Ms Wu's home in Yuan Zhongfang community also has many moon cakes every year. Her method is to eat moon cakes for breakfast. In order to avoid boredom, she only puts a small plate of moon cakes on the dining table every day and eats them once every two or three days. "Isn't the moon cake a little greasy? I specially served it with tofu and pickles. Most of the remaining boxes of moon cakes in our family were eliminated in this way. " Ms. Wu said.
Tip 2: Make sweet porridge.
"You can mix these fillings with some peanuts and rice you like and cook them into sweet porridge." Ms. Li said, "I treat leftover moon cakes like this every year. Children especially like to drink moon cake porridge cooked by me. "
Tip 3: Processing into steamed bread
Mr. Meng, who lives in the Cultural Greentown Community, said that some moon cakes contain lotus seed paste and bean paste, which are good raw materials and can be taken out as stuffing steamed buns, and the taste is quite good.
Tip 4: Give it to low-income people.
It is easier for Mr. Wu, a citizen, to dispose of the remaining moon cakes and give them away directly. "Although we don't like to eat moon cakes, some poor people don't want to buy them. After the Mid-Autumn Festival every year, I will send moon cakes to vagrants on the street, migrant workers on construction sites and low-income households in the community. " Mr. Wu told reporters that in order to respect these low-income people, he usually doesn't send moon cakes many days after the Mid-Autumn Festival, but only when the moon cakes are about to go bad. But by the Mid-Autumn Festival, it is estimated that some moon cakes may not be eaten, so they are given directly to groups in need.
Mr. Wu said: "Our home is not far away, and there are often more than a dozen migrant workers waiting to work there. This Mid-Autumn Festival, I gave them four boxes of endless moon cakes.
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