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.
- 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)
- Soft milk bread ( Hong Kong-style Pullman loaf) — 4–8 thick slices (or Japanese shokupan, brioche, or thick white toast)
- Butter or margarine — 2–3 tbsp, softened (for spreading)
- 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
- 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.
- 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).
- 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).
- 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.
- 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.
- 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).