Encased in a soft wheat dough, filled with sweet red bean paste, and steamed to perfection, Manju is a classic Japanese confectionery (wagashi). When you crave a fun, sweet treat, these dumplings will hit the spot! Enjoy with a hot cup of green tea.
From Mizu Yokan to Daifuku, there are endless varieties of traditional Japanese confections called wagashi (和菓子). But to make at home, Manju (饅頭) is the best. It’s one of the simplest Japanese sweets you can make in your kitchen.
Table of Contents
What is Manju?
Manju was first introduced to Japan in 1341 when a Japanese envoy came back from China and brought back mantou (饅頭) with him. The character for mantou is read as”manjū” in Japanese.
Since then, Manju has been a popular sweet for generation after generation. You can easily purchase these inexpensive treats from street vendors and wagashi shops everywhere.
There are many variations of manju, but the most common one is steamed manju with a thin fluffy bun filled with sweet red bean paste.
Different Types of Manju
To put it in a nutshell, there are two main types of manju: Baked Manju (焼き饅頭) and Steamed Manju (蒸し饅頭). Not to mention, there are endless regional varieties with different shapes, sizes, and fillings with their regional touch.
For fillings: The most common filling, red bean paste, comes in different consistencies: koshian, tsubuan, and tsubushian (more about it here). Other fillings include uguisu an (bean paste made with peas), Shiro An (bean paste made with white kidney bean), chestnut paste, sesame paste, Matcha bean paste, Miso bean paste, etc.
For buns: We can divide manju into five types.
1. Manju (饅頭)
- Also known as Cha Manju (茶饅頭), Rikyu Manju (利休饅頭), Kokuto Manju (黒糖饅頭), Onsen Manju (温泉饅頭), Usukawa Manju (薄皮饅頭).
- The bun is made from wheat flour and brown sugar.
2. Jyouyo Manju (薯蕷饅頭)
- The bun is made from rice flour using grated yams.
- Kohaku Manju (紅白饅頭), picture below, and Oribe Manju (織部饅頭) are good examples.
By Ocdp (Own work) [CC BY 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
On celebratory occasions, the Japanese eat Kohaku Manju (紅白饅頭) – red and white manju. Red (ko 紅) and white (haku 白) colors represent the symbol of happiness and lucky colors from ancient times.
3. Sake Manju (酒饅頭)
- The buns are made from wheat flour using yeast mash/starter.
- This is the origin of the idea for Anpan.
- Toraya Manju (虎屋饅頭) is a good example.
4. Yaki Manju (焼き饅頭)
- The buns have a texture like Castella.
- Momiji Manju (もみじ饅頭), Kuri Manju (栗饅頭), Tou Manju (唐饅頭), Chidori Manju (千鳥饅頭) are good examples.
5. Miso Manju (味噌饅頭)
- The buns are made from wheat flour using miso.
- Minobu Manju (身延饅頭) is a good example.
3 Tips to Make Perfect Manju
1. Don’t over-knead
Is it just me or do you also think kneading is fun and we tend to overdo it? But if you want to make a fluffy bun around the filling, over-kneading is a big no-no. So don’t make the mistake. Just fold the dough a few times till the dough is pliable and easy to divide (not droopy). Don’t worry about making it into a round shape like how you would do with bread dough.
2. Thinner edges, thicker center
When pressing down the dough and making it into a circle shape, make sure to only thin out the edges and keep the center somewhat thicker. This way when you wrap the red bean paste with the dough, the seam line on the bottom won’t be too thick and your buns will have nice fluffy thicker dough than the bottom. If you thin out the center of the dough too much, your buns will be super thin on top and thick on the bottom.
3. Seal the dough tightly
There are a couple of ways to add the filling to the dough. If you are a wagashi expert, you would put the filling on the circle dough and push the filling toward the dough with your fingers while you rotate the dough with the other hand….and voilà! The filling is magically inside the dough! Don’t know what I’m talking about? Check out this video for guidance.
For beginners, let’s keep it simple. Gather the opposing edges of the circle dough and pinch the dough over the filling to seal tightly.
To Serve and Store
Enjoy the steamed manju warm or at room temperature. I love brewing a pot of green tea to enjoy with the lightly sweet buns for my afternoon snack.
They are freezer-friendly too! Make sure you cover each one with plastic wrap to retain the moisture while they are still warm, place the leftovers in a zip-lock bag to freeze, and just re-steam them when you want some buns any time of the day!
Wish to learn more about Japanese cooking? Sign up for our free newsletter to receive cooking tips & recipe updates! And stay in touch with me on Facebook, Pinterest, YouTube, and Instagram.
Manju
Ingredients
- ½ cup brown sugar (packed)
- 3 Tbsp water
- ½ tsp baking powder
- ½ tsp water (for mixing with baking powder)
- 1 cup cake flour (plus more for dusting)
- 8.5 oz sweet red bean paste (anko) (I used koshian fine paste)
Instructions
- Gather all the ingredients. Cut a sheet of parchment paper into (12) 2.5- x 2.5-inch (6- x 6-cm) sheets.
- In a small saucepan, add 3 Tbsp water and ½ cup brown sugar. Whisk to dissolve the sugar over medium-low heat.
- Transfer to a large bowl and set aside to cool.
- Meanwhile, wet your hands with a little bit of water and make 12 balls of 8.5 oz sweet red bean paste (anko). Each ball should be about 1 scant Tbsp (20 g).
- Combine ½ tsp baking powder and ½ tsp water.
- Add to the cooled brown sugar mixture and mix all together.
- Sift 1 cup cake flour and add to the brown sugar mixture. Combine the mixture with a silicone spatula, chopsticks, or your fingers. Pinch the clumps together into a ball. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside to rest the dough for 15 minutes in the bowl.
- Transfer the dough on a floured work surface and knead for 1–2 minutes, incorporating flour as necessary to get rid of the stickiness. The texture of the dough should be pliable (in Japanese, we say the texture should be similar to the texture of the earlobe). Do not over-knead.
- Once the dough is no longer sticky and smooth, form the dough into a stick, and cut into 12 pieces.
- Cover them with a damp towel to prevent the dough from drying.
- Form one portion of the dough into a ball and flatten it so it becomes 2 inches (5 cm) in diameter.
- Then, flatten the piece with your fingers and roll out to form a circle shape about 2.5 to 3 inches (6–7 cm) in diameter. Only stretch the outer edges of the dough and keep the center thick.
- Place the red bean ball in the middle and pull each corner into the center and pinch to close the dough.
- Now you know why we need the outer dough to be thin. If you have the thick outer dough, the pinched area will be harder to fold in.
- Place the manju on the working surface, seam side down. Rotate the dough a few times to shape nicely. Place it on to the parchment paper.
- Cover the manju with a damp towel to prevent it from drying. Repeat with the remaining dough.
- Set up a steamer. Fill the wok (or pot) with 2 inches of water. Bring the water to a boil. Steam for 10–12 minutes with high heat (this creates lots of steam).
- Once they are done cooking, remove manju from the steamer and let cool on a wire rack or bamboo sieve (so the air/heat won’t trap on the bottom of manju). While they are still warm, wrap each manju with plastic wrap individually. This will help to retain the moisture. Enjoy!
To Store
- You can keep the leftovers in an airtight container and store in the fridge for 1 day or in the freezer for a month. To reheat, steaming is the best method. If you microwave it (cover with a damp paper towel), you have to eat it immediately, otherwise, the texture gets hard quickly.
Notes
- Prepare 1 cup all purpose flour in the bowl.
- Remove 2 Tbsp from the bowl.
- Add 2 Tbsp corn starch back to the bowl.
- Now you have 1 cup cake flour.
- Be sure to sift the flour to distribute the cornstarch well before using it in your cake batter.
Hello Nami, we tried making these today but our dough seemed quite dry. Used all purpose flour with corn starch as suggested and followed the directions carefully. Hints?
Hi Rodger! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe!
We are sorry to hear your dough turned out to be quite dry.
When you make cake flour, we recommend sifting the All-purpose flour and corn starch first, then measuring the flour for the Manju.
The dry dough could be from too much flour from the beginning or over-kneading the dough with flour on the work surface.
We hope this helps!
Hello Nami, these look delicious! Is it ok to prepare the dough and buns the day before (and keep them in the fridge in an airtight container) and then steam them the next day? Or is it better to steam them the same day you make the dough and then reheat them the following day? Thank you very much!
Hi Cherry! Thank you very much for trying Nami’s recipe!
We recommend making it on the same day and reheat the next day. Please see the note at the end of the recipe card “To store” for more detail.
We hope this helps!🙂
Hey there – what’s the cooking method it we want to make these baked?
Hi Lara! Thank you for reading Nami’s post!
We have never tried baking this Manju before and are not sure how the outcome will be. Probably lower temperature is better. Like 300~325° or bake it a short time with 375° until outer batter cook.
Let us know if you try it!
Hi Namiko, I’m a little confused. I see that you mentioned cake flour and even provided a homemade recipe, but you mentioned that manju is made with wheat flour. So which exactly should be using? Would fine wheat flour work instead of cake flour?
Hi Shannon! Thank you very much for reading Nami’s post!
Yes. Manju is made with wheat flour, but it not whole wheat flour. The cake flour she used is mixed with all-purpose (wheat) flour and cornstarch. If you use just fine-grain whole-wheat flour, the texture would be different.
We hope this helps!
Can you please make a matcha version of this ? I tried the 711 matcha milk paste buns in Japan and it was so good ! I would love to make a matcha version of this!
Hi Jana! Hmmm maybe one day. I’ll add to my list. Thank you for your request!
Hi. thanks for the recipe. Do you know how to make CyaManju? I have the ingredients but I dont know the quantity for them. Thanks
Hi renimon20! If you’re referring to Cha Manju 茶饅頭, that’s same as this recipe. It’s also called Rikyu Manju 利久饅頭. 🙂
Thanks!😁
Hi Nami! Thanks for all your recipes; I always have great time trying them. I’ve made these a few times now, and the manju always come out wrinkled and not very puffy. I’ve tried much less kneading and also more baking powder. Any tips for troubleshooting? Thank you!
Hi Kate! I googled and some people have similar issues. The majority of case was due to the condensation from the lid. Did you cover the lid with a towel? Please don’t skip. Some people talked about the BP being old. Have you checked that before? Some talked about the substitute of flour. Did you make any substitution? Some also said if the water below is too close…
Do you think any of these ring a bell?
Hi, thanks for sharing the recipe! I want to know instead of steaming the Manju, can we baked this recipe? Or is there any difference in Baked Manju?
Hi Alexia! I haven’t tried baking this yet, so I’m not too sure how it would turn out actually… as long as the dough is cooked. 🙂
Hi Nami! I love all of your recipes – made so many good meals and desserts with them!
Can I ask, where did you get the bamboo steamer and what brand/type it is? Do you have a link you can share? Thank you so much!
Hi Joline! Thank you so much – so happy to hear you like them. I got the large one from the Chinese market (not too expensive). I don’t know the brand since there is no label etc. Nothing fancy. The smaller and neat looking one I show in some of my recipes is from Japan and a bit expensive.
hello, and thank you so much for this recipe and the rest of your blog! I am wondering if it would be possible to use custard to fill the manju, instead of red bean paste ? thank you 🙂
Hi Matilda! I think you can, but I had never tried that before. You have to make your custard pretty firm though in order to close the manju skin easily. Let me know if you end up trying it! 🙂
This recipe came out very tasty and the manju were perfect for teatime! Just a note on the quantity though…I followed the measurements exactly, but I could only get 8 very small buns out of the recipe. They’re about 2 inches in diameter.
Hi Cat! Hmmm… I see. At Step 9, were you able to cut into 12 pieces? Or your dough was not enough?
Only three tablespoons of water for mixing with brown sugar?
I end up with a paste.
Thanks
Hi Ed! I just realized that I didn’t write to “over medium-low heat” (the picture shows the pot is over the stove and next step says to let it cool). Your paste will become liquidity as it’s heated. I apologize that my recipe wasn’t clear. 🙁
Hi Nami,
Love all your recipes for japanese foods, just like my mother made. She used to make “Roppo” manju which was my favorite, but I can’t seem to find a recipe on how to make them. Do you have a recipe for this manju. I now my mother used to fry on an electric griddle. These were the best. Crunchy on outside and sweet inside.
Hi Ruby! I had never tried Roppo Manju, so I googled in Japanese. And I learned that it’s called Roppo Yaki 六法焼 and it is a regional sweet from Ishikawa Prefecture, Fukui Prefecture, and west of Japan, including Oita Prefecture in Kyushu. I’ll definitely try it when I travel in these parts of Japan.
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%85%AD%E6%96%B9%E7%84%BC
I found
Since I had never had it before, it’s hard to replicate the taste, and I found a recipe online. Can you use chrome and translate to English?
https://recipe.rakuten.co.jp/recipe/1560009534/
Hope you get to make this treat again! 🙂
Hi, Namiko!
Love your recipes, already tried one for koshian.
Want to make manju but I don’t have a steamer. Is it possible to bake them in the oven?
Hi Alexandra! I’m not sure – manju is usually steamed first before baking to get toasty skin (it’s called Yaki Manju). If you skip the steaming process, I’m not sure how the texture will turn out. I just saw a recipe that put the manju straight into the oven. I had never tried or tasted so I can’t tell, but maybe it’s worth trying? Let us know what you find out. 🙂
But I also like to suggest to make your own steamer. I quickly explain the steamer set up in this post. Give it a try!
https://www.justonecookbook.com/steamed-vegetables-with-miso-sesame-sauce/
Nami, thank you for the prompt reply!
I tried some recipe for baking and in general it turned out good. Though I should say butter in a dough makes it harder to knead and mold so some of anko just got out eventually ^^`
Going to try make a steamer and try traditional recipe next time.
Good luck, and keep me posted! xoxo
I’d like to make these manju to give to someone, but I don’t know if they have a steamer…is it possible to refrigerate these for a day or so, and microwave them to warm them up? Are they alright eaten at a cool temperature?
Thank you very much 🙂
Hi Natalie! I recommend microwaving the manju with lower wattage but a bit longer. Strong heat won’t work, so make sure to reduce the power. Should work, and I really hope it’ll work. 🙂
That’s a great idea for homemade cake flour 😛 Great recipes!
Thank you Emma!