Why is Tianjin’s “Goubuli” steamed buns called this name?

There are two folk theories about the origin of the name Goubuli steamed buns.

The first statement. At that time, there was a farm family in the suburbs of Tianjin. They were blessed with a son at the age of forty, and they named him "Gouzi" for peace. When Gouzi was fourteen years old, he came to Tianjin to learn crafts and worked as a waiter in a steamed food shop. Because Gouzi was clever, diligent and studious, he developed a good job. Later, Gouzi was unwilling to live under someone else's roof, so he set up his own bun stall. He invented the technology of water stuffing and semi-risen dough. The buns he made are soft in texture, fresh and not greasy. The appearance of the buns is like a blooming white chrysanthemum. The color, aroma, taste and shape are unique, attracting people from all over the world. People came to eat steamed buns, and the business was very prosperous. Gouzi was too busy with business to talk, so people said: "Gouzi sells steamed buns and ignores people." As time goes by, people called him Goubuli.

The second statement. A fourteen-year-old boy named Gao Guiyou came to Tianjin from his hometown in Yangcun, Wuqing County, and became a boy at the Liu Family Steamed Food Shop. This shop specializes in assorted steamed food and meat buns, and its customers are mostly boatmen, trackers, and vendors who go to and from the canal pier. Gao Guiyou specializes in making steamed buns in the store. Because of his strong personality when he was young, his parents gave him the nickname "Goubuli". With his little mind, the steamed buns he made were delicious, sold quickly, and were praised by people. When he was sixteen or seventeen years old, he used the money he saved to open a bun shop nearby. People got used to calling him by his nickname "Goubuli", and over time, they called the buns he sold "Goubuli". The buns are gone.

At that time, Yuan Shikai, the governor-general, praised the steamed buns after eating Goubuli, and then went to Beijing and the palace to offer the steamed buns to the Empress Dowager Cixi. The Empress Dowager Lafayette tasted the steamed stuffed buns and was very happy. He praised: "There are animals in the mountains, geese in the clouds, cattle and sheep in the hinterland, and fresh seafood from the sea. They are not as fragrant as Goubuli, and they can live longer if they eat them." From then on, Goubuli steamed buns became famous.