How to draw Mid-Autumn Festival delicacies is as follows: How to draw a simple moon cake: first draw the round fillings on the moon cake, then draw wavy lines, and then draw layers of lace.
Paint the filling yellow, paint the lace brown, and paint the remaining part dark brown, and a simple mooncake is ready.
Moon cakes, also known as moon cakes, harvest cakes, reunion cakes, etc., are one of the traditional Han Chinese delicacies.
Moon cakes were originally used as offerings to worship the moon god.
Sacrifice to 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.
Sacrifice to the moon is a very ancient custom in China. Moon cakes were an offering to worship the moon god during the Mid-Autumn Festival in ancient times, and they are also a seasonal food during the Mid-Autumn Festival.
In ancient times, moon worship was held every Mid-Autumn Festival night.
Set up a large incense table and place mooncakes, fruits and other offerings.
Under the moon, the moon statue is placed in the direction of the moon, with red candles burning high. The whole family worships the moon in turn, and then the housewife cuts the reunion moon cakes.