1, moon cakes are like little babies arguing with transparent dresses, sleeping in pink beds. Nanjing Zen
2. The moon is round in the Mid-Autumn Festival, and the moon cakes are sweet. Safe stuffing, happy skin, RMB box, platinum rope. Give blessings as express delivery and attach business cards as reunion.
The golden moon cakes give off a faint fragrance, which makes my mouth water.
4. Five kernels include almonds, walnuts, peanuts, sesame seeds and melon seeds. When you smell it, you will drool and can't wait to swallow it.
Moon cakes, also known as moon cakes, harvest cakes and reunion cakes, are one of the traditional delicacies of Han nationality in China. Moon cakes were originally used as sacrifices to worship the moon god.
Offering sacrifices to the moon is a very old custom in China, which is actually the worship of the "Moon God" by the ancients. Eating moon cakes and enjoying the moon in Mid-Autumn Festival is an indispensable custom in northern and southern China. Mooncakes symbolize a happy reunion. People regard them as holiday food, and use them to come to Yue Bai and give them to relatives and friends.
Cultural practices
Sacrificing the moon is a very old custom in China. Moon cakes are offerings to worship the moon god in ancient Mid-Autumn Festival, and they are also food for Mid-Autumn Festival. In ancient times, the Mid-Autumn Festival was held every year. Set up a big incense table and place sacrifices such as moon cakes and fruits. Under the moon, put the moon statue in the direction of the moon, and the red candle burns high. The whole family takes turns in Yue Bai, and then the housewife cuts the reunion moon cakes.
As an offering to worship the moon god, moon cakes have a long history. The word "moon cake" was first recorded in Wu's Dream in the Southern Song Dynasty. Watching the moon and eating moon cakes are the necessary customs of Mid-Autumn Festival in all parts of China. As the saying goes: "The moon cake is sweet and fragrant when it is full on August 15th".
Dietary customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival on the 15th day of August in the Han Chinese calendar. Su Dongpo, a great poet in the Song Dynasty, once praised moon cakes with a poem: "Small cakes are like chewing the moon, crisp and stuffed", from which we can see that ghee and sugar have been added to moon cakes in the Song Dynasty.