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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Eggs ❯ Steamed Eggs (蒸蛋)

Steamed Eggs (蒸蛋)

Judy

by:

Judy

130 Comments
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Updated: 7/18/2025
Steamed Egg

Once you learn how to make Chinese steamed eggs (蒸蛋), you’ll be making it all the time. Not only is it delicious and comforting, the recipe is so easy to remember, you’ll know it by heart.

An Anytime Recipe

If you find yourself short of one dish to serve for dinner, make some Chinese steamed egg.

Want something to warm you on a cold day? Make steamed eggs. 

If someone in the family is sick, or you want a soft food to feed your baby? Steamed egg is there for you.

If you’re too lazy to make a complicated dinner? You guessed it. Steamed egg.

Known in Cantonese as “waat dan” or “slippery egg,” this is a versatile, anytime Chinese comfort food. You can never go wrong with it.

Chinese steamed egg

If you didn’t grow up with it, you would never think to steam eggs, but the result is a silky, almost custard-like dish. It’s great for young kids and the elderly. It can be rustic or fancy…rural or uptown.

Poor Sarah is sick with a nasty cold, so I figured it would be a good time to make her a Chinese steamed egg for a cold remedy.

Instead of using just water, I added some chicken stock for extra flavor and nutrients. You can also use vegetable stock if you want to keep it vegetarian.

Watch our quick guide to making steamed eggs over on our Youtube channel! If you enjoy this video give it a like and subscribe so you never miss a new video!
Chinese steamed egg ingredients

How to Set up a Steamer (with no special equipment

If you don’t have a lot of experience with steaming food, you may be wondering how to set up a steamer. You have multiple options:

  1. Wok with lid & steaming rack or empty metal can
  2. Any deep pot with a lid and steaming rack or empty can
  3. Bamboo Steamer in wok (as long as dish of eggs can fit inside)
  4. Metal Steamer

All you really need is a covered container with boiling water at the bottom, and some type of rack (an empty tuna can works) to rest your heatproof dish of eggs on. As long as the steam can circulate around the dish, it will cook the eggs.

Read more about setting up a steamer

A Starting Point

I have seen many versions of this Chinese steamed egg dish, with mushrooms, a drizzle of soy sauce, clams, crab, chicken.

Basically, you be the chef, and think of this Chinese steamed egg recipe as a starting point. Make it your own, and prepare it any way you like it.

We have several examples ourselves!

We love our Steamed Eggs with Crispy Pork, which involves making a quick meat relish to go on top of the eggs. Kaitlin’s Three Color Steamed Eggs add salted duck eggs and thousand year old eggs. Both recipes transform the dish into a more substantial meal. Adding vegetables like okra and a drizzle of soy sauce can also make the dish even prettier!

Steamed Eggs with ground pork, thewoksoflife.com
Three Color Steamed Egg with fried shallots and scallion
Steamed Eggs with Okra and Soy Sauce

We also have a recipe in our cookbook, The Woks of Life: Recipes to Know & Love from a Chinese American Family. In that recipe, we top steamed eggs with ground chicken and oyster mushrooms. It is delicious.

I hope that gives you some ideas. Now I’ll show you how simple this is to make!

Steamed Eggs: Recipe Instructions

Crack 3 eggs in a liquid measuring cup and note the volume (it’s usually around 2/3 cup).

3 eggs cracked into measuring cup

Pour the eggs into a large bowl, add salt, and beat for at least 1 minute (or just do this in the measuring cup).

beating eggs in measuring cup

Now measure out water at the same volume as the eggs, and add it to the bowl. Do the same with the chicken stock. Whisk in the sesame oil, and make sure everything’s well combined.

Pour the egg mixture through a fine mesh strainer into a shallow heatproof dish (a Pyrex pie plate works well).

The strainer prevents bubbles from forming, and gives you a glassy texture, similar to our Hong Kong egg tarts.

pouring egg mixture through a fine mesh strainer
egg white caught in fine mesh strainer

TIp!

If you want to make individual steamed eggs, you can also pour the mixture into individual ramekins. This recipe makes enough for 4 ramekins.

individual steamed eggs in ramekins

If any small bubbles remain, you can skim them off with a spoon or use your finger to pop them. The surface of the egg should be smooth and glassy.

Chinese Steamed Egg mixture in dish

Fill your steaming set-up with just enough water to simmer for a few minutes. The water shouldn’t touch the dish of eggs. (See our post on how to set up a steamer if you’re not familiar with steaming foods in Chinese cooking.) Bring to a boil.

Once boiling, place the dish of eggs in the steamer, and cover. Keep the heat at medium-high to high. The water should be at a rapid simmer/boil.

Steam the eggs for 3 minutes. After 3 minutes have elapsed, shut off the heat but keep the steamer covered. Let stand for 14 minutes with the lid firmly covered. Remove your steamed egg dishes from the steamer, sprinkle with scallions, and serve.

Chinese Steamed Egg

After it cools down a bit out of the steamer, just use a spoon to scoop out that delightful Chinese steamed egg goodness!

Spoonful of steamed egg

For a little extra flavor, you can also drizzle the egg with a bit of light soy sauce:

Chinese steamed egg with light soy sauce on top

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Recipe

Steamed Egg
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4.95 from 20 votes

Steamed Eggs (蒸蛋)

Steamed eggs are Chinese comfort food. With just a handful of ingredients, this recipe is so easy you'll be whipping it up from memory!
by: Judy
Serves: 4 servings
Prep: 3 minutes mins
Cook: 17 minutes mins
Total: 20 minutes mins
[adthrive-in-post-video-player video-id=”6QOAZr8F” upload-date=”2024-07-11T06:03:03.000Z” name=”Steamed Eggs” description=”Steamed eggs are Chinese comfort food. With just a handful of ingredients, this recipe is so easy you’ll be whipping it up from memory!” player-type=”default” override-embed=”default”]

Ingredients

  • 3 eggs
  • Water (same volume as eggs)
  • Vegetable or chicken stock (same volume as eggs)
  • Salt (to taste)
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • Chopped scallion

Instructions

  • Crack 3 eggs in a liquid measuring cup and note the volume. Pour the eggs into a large bowl, add salt, and beat for at least 1 minute. Now measure out water at the same volume as the eggs, and add it to the bowl. Do the same with the broth. Whisk in the sesame oil, and make sure everything's well combined.
  • Pour the egg mixture through a fine-meshed strainer into a heatproof dish (a pyrex pie plate works well) or divide amongst 4 ramekins.
  • Boil the water in your steamer. Place the dish of eggs in the steamer, cover, and steam over high heat for 3 minutes. After 3 minutes have elapsed, shut off the heat, but keep the steamer covered. Let stand for 14 minutes with the lid firmly covered. Remove from the steamer, sprinkle with scallions, and serve.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 66kcal (3%) Carbohydrates: 1g Protein: 5g (10%) Fat: 4g (6%) Saturated Fat: 1g (5%) Cholesterol: 123mg (41%) Sodium: 239mg (10%) Potassium: 96mg (3%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 1g (1%) Vitamin A: 210IU (4%) Vitamin C: 0.6mg (1%) Calcium: 18mg (2%) Iron: 0.7mg (4%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
Did You Make This?Tag us on Instagram @thewoksoflife and be sure to follow us on social for more!
@thewoksoflife

Note: This recipe was originally published on January 29, 2015. We have since updated it with new photos, clearer instructions, and nutrition information. The recipe itself is the same. Enjoy!

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Judy

About

Judy
Judy Leung is the matriarch of The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside husband Bill and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin. Born in Shanghai, China, she immigrated to the United States at sixteen. Fluent in both English and three Chinese dialects, she also plays the important role of researcher and menu translator! Drawing from over four decades of cooking experience and travel, Judy aims to bring Chinese culinary traditions to readers and preserve recipes that might otherwise be lost to time. Her expertise spans from Shanghainese cooking and everyday homestyle dishes to a variety of regional foodways, showcasing the depth and breadth of Chinese cuisine for a global audience. Over the last decade, she’s helped transform The Woks of Life into what Saveur Magazine has deemed “the internet’s most popular Chinese cooking blog,” co-written a New York Times bestselling cookbook, and become convinced that we will never run out of recipes to share!
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