The poem describing the taste of mooncakes is as follows:
1. It has a special shape and is made of cold utensils, and its name is Congshi Single Core. The heart of a pastry maker is clever, and the appearance is as beautiful as the moon. Yuan Jinglan's "Ode to Mooncakes"
2. Mooncakes are filled with peach meat fillings, and ice cream is sweetened with cane sugar frosting. Qing Dynasty. Yang Guangfu's "Songnan Caifu"
3. The Mid-Autumn Festival is here again, the fragrance of cinnamon seeds is floating, and the blessings are solid. "Mooncakes with Guizhi Fragrance for Mid-Autumn Festival" by Chen Baochen of the Qing Dynasty
4. The round cakes are as round as the moon, which is a sign of good luck and good fortune. Having more than enough food means feeling loved and cared for by one's family, and Pisces is the same as every year. "Mid-Autumn Festival" Modern Shi Jingchen
5. Make a silver toad and a purple mansion shadow, and a pair of toads and rabbits fill the world. Suddenly Chang'e stole the medicine and ran into Guanghan but could not return. "Youzhou Customs" by Peng Yunzhang of the Qing Dynasty
6. Make a silver toad and a purple mansion shadow, and a pair of toads and rabbits fill the world. Suddenly Chang'e stole the medicine and ran into Guanghan but could not return. "Youzhou Customs" by Peng Yunzhang of the Qing Dynasty
7. Half of the palace flowers are still broken on the plate, and the phoenix and dragon are carved from the inner house. "Two of the Mooncakes in the Palace on New Year's Eve"
8. Mid-Autumn Festival fresh fruits are arranged on crystal plates, and the cakes are round and divided into osmanthus and cold. We gather together to eat together without going out, and we have to have group music with the bright moon. "Jilin Chronicle Poems" by Shen Zhaozhen at the end of the Qing Dynasty
9. The drunken immortal asked the sky, and the small mooncakes were like the bright moon.
10. The biscuits are like chewing the moon, with crispy and sweet fillings in the middle. Taste the taste silently, and shed tears of lovesickness on the towel. "Mooncakes" by Su Shi of the Northern Song Dynasty
Extended information:
Mooncakes, also known as mooncakes, harvest cakes, reunion cakes, etc., are one of the traditional delicacies of the Han nationality in China. Moon cakes were originally used as offerings to worship the moon god.
Sacrificing the moon is a very ancient custom in China. It is actually an activity of worship of the "Moon God" by the ancients. Eating moon cakes and admiring the moon during the Mid-Autumn Festival are indispensable customs in the Mid-Autumn Festival in northern and southern China. Moon cakes symbolize reunion, and people regard them as festive food, using them to worship the moon and give them to relatives and friends.
Moon cakes have a long history as offerings to worship the moon god. The term mooncake was first recorded in the "Meng Liang Lu" written by Wu Zimu in the Southern Song Dynasty. Mooncakes have been integrated with the dietary customs of various places, and have developed into Cantonese-style, Jin-style, Beijing-style, Soviet-style, Chaozhou-style, Yunnan-style mooncakes, etc., which are loved by people from all over the north and south of China.