Jianbing is the ultimate Chinese street-side savory crepe: a thin wheat-and-mung-bean pancake wrapped around a fried egg, crisp fried dough, hoisin, chili sauce, herbs and pickles. This home version uses a non-stick skillet and easy-to-find substitutes to capture that iconic hand-held snack in under 40 minutes.
Prep Time15 mins
Cook Time25 mins
Total Time40 mins
Servings4
Yield4 stuffed crepes
Nutrition Facts
Per serving (estimated)
- 385 kcalCalories
- 16 gFat
- 3.5 gSaturated Fat
- 42 gCarbs
- 3 gFiber
- 6 gSugar
- 16 gProtein
- 720 mgSodium
- 380 mgPotassium
- 110 mgCalcium
- 4.5 mgIron
- 12 mgVitamin C
- 220 mcgVitamin A
Ingredients
For the crepe batter
- 1 cup (130 g) all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup (30 g) mung bean flour or chickpea flour
- 1 1/4 cups (300 ml) cold water
- 1/2 tsp fine sea salt
- 1/2 tsp ground turmeric
- 2 tbsp toasted black sesame seeds
For assembling the crepes
- 4 large eggs
- 3 tbsp neutral oil such as canola or grapeseed, divided
- 4 cups loosely packed baby spinach or shredded romaine
- 1/2 cup fresh cilantro leaves
- 4 scallions, finely sliced
- 1/2 cup pickled mustard greens or pickled daikon, finely chopped
- 4 crispy fried wonton wrappers or 2 sheets baocui broken into 4 pieces
- 4 tbsp hoisin sauce
- 2 tbsp Chinese chili sauce or sambal oelek
- 2 tbsp sweet bean sauce (tianmianjiang)
Directions
- In a bowl whisk the all-purpose flour, mung bean flour, salt, turmeric, sesame seeds and water for 2 to 3 minutes until completely smooth and the consistency of thin pancake batter; set aside to rest while you prep the toppings.
- Arrange every filling ingredient in small bowls within arm's reach of the stove so assembly moves quickly once the crepe hits the pan.
- Heat an 8-inch non-stick skillet over medium heat and brush with about 1 teaspoon of oil. Pour in roughly 1/3 cup batter, swirl to coat the pan in a thin even layer, and cook 60 to 90 seconds until the surface looks dry and the edges lift slightly.
- Crack one egg directly onto the center of the crepe, break the yolk, and use the back of a spoon to spread the egg into a thin layer. Scatter one quarter of the sliced scallions over the egg and cook 45 to 60 seconds more until the egg sets.
- Flip the crepe egg-side down, then drizzle 1 tablespoon hoisin, 1/2 tablespoon chili sauce and 1/2 tablespoon sweet bean sauce across the surface in thin lines.
- Working quickly, pile 1 cup spinach, a handful of cilantro, 2 tablespoons pickled greens and one crispy wonton wrapper onto the center third of the crepe.
- Using a spatula, fold the bottom edge up over the fillings, fold in the two sides like an envelope, then roll forward into a tight cylinder. Slide onto a plate and repeat with the remaining batter and fillings, brushing the pan with oil between crepes.
- Serve immediately while hot and crisp, with extra hoisin and chili sauce on the side for dipping.
Cook’s Notes
- True batter consistency is crucial: it should coat the back of a spoon but still run freely off the whisk; add water a tablespoon at a time if it thickens while resting.
- Mung bean flour is traditional and gives the crepe its slightly springy, gluten-free-friendly texture; chickpea flour is the easiest substitute and adds a nutty note.
- Crispy fried wonton wrappers stand in for the classic baocui (fried cracker) and keep well in a paper bag at room temperature so they stay shatter-crisp inside the warm crepe.
- Lightly toast the hoisin sauce with a splash of water for 30 seconds in a small pan before drizzling; this loosens it and deepens its caramel flavor.
- For a vegan version, skip the egg and instead spread a thin layer of scrambled silken tofu seasoned with a pinch of salt and white pepper.
- A cast-iron or well-seasoned carbon-steel skillet will give you the most authentic lacy, golden edges; non-stick works fine but will not brown as deeply.










