Knead the dough, pleat 18 folds with your own hands, simmer the broth yourself — then eat everything you made. A Taipei cooking class is the activity you'll remember long after the trip, not just another meal.
Check this before booking to make sure you get your money's worth.
You're not paying for food — you're paying for understanding, technique and a story.
One honest caveat: a single class will not make you a dumpling chef. You will leave with a basic skill and a much richer understanding of why Taiwanese food tastes the way it does — which makes every subsequent meal in Taiwan (and at home) more interesting. You will start noticing details you used to walk past: the thinness of the skin, the fold count, the depth of the broth.
Each format suits a different traveller. Pick the one that matches what you want to take home.
Taipei's signature cooking experience — knead the dough, stretch it paper-thin, fill it with pork and pleat exactly 18 folds by hand. Steam and eat your own work. Instructors typically demonstrate and then give you generous hands-on time. Making a perfect pleat is harder than it looks, and that's entirely the point.
Taiwan's national dish looks deceptively simple but hides real depth in the broth. This class takes the longest of any popular format — you learn why the soup runs so dark and rich. If you've ever wondered how something so ordinary-looking can taste that complex, this is the answer.
A lighter, faster and very fun class — learn to make cong you bing (蔥油餅), the crispy-outside, tender-inside scallion flatbread, plus one or two other breakfast staples. The pace is quicker than a xiaolongbao session and well suited to families or groups who want an enjoyable experience without pressure.
Make bubble tea at its birthplace — plus 雪花冰 (Snowflake Ice), Taiwan's signature shaved-milk dessert. The most accessible class on this list: no serious knife work, often no open heat, and suitable for younger children too. Highly rated for group energy and the novelty of drinking something you assembled yourself.
A premium full-session covering 4–5 dishes from soup dumpling to dessert. The longest format, usually capped at a smaller group than standard classes. Best for travellers who want a genuinely deep culinary experience — or anyone who wants to make a special occasion out of a meal.
Note: specific studio names and providers change frequently — check Klook directly for available dates and the most current listings when you visit.
Most classes follow this structure. Minor variations exist between providers.
Arrive on time, sign in and receive your apron. The atmosphere is usually relaxed from the start — instructors are well aware that most guests have never made Taiwanese food before and pace accordingly.
Everything is already prepared — ingredients, seasonings, tools and gloves. You bring nothing. The instructor will walk you through each item before you begin.
The instructor demonstrates the full process from start to finish, explaining the technique and the reasoning behind each step — why knead for this long, why the water must be at this temperature, what "right" looks like versus "close enough".
The best part: you do every step yourself. The instructor circulates and gives individual guidance. Don't worry about perfection — every other person at the table is working through the same learning curve at the same time.
Your creations go in the steamer or on the heat. While you wait, there is usually more conversation about Taiwanese food culture. Then you eat everything you made — tea or another drink is usually included.
Most providers email a recipe sheet after the class so you can recreate the dishes at home. Some also send you off with a small keepsake — a packet of Taiwanese tea, a spice blend used during the session, or similar.
Let's be straightforward: a cooking class costs significantly more than eating the same food at a street stall or restaurant. The xiaolongbao you make in class will cost you 10–20× what a basket costs at a local shop. You are paying for something categorically different.
If your goal is to eat as much great xiaolongbao as possible across multiple shops at a reasonable price, read our complete Taipei Xiaolongbao guide. Or if you want to survey the full landscape of Taiwanese food before deciding, start with 25 Must-Try Taiwanese Dishes.
New sessions open regularly — Klook prices are often lower than booking direct at the studio, and verified reviews from past participants help you choose with confidence.
The Din Tai Fung legend, how to eat a soup dumpling without scalding yourself, and 8 great Taipei shops.
Read the Xiaolongbao Guide →The complete Taipei eater's guide — from lu rou fan and stinky tofu to bubble tea and mango shaved ice.
Open the 25-Dish Guide →Romantic activities in Taipei including cooking classes, special dinners and the best viewpoints at dusk.
See the Couples' Guide →Kid-friendly activities including cooking workshops, Taipei Zoo, Xpark and easy day trips.
See the Family Guide →Everything you need for a Taipei trip — hotels, attractions, transport, food and practical info.
Open the Taipei Guide →