EASY Vietnamese Savory Puff Pastry with Ground Pork (Bánh Patê Sô)

savory puff pastry pork banh pate so

EASY Vietnamese Savory Puff Pastry with Ground Pork (Bánh Patê Sô) – Flaky, golden, bakery‑style Vietnamese puff pastries — made weeknight simple.

Bánh patê sô is one of those quietly perfect Vietnamese bakery snacks: buttery puff pastry, peppery pork filling, and a warmth that feels like childhood. Traditionally, the filling leans French‑Vietnamese — onion, black pepper, fish sauce, and sometimes wood ear mushroom for texture. This version keeps all the nostalgic flavor but streamlines the process so you can make a full batch in under an hour.

Store‑bought puff pastry does the heavy lifting. The filling mixes in one bowl. And the result is exactly what you want: crisp layers, juicy pork, and that signature black‑pepper aroma when you break one open.

What Is Bánh Patê Sô?

Patê sô (sometimes written pâté chaud) is a Vietnamese savory puff pastry influenced by French colonial baking. You’ll find it in Vietnamese bakeries next to bánh mì, pandan waffles, and steamed buns. The filling is simple — seasoned ground pork — but the flavor is unmistakably Vietnamese thanks to fish sauce, sugar, and lots of black pepper.

Patê sô is one of those French techniques Vietnam absorbed and quietly transformed. The pastry stayed French, but the filling shifted into something unmistakably Vietnamese — peppery pork, fish sauce, onion. It found its place in Vietnamese bakeries because it fits the rhythm of how we eat: warm, portable, satisfying with coffee. Over time, it became less of a borrowed idea and more of a natural part of the Vietnamese bakery landscape.

What Makes This Version Easy

EASY Vietnamese Savory Puff Pastry with Ground Pork (Bánh Patê Sô)
  • Uses store‑bought puff pastry
  • One‑bowl pork filling
  • No special shaping — squares or rectangles both work
  • Freezer‑friendly for future bakes
  • Perfect for breakfast, snacks, or hosting

Flavor Notes

  • Black pepper is the defining flavor — don’t hold bac
  • Fish sauce seasons the pork without making it “fishy”
  • Onion + garlic melt into the filling
  • Optional wood ear mushroom adds a subtle bounce and authenticity
Vietnamese pork puff pastry banh pate so

EASY Vietnamese Savory Puff Pastry with Ground Pork (Bánh Patê Sô)

A modern, streamlined take on the classic Vietnamese bakery patê sô. Store‑bought puff pastry keeps this weeknight‑friendly, while the filling stays true to the nostalgic flavors: black pepper, fish sauce, onion, and a touch of sweetness. Perfect warm with coffee or tea.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Course Appetizer, dinner, lunch
Cuisine French, Vietnamese

Equipment

  • Baking sheet
  • Parchment paper
  • Mixing bowl
  • Fork for sealing
  • Pastry brush

Ingredients
  

  • 1 lb ground pork 80–85% lean
  • 1 small yellow onion finely diced
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 tbsp fish sauce
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 tsp soy sauce optional, for color
  • 1 tbsp finely chopped wood ear mushroom optional
  • 1 egg for binding

Pastry

  • 1 box Store‑bought puff pastry, thawed but still col
  • 1 Egg (for egg wash)

Instructions
 

Make the filling

  • Combine ground pork, onion, garlic, fish sauce, sugar, black pepper, soy sauce (if using), wood ear mushroom, and 1 egg. Mix gently until just combined. Chill for 15 minutes to firm up.

Prep the pastry

  • Heat oven to 400°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment. Cut puff pastry into 3–4 inch squares.

Assemble

  • Place a spoonful of filling in the center of each square.
  • For triangles: fold into a half‑moon and crimp edges with a fork.
  • For rectangles: top with another square and seal edges.

Bake

  • Brush tops with egg wash. Bake 20–25 minutes until puffed and deeply golden. Let rest 5 minutes before serving.

Notes

  • Finely diced onion melts into the filling; avoid large chunks.
  • Black pepper is the defining flavor — keep it bold.
  • Serve warm with Vietnamese iced coffee or hot tea.
  • To freeze: assemble, freeze on a tray, then bake from frozen (add ~5 minutes).
Keyword Asian meatballs, meatpie, vietnamese puff pastry, pate so, banh pate so, vietnamese bakery recipe, ground pork pastry, vietnamese savory pastry, lemongrass cooking

The Perfect Party Side: Bánh Patê Sô

Patê sô is an effortless hosting win: they bake up golden, stay crisp on the table, and feel special without any extra styling. You can serve them warm on a board with chili crisp, Maggi, or a simple herb salad, and guests can help themselves. They hold well, they travel well, and they make a brunch or cocktail spread feel more considered with almost no added work.

Related Easy Hosting Meals:

Serving Ideas

  • With Vietnamese iced coffee (cà phê sữa đá
  • As part of a brunch spread
  • Warm with chili crisp or Maggi
  • Packed into lunchboxes

Make-Ahead & Freezer Tips

Patê sô freezes beautifully. Assemble, freeze on a tray, then bake straight from frozen. Add a few extra minutes to the bake time and they puff up perfectly.

Browse Make-Ahead Recipes:

FAQ: Vietnamese Savory Puff Pastry with Ground Pork

Can I use ground chicken or turkey instead of pork?

Yes — ground chicken or turkey works well. Choose a slightly higher‑fat option so the filling stays juicy. Add an extra splash of fish sauce if using leaner meat.

Do I need to cook the pork filling before baking?

No. The filling cooks fully inside the pastry. Keeping it raw helps the mixture stay moist and tender.

Why is black pepper so important in patê sô?

Black pepper is the defining flavor of Vietnamese bakery‑style patê sô. It gives the filling warmth, aroma, and that nostalgic “Vietnamese deli” profile.

Can I make these ahead?

Yes. Assemble the pastries, freeze them on a tray, then store in a freezer bag. Bake straight from frozen and add a few extra minutes.

How do I keep the puff pastry from getting soggy?

Keep everything cold. Chill the filling, work quickly, and avoid over‑stuffing. Cold pastry puffs higher and stays crisp.

What dipping sauces go with patê sô?

They’re great on their own, but you can serve them with Maggi, chili crisp, or a simple squeeze of lime.

How do I reheat leftovers?

Bake at 350°F for 8–10 minutes until crisp again. Avoid microwaving — it softens the pastry.

Can I add vegetables to the filling?

Yes. Finely diced carrot, jicama, or wood ear mushroom add texture without changing the classic flavor.


Browse Easy Banh Mi Recipes


Explore Latest Vietnamese Recipes

More to Explore