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Avocado Cashew Ham Sandwich

This is a modern, trendy, and very popular sandwich style in Chinese bakeries, cafes, and convenience stores (especially in first- and second-tier cities). 



It combines creamy avocado, crunchy roasted cashews, savory ham, and often a touch of sweetness or umami from Chinese-style condiments, all layered between soft milk bread or toast. 

The result is rich, balanced, fresh, and satisfying — a perfect quick breakfast, lunch, or snack.

Ingredients (makes 2 large or 4 smaller sandwiches)Main filling
  • Ripe avocados — 2 medium (about 300–350 g flesh)
  • Roasted cashew nuts (unsalted or lightly salted) — 60–80 g (roughly chopped or crushed)
  • Ham slices — 6–8 thin slices (Chinese-style luncheon meat, honey ham, or smoked ham)
  • Japanese-style mayonnaise (Kewpie preferred) — 3–5 tbsp
  • Lemon juice — 1–2 tsp (prevents browning and adds brightness)
  • Salt — pinch
  • Ground black pepper or white pepper — pinch
  • Optional Chinese bakery touches:
    • ½–1 tsp light soy sauce or oyster sauce (for subtle umami)
    • ½ tsp sugar or honey (for slight sweetness, common in Chinese versions)
BreadOptional add-ins & toppings
  • Lettuce leaves or baby spinach — a few pieces
  • Sliced tomato or cucumber — 4–6 thin slices
  • Cheese slice (cheddar or processed) — 2–4 pieces (some modern versions add it)
  • Honey or condensed milk — for light drizzling on top
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Prepare the avocado-cashew filling
    • Cut avocados in half, remove pit, scoop flesh into a bowl.
    • Mash with a fork until creamy but still slightly chunky (not completely smooth — some texture is nice).
    • Immediately add lemon juice, pinch of salt, pepper, and optional soy sauce/sugar. Mix well.
    • Stir in chopped/crushed roasted cashews — they add crunch and nutty aroma.
    • Taste and adjust seasoning — it should be creamy, mildly tangy, nutty, and savory with a hint of sweetness.
  2. Toast the bread (optional but recommended)
    • Lightly toast the bread slices until golden and fragrant (toaster or oven at 160°C/320°F for 3–4 minutes).
    • While warm, spread a thin layer of softened butter or margarine on one side of each slice (creates a moisture barrier and adds richness).
  3. Assemble the sandwich
    • Place a slice of buttered bread on a clean surface (buttered side up).
    • Spread a generous layer (about 3–4 tbsp) of avocado-cashew mixture evenly, leaving a small border.
    • Layer 2–3 thin ham slices on top.
    • Optional: add lettuce, tomato/cucumber slices, or cheese for extra layers.
    • Top with another buttered bread slice (buttered side down).
    • Gently press down. Trim crusts if you want the neat bakery look (very common in China).
  4. Slice & finish
    • Cut the sandwich diagonally into 2 triangles (or into 3 long strips — classic Chinese convenience store style).
    • Optional: lightly drizzle honey or condensed milk on the cut surface for that signature sweet touch.
    • Garnish with a few extra crushed cashews or a sprinkle of black sesame seeds if desired.
  5. Serve
    • Serve immediately at room temperature or slightly chilled — best when the bread is still soft and the filling is fresh.
    • Wrap tightly in cling film if taking away (common for breakfast on the go in China).
    • Enjoy with coffee, milk tea, or soy milk — perfect as breakfast or afternoon snack.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Avocado ripeness — Use perfectly ripe avocados (soft but not mushy). Too hard = bland; too soft = watery.
  • Cashew crunch → Roast raw cashews lightly (dry pan, 3–5 min) for maximum aroma. Crush roughly — whole pieces add better texture.
  • Ham choice → Chinese-style honey ham or luncheon meat is most authentic. Smoked ham or turkey ham works too.
  • Bread → Soft, slightly sweet milk bread is ideal. If unavailable, use thick-cut brioche or Japanese shokupan.
  • Moisture control → Butter the bread and drain any excess avocado liquid — prevents soggy bread.
  • Variations
    • Add sliced boiled egg or cheese for “deluxe” version.
    • For spicy: mix sriracha or chili crisp into the avocado.
    • For lighter: use Greek yogurt + a little mayo instead of full mayo.
  • Storage → Best eaten same day. If storing, wrap tightly and refrigerate up to 6–8 hours (avocado may brown slightly).
This sandwich is creamy, nutty, savory-sweet, and incredibly satisfying — a modern Chinese bakery favorite.

Honey Bean Waffles

This is a trendy, popular street-food / bakery item in China (especially in cities like Shanghai, Guangzhou, and online dessert shops).



 It features a crisp-on-the-outside, soft-and-chewy-on-the-inside Hong Kong-style waffle (also called bubble waffle or egg waffle) filled with sweet red bean paste (or adzuki bean paste) and often topped with honey, condensed milk, whipped cream, and more red beans for extra indulgence.

Ingredients (makes 4–6 large waffles)Waffle batter
  • All-purpose flour — 150 g (1¼ cups)
  • Cornstarch — 30 g (¼ cup) — for extra crispiness
  • Baking powder — 1 tsp
  • Baking soda — ¼ tsp
  • Salt — ⅛ tsp
  • Eggs — 2 large
  • Milk (whole or evaporated) — 180–200 ml (¾–⅞ cup, adjust for batter consistency)
  • Sugar — 50–60 g (¼–⅓ cup, adjust sweetness)
  • Unsalted butter (melted) — 40 g (about 3 tbsp)
  • Vanilla extract — ½ tsp (optional)
Honey bean filling & toppings
  • Sweet red bean paste ( canned or homemade) — 200–300 g (about ¾–1 cup)
  • Honey — 3–4 tbsp (for drizzling)
  • Condensed milk — 2–4 tbsp (for drizzling)
  • Whipped cream or fresh cream — optional, for piping or dolloping
  • Toasted sesame seeds or crushed peanuts — optional garnish
  • Extra red beans or red bean paste — for topping
EquipmentStep-by-Step Instructions
  1. Make the waffle batter
    • In a large bowl, whisk together flour, cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
    • In another bowl, beat eggs + sugar until pale and slightly thickened (1–2 minutes).
    • Add milk, melted butter, and vanilla extract to the egg mixture. Whisk until smooth.
    • Gradually pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients while whisking until just combined (do not overmix — a few small lumps are fine).
    • Let the batter rest 15–30 minutes at room temperature (this helps the texture become lighter and crispier).
  2. Prepare the honey bean filling
    • If using canned sweet red bean paste, stir it well to loosen.
    • Optional: Warm the red bean paste slightly (microwave 20–30 seconds) so it’s easier to spread or pipe.
    • Transfer to a piping bag with a wide tip (or use a spoon) — set aside.
  3. Cook the bubble waffles
    • Preheat your bubble waffle iron according to the manufacturer’s instructions (usually medium-high heat, around 180–200°C / 350–390°F).
    • Lightly brush both sides of the iron with neutral oil or butter (use a paper towel — very thin layer).
    • Pour batter into the lower mold until it almost reaches the top of the bubbles (about ¾ full — it will spread when closed).
    • Close the iron firmly. Cook 2½–4 minutes, flipping once halfway through (time depends on your iron — aim for golden-brown with crisp edges).
    • Open carefully — the waffle should release easily. If it sticks, brush more oil next time.
    • Repeat with remaining batter. Keep cooked waffles warm in a low oven (100°C / 210°F) if making multiple.
  4. Fill and finish
    • While the waffle is still hot and flexible, quickly spread or pipe a generous layer of red bean paste over one half (or the entire surface).
    • Fold the waffle in half (half-moon shape) or roll it loosely into a cone/cigar shape while still warm (it firms up quickly).
    • Drizzle generously with honey and condensed milk.
    • Optional: top with a dollop of whipped cream, extra red beans, toasted sesame seeds, or crushed peanuts.
  5. Serve
    • Serve immediately while warm — the contrast between crispy exterior, soft chewy interior, and creamy-sweet filling is best fresh.
    • Eat by hand or with a fork — it’s messy in the best way!
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Bubble iron temperature — Too hot = burnt outside, raw inside. Too low = pale and soggy. Test one first and adjust.
  • Batter consistency — Should be thick but pourable (like pancake batter). If too thick, add 1–2 tbsp more milk.
  • Red bean paste — Use good-quality canned sweetened red bean paste (not the chunky unsweet kind). Warm it slightly so it spreads easily.
  • Folding timing — Fold while hot — the waffle hardens fast and will crack if cooled too much.
  • Variations
    • Fill with custard cream, matcha cream, chocolate spread, or peanut butter.
    • Top with ice cream, fresh fruit, or boba pearls for a dessert version.
    • For lighter version: use less sugar in batter and skip condensed milk.
  • Storage → Best eaten fresh. Reheat in toaster oven 2–3 minutes to crisp up (filling may soften).
This dessert is crispy, chewy, sweet, and full of nostalgic Chinese bakery vibes — a perfect treat for any time of day.

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Avocado Cashew Ham Sandwich

This is a modern, trendy, and very popular sandwich style in Chinese bakeries, cafes, and convenience stores (especially in first- and secon...

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