Showing posts with label melon seeds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label melon seeds. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2011

Mid-Autumn Festival - 中秋节

Today is the 15th Day of the Eight Moon and is 中秋节or Mid-Autumn Festival. 

In the past, the family sat down to a sumptious dinner and then all adjourned to the flat roof-top of our old house to worship the Moon Goddess .....


Then all drank tea and ate melon seeds and mooncakes while the children carried Chinese lanterns.

Nowadays, it is just dinner and then off to the garden to play fireworks or send off  Chinese flying lanterns (孔明燈, kongmingdeng).

Of course,  the Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋节) is still mostly about family gatherings and eating mooncakes. When it cmes to mooncakes, there are now huge varieties of mookcakes in all flavours, shapes and hues. Following are some varieties we have at home....gifts from families and friends!

 Green Tea 禄茶
Teochew 潮州
  Baked 烤
  Shanghai 上海
 Snowskin 冰皮
 
Soya Bean Paste 豆沙
White Paste 白糕
 Air-Dried 风
Soft 软糕

Whichever mooncake you enjoy, just remember one of the stories behind this festive tradition - STAND UP TO OPPRESSION.

Happy Mid-Autum Festival! Enjoy your mooncakes!

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Mid-Autumn Festival - 中秋節

Tomorrow is the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month and is thus the Mid-Autumn Festival or 中秋節 (Zhongqiujie)。There are lots of legends and stories related to this festival - so if you are interested, just google for them! Mooncakes are traditionally Chinese pastries generally eaten during the Mid-Autumn Festival. As for the fillings, it looks like the variety is endless - so I will not write more here!

Here to the home-made mooncakes!


The green one is the snow skin mooncake and the brown one is a baked mooncake. The filling inside the baked one is of lotus seed paste and melon seeds. These days, most of the fillings used are low sugar.


This is a small one - about 4 cm in diameter and the filling is a pineapple paste. Most, if not all, the commercial pineapple paste available now  are too sweet for me.


What is  Mid-Autumn Festival  without melon seed and, of course, the pamelo?


 Actually, my main interest in mooncakes is not in the actual moon cakes but in the moulds that produce the moon cakes!  Below is a  variety of the moulds - both wooden (previously hand-crafted, but now machined) and plastic - used for making mooncakes.


This is a wooden mould and is one of the four-in-one type, meaning that the four faces of the wooden block have four different patterns.

 
 
 

The following wooden moulds are stand alone units. 

The unicorn ..... 

The pig ....

The large square ....

The large oval and small round ....

These days , plastic moulds are also available and they are generally about 1/5 the price of the wooden ones though some of the better wooden ones fetch very much high prices. Plastic ones are easier to use BUT the quality of the relief in the patterns on the mooncakes is sharply reduced.

The large and small round moulds ....
 
The sow and five piglets ....  
 
In recent years, various manufacturers have also introduced the plastic moulds with springs for easy release of the mooncakes from the moulds ...
 
 
 

It is important to note that all the moulds seen here are for the home users. They are not used by the professional mooncake makers! Each of the professional mooncake makers will have their own set of hand-crafted wooden moulds with their own intricate unique patterns - costing thousands of ringgits, if not more. 

Here to a Happy Mid-Autumn Festival!