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Home Collections Asian Takeout

Chinese Dumplings – Pork (Potstickers)

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published23 Mar '18 Updated27 Jun '25
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Chinese Dumplings! Also known as Potstickers, these irresistible plump babies have a traditional pork and cabbage filling, pan fried then steamed in a skillet so they’re golden crispy on the underside and steamy and soft on the surface.

Complete your Chinese banquet with a side of Fried Rice, Hot and Sour Soup and Chinese Broccoli with Oyster Sauce. Time to get your dumpling game on!

Potstickers / Pan Fried Chinese Dumplings on a dark brown plate shot from overhead
Potsticker being dipped in a small bowl with soy sauce and chilli oil

Chinese Dumplings aka Potstickers

There was a time when I had a handful of favourite hole-in-the-wall dumpling joints complete with peeling lino floors, chipped tables and rickety chairs where we could stuff ourselves silly for less than $8 a head.

Nowadays, dumplings have become “all the rage” and many such places have become fancy. Renovated interiors, glossy menus. And sky rocketing price tags. And crowds.

Hmph! Not happy!

So in recent years I’ve found myself making dumplings on a fairly regular basis. Potstickers being my favourite – also known as  Pan Fried Chinese Dumplings.

Golden crispy on the underside with a juicy pork filling inside, these Chinese dumplings stack up to the very best dumpling joints!

Potsticker Fillings

There’s great variety in terms of filling with no hard and fast rules. This filling is pretty classic, with the main “things” in it being pork, shiitake mushrooms, cabbage and garlic chives. And I’ve since shared my Vegetable Filling too (it’s so good!).

You could actually skip the mushrooms or chives, without affecting the overall tastiness of the dumplings. I include both because I love the extra umami (food tech term meaning “savouriness”) that the mushroom provides and the little hit of freshness from the chives.

Rehydrating shiitake mushrooms and finely chopping them
Glass bowl with Potsticker Filling made with pork, cabbage, shiitake mushrooms and chives.
Glass bowl with Potsticker Filling made with pork, cabbage, shiitake mushrooms and chives.

How to wrap Chinese Dumplings

As for wrapping them, it’s simple – and here’s my biggest tip: Don’t stress! Forget the pleats if it’s all too hard, just press and seal flat. 🙂 There are plenty of dumpling places around that do that and it’s obvious why – it’s far faster to make them.

But if you’re wanting to replicate the classic Chinese Potstickers, here’s how to wrap them – and the video beneath the recipe is super helpful too.

By the way, the hands in these images and the video are not mine, they belong to Mama RecipeTin. Way too difficult and messy to try to film myself wrapping dumplings!

Dumpling wrapper for Potstickers (Chinese Pan Fried Dumplings)
How to wrap Potstickers (Pan Fried Chinese Dumplings)

I love that moment when all the Potstickers are wrapped and sitting there, plump and ready for cooking. It’s a chest-puffing moment, and rightly so! 😇

A tray filled with Potstickers ready to be cooked
Close up of uncooked wrapped potstickers on a tray

How to cook Chinese Dumplings

There are 3 ways to cook Chinese dumplings:

  • Steamed – in your steamer of choice (traditionally a bamboo steamer);

  • Pan fried – this is the recipe I’m sharing today, Pan Fried Chinese Dumplings. I love the way they are cooked – pan fried until the base is golden, then water is added so they steam to cook the inside. The bottom goes soggy while it’s steaming but then once the water evaporates, it goes crispy again.

  • Boiled – Dumplings can also be boiled. Try adding them into a Chinese Noodle Soup!

Potstickers cooking in a black skillet

Why are they called Potstickers in the States??

I actually never understood why they’re called Potstickers in the States. They aren’t cooked in a pot, and you’d be seriously peeved if they stick to the pan.

They should be called Skillet-Non-Stickers.

But I made the effort to do a little Google and was interested to learn that pan fried dumplings are called Guotie in Chinese and the literal translation is “potstickers” or “panstickers”. So I guess any other tales you hear about where the name comes from are just that – tales! 😂 – Nagi x


More great dumplings of the world

  • Vegetable Dumplings

  • Wontons

  • Gyoza (Japanese dumplings)

  • Siu mai (Chinese yum cha steamed pork and prawn dumplings)

  • Chinese Steamed BBQ Pork Buns

  • Browse the Yum Cha recipe collection, all Chinese Recipes and Asian Takeout copycat recipes

Potsticker being dipped in a small bowl with soy sauce and chilli oil
Overheat photo of Potstickers, also known as Pan Fried Chinese Dumplings, on a dark brown plate with dipping sauce.

Chinese dumplings (potstickers)
Watch how to make it

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Potsticker being dipped in a small bowl with soy sauce and chilli oil

Chinese dumplings (Potstickers!)

Author: Nagi
Prep: 30 minutes mins
Cook: 25 minutes mins
Total: 55 minutes mins
Mains
Chinese
4.99 from 81 votes
Servings30 pieces
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Recipe video above. Time to get your dumpling game on! Don't fret about perfect pleats – if it's all too hard, just press the seams together without pleating, plenty of Chinese restaurants do this. 
This recipe has a pork and cabbage filling, which is traditional and common. After a Vegetable filling? Here it is!

Ingredients

  • 5 – 6 dried shiitake mushrooms (Note 1)
  • 1 ½ cups finely chopped Chinese cabbage (Napa cabbage)
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 250 g / 0.5 lb fatty pork mince (20 – 30% fat ideal – Note 2)
  • ¼ cup garlic chives , finely chopped*
  • 2 tsp light soy sauce (light or dark soy also ok)
  • 1 1/2 tsp Chinese wine (Note 4)
  • ½ tsp sesame oil*
  • ¼ tsp white pepper (black also ok)
  • 1 garlic clove , minced
  • ½ tsp grated fresh ginger*

To cook:

  • 30 – 35 round dumpling wrappers (Note 5)
  • 1/2 cup water per batch
  • 4 – 6 tsp vegetable oil
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Shiitake Mushroom: Place the mushrooms in a bowl and pour over plenty of boiled water. Leave for 20 minutes or until rehydrated. Squeeze out excess water, then finely chop.
  • Cabbage: Place cabbage in a bowl with salt. Toss with fingers, then set aside for 15 minutes. Squeeze out excess liquid from cabbage using hands.
  • Filling: Place cabbage, mushrooms and remaining Filling ingredients in a bowl. Mix with your hands until well combined.

Make Dumplings (watch video + see photos in post):

  • Peel one wrapper off and place on the palm of your left hand (if right handed). Dip your finger in water and run it along half the edge of the wrapper.
  • Place 1 heaped tablespoon of Filling in the centre. Fold wrapper over, then pleat to seal. Alternatively, just press together with no pleats.
  • Finish so the dumpling is curved slightly, see photos in post, with the pleats on the top.
  • Place on tray. Cover with cling wrap or wet tea towel (important). Repeat with remaining dumplings. Should make 30, if yours are extremely plump you may only make 25.

Cooking:

  • Make sure your pan has a lid that fits it half decently (Note 6).
  • Heat 2 tsp oil in a non stick pan over medium high heat. Add dumplings, pressing down firmly to flatten the base onto the pan. Cook around 8 to 10 per batch.
  • When the base is golden brown (check them), add 1/2 cup of water into the pan.
  • Immediately clamp the lid on, then leave for 7 minutes (any less and the pleats won’t be cooked through so if your water dries out, add a bit more).
  • Remove lid – most of the water should be evaporated, the pleats should be cooked through. Leave the pan on the stove until the base dries and the underside of the dumplings are once again crisp.
  • Remove dumplings from pan and transfer to serving plate. Repeat with remaining Dumplings.
  • Serve with Dipping Sauces of choice. (Note 7)

Recipe Notes:

* Can be omitted. There are no hard and fast rules for what goes in the Filling, and it varies across China and certainly all over the world. Some Fillings can be very simple, so these ones marked with an Asterix can be omitted and it’s still going to taste terrific (and “real”!).
1. I love using dried shiitake mushrooms in the filling because it adds incredible umami (“savouriness”). Dried is better than fresh in terms of flavour intensity. You can find dried shiitake mushrooms at Asian grocery stores and some speciality shops. It can be substituted with fresh shiitake mushrooms. If you can’t find either, just leave it out – don’t worry, your dumplings will still taste terrific!
2. My favourite is to ask the butcher to mince pork belly, second favourite is pork shoulder. You want the fat! If you use lean pork mince form standard supermarkets, you may be disappointed with the lack of juiciness of the Filling. If you can only get supermarket pork mince, I would urge you to add at least 2 tbsp vegetable or canola oil into the Filling mixture and mix for at least 2 minutes with your hands.
3. The garlic chives are optional. I adore dumplings with garlic chives in them, and I love the little specks of green in the dumplings.
4. Or Mirin, sake or dry sherry. If you can’t have alcohol, leave this out and add an extra pinch of salt and sugar.
5. The dumpling wrappers I use are pictured in the post (Double Merino brand, Gow Gee pastry) and is sold at large supermarkets in Australia (Woolies, Coles) as well as Harris Farms and Asian Grocery stores. They are about 8 cm / 3.5″ wide and 2mm / 1/10″ thick. If you’d like to try your hand at homemade dumpling wrappers, try this recipe by Maggie from Omnivores Cookbook, one of my favourite Chinese blogs. She has an excellent video tutorial in that recipe.
6. None of my favourite skillets came with lids, so I always make do with lids from large pots.
7.  Dipping Sauces- my favourite is soy sauce with chilli oil or paste. Other common ones are soy sauce + Chinese black vinegar, or even white vinegar.
8. STORING: Place uncooked dumplings in a single layer in an airtight container (use paper between layers) and store for up to 2 days in the fridge, or 3 months in the freezer. To cook, defrost, then cook per recipe. Store cooked dumplings in the fridge for up to 2 days – I like to microwave to reheat then pan fry to re-crisp the bottom!
9. Nutrition per dumpling. The weight per dumpling is off because it doesn’t factor in the liquid absorbed by the dumpling wrapper. Guessing it’s closer to 60g / 2 oz per piece.

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 27gCalories: 78cal (4%)
Keywords: Chinese dumplings, Chinese Pan Fried Dumplings, Potstickers
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

BEST DUMPLINGS IN SYDNEY

Just in case you need a dumpling fix and you want someone else to make them for you, here are my favourite dumpling haunts in Sydney:

  • Shanghai Night (Ashfield) – This is about as no frills as it gets as far as proper Chinese dumpling dives in Sydney go. You won’t see any tourists here at this Ashfield institution. Service and decor are “minimalist”, it’s all about the pan fried and soup dumplings (xiao long bau ie soup in the dumplings) here.

  • Din Tai Fung (Sydney CBD and other locations) – Famous for their soup dumplings, they aren’t a worldwide chain for no reason! Their other non-dumpling dishes are also delicious (but avoid the weird things like rainbow dumplings….).

  • Mr Wong (Sydney CBD) – They ain’t cheap but then these are meticulously made, all about top quality ingredients, and sometimes unusual creations you won’t see anywhere else. As if their dumplings weren’t good enough, the rest of the menu is possibly even more amazing …

  • Chinese Noodle Restaurant (Haymarket, China Town) – Don’t get it mixed up with Chinese Noodle House, which is confusingly on the other side of the small court. Just remember “the one on the left”. This is place to go in Chinatown for big plates of potstickers at rock bottom prices.

  • Tim Ho Wan (Chatswood, Sydney CBD) – Originally from Hong Kong, Tim Ho Wan was a hole-in-the-wall that shot to fame some years ago as the world’s cheapest Michelin-starred restaurant. Their prawn dumplings and siu mai are awesome, along with their famous baked pork bun.

  • Taste of Shanghai (Eastwood and other locations) – One of the offenders of going up market and expanding all over Sydney. 😩 But still a perfectly respectable place to get a dumpling fix. Try the dumplings in chilli oil, and the Xiao Long Bau (soup inside dumplings). The Eastwood and Ashfield ones are my favourite locations.


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215 Comments

  1. Elizabeth Gordon-Douglas says

    September 12, 2021 at 6:44 pm

    I made these potstickers tonight! So easy and absolutely Devine!

    Reply
  2. Sally says

    September 8, 2021 at 10:37 pm

    Not to be a Chris but can I sub the pork with beef mince?

    Reply
  3. Joseph Greeley says

    September 7, 2021 at 6:34 am

    Can’t wait to try these! The story i heard about the name ‘potsticker’ was that a chef was boiling dumplings for the Emperor (or some other high-faluting individual) and accidentally let the pot boil dry so that the dumplings got crispy on the side against the pot. No idea if it has ANY truth to it. but it sounds good and explains the name!

    Reply
  4. Ren says

    September 6, 2021 at 5:48 pm

    5 stars
    Hi Nagi,

    I made 64 of these little suckers on Saturday…. It was a labour of love as I am not experienced in wrapping dumplings. I started out (trying to) create the pleats. After dumpling No. 15 i just started squashing the pastry edges together, because I also had your lasgana recipe to cook, for my Dad for Father’s Day!!
    Hubby and I had Potstickers with your Charlies, Chargrill Asian salad for lunch today. OMGoodness! Soooo good!!! I added ginger, coriander and some Cayenne chilli to the salad also. Very yummy!!
    Thanks Nagi,
    R x

    Reply
  5. Anne K says

    August 28, 2021 at 1:10 pm

    Hi Nagi
    Love your recipes
    Is it ok to substitute regular cabbage for Chinese cabbage? Thank you

    Reply
  6. Bry says

    August 22, 2021 at 6:50 am

    Hi Nagi,
    Love your recipes! Could I replace the pork with crumbled firm tofu? I have impossible meat substitute i could use as well, but would love to use up some tofu.
    Thanks!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      August 23, 2021 at 7:36 pm

      Hi Bry, it would be something I’d need to test – you really need the fat in the pork to keep these juicy and tofu wouldn’t have the same effect sadly. N x

      Reply
  7. Rachelle Attieh says

    August 8, 2021 at 11:36 am

    I love every recipe of yours I’ve tried. Can I make a vegetarian version of this?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      August 9, 2021 at 7:47 pm

      It’s on my list of things to do Rachelle!! N x

      Reply
  8. Ann Maree says

    July 31, 2021 at 7:31 pm

    5 stars
    Hello… my teenagers devoured these as they do with every recipe I have cooked from your site. It is my absolute go to.

    Can you please suggest what I might have done wrong when my gourmet teenager says that the texture of the pork filling was too firm? I did add some oil as per your suggestion but maybe not enough?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      August 1, 2021 at 7:41 am

      HI Ann! So glad they were enjoyed 🙂 Try using a lighter touch when handling the pork. If you press really hard it packs the pork in tightly. Because it’s wrapped in the dumpling pastry which holds it in, you don’t need to pack the meat tightly. 🙂 N x (PS Oh the other thing might be overcooking? Or using lean pork. Fatty is best!! N x)

      Reply
      • Ann Maree says

        August 7, 2021 at 6:43 pm

        5 stars
        Thankyou so much for your feedback. I was definitely overlooking the dumplings!!! Problem solved & teenagers want more. There’s a reason this is my go to site for all things cooking!

        Reply
  9. Claire says

    June 15, 2021 at 10:15 pm

    5 stars
    I make a big batch of these every few months and pop them in the freezer, they’re incredible and so easy!! Just waiting for the veggie dumpling recipe to drop… 😉

    Reply
  10. Jessie says

    June 8, 2021 at 2:29 pm

    Love your recipes.
    Question. Can you use leftover chicken in your recipes instead of breast or thigh

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      June 9, 2021 at 4:28 pm

      Hi Jessie, which recipe are you referring to sorry? N x

      Reply
      • Jessie says

        June 9, 2021 at 4:34 pm

        Any of the stir fry or noode. I was looking at the raman ones
        . Thanks for answering

        Reply
  11. Ai says

    May 30, 2021 at 1:37 pm

    5 stars
    I made these tons of times from your , sorry didn’t rating till now. Thiank you for great all the recipes and the recomend dumpling place below.

    Reply
  12. Oziemum says

    April 26, 2021 at 9:55 am

    5 stars
    Cooked these last night and they were delicious and rated by my son as the best I had ever made – aided by a gift he bought me at the weekend which was a nifty dumpling cutter and fluted press – so simple to use! And useful as locally, in rural Tasmania, we could only find square dimsum wrappers and I had no time to make my own so I simply used the cutter to make rounds and they worked perfectly.

    Reply
  13. meazechelle dakanay says

    March 14, 2021 at 1:09 pm

    5 stars
    I made this tonight and it was a hit!! My boys can’t stop eating it. The best potstickers I had! Thank you for sharing the recipe!

    Reply
  14. Belinda Fairfoul says

    March 7, 2021 at 12:06 pm

    5 stars
    Made this recipe and the Siu Mai recipe in the same evening for dinner. Easy to follow and the family loved them!! Definitely will make them again!

    Reply
  15. Ana says

    February 11, 2021 at 7:56 am

    5 stars
    I’ve been a long time fan of your recipes and need to say, these turned out beautifully! I was apprehensive at first because it was difficult to find potstickers here in Switzerland but it was worth the effort. Absolutely delicious and super easy to make. Best of all, it brought back great memories of my travels through Japan (which is very welcome during lockdown!). I love the way you present your content. Thank you!

    Reply
  16. Margot Hallgren says

    January 24, 2021 at 12:25 pm

    5 stars
    This recipe turned out very well! The potstickers were delicious, my husband said they were better than take-out, unfortunately I overlooked the “non-stick pan” instruction, and they stuck to the all clad saute pan I used. 🙄 So, not perfect looking, but we are them anyway!
    Fortunately, I only cooked 8 so we have a lot left in the fridge, and I will be sure to use a non-stick pan next time!! Thank you for sharing the great recipes! I made your General Tso’s Chicken and Lo Mein noodles recipes as well, but did not add chicken to the Lo Mein. So delicious!!

    Reply
  17. Zee Gimon says

    January 13, 2021 at 7:48 pm

    Nagi, can I use phyllo dough instead of these wrappers? We don’t have them here, but we do have phyllo.

    Reply
  18. Liz says

    January 5, 2021 at 10:43 am

    These came out soooooooo goood! What a yummy recipe. I added oil since my grocery store only had lean pork. Also used vegan wonton wrappers as that was also all I could find. Not nearly as pretty but still tastes great!

    Reply
  19. KP says

    November 12, 2020 at 4:33 am

    5 stars
    The video on making the pleats was very helpful!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      November 12, 2020 at 9:25 am

      Great KP – it’s such a visual thing, I find it helps to watch someone else do it so you can replicate it 🙂 N x

      Reply
  20. Anna says

    October 6, 2020 at 9:04 pm

    5 stars
    Made 100 of these beauties today. I left out the cabbage and shitake (fussy children) and the result was still incredible. Lots of happy eaters here!

    Reply
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