mooncake festival gift | how mooncake festival celebrate and mooncake making and mooncake festival gift

 Moment, Tuesday 21st September, is theMid-Autumn Festival in China which, along with Chinese New Year, Dragon Boat Festival, and Qing mooncake festival gift, is one of the most important carnivals in the Chinese timetable. In this post, Bryan Sitch and Fang Zong describe some of the stories associated with this jubilee, also known as the Moon Festival, explaining the significance of mooncakes and rabbits, amongst other effects.


There are numerous legends associated with theMid-Autumn( or Moon/ Mooncake) Festival. We do n’t propose to retell all of the stories then but will concentrate on one with close connections to a document in Manchester Museum’s collection, featuring Chang ’ e the moon goddess

The story goes that one day, some,000 times agone , ten suns  appeared in the sky, ruining earth with terrible heat and failure. Determined to relieve the suffering,mooncake festival gift  a great sportswoman, Hou Yi, shot down nine of the suns, saving life on Earth. As a price the Queen Mother gave him the catholicon of eternal life. Hou Yi married the beautiful Chang ’ e, a menial to the King of Heaven. When one of Hou Yi’s followers tried to steal the catholicon, Chang ’ e swallowed it, turning her into a goddess and making her immortal. She set up herself floating up to the moon. Hou Yi was helpless to help and because he could n’t join Chang ’ e, he put out food immolations which were round, like the moon. This came a custom at the time of the full- moon in the afterlife, and the tradition came part of theMid-Autumn Festival or Mooncake Festival, when it's customary to give musketeers, associates and cousins gifts of mooncakes to celebrate.

Mooncakes are made with sweet bean paste in a rich confection cover, but they also contain the thralldom of an egg which gives them an suddenly savoury taste too! They're made in special moulds which leave intricate patterns on the outside of the mooncake. It's estimated that further than1.48 billion moon galettes are eaten by Chinese communities in landmass China and throughout the world during the Moon Festival each time. In this health-conscious age, we should also point out that mooncakes have lots of calories in them and eating too numerous can be bad for the midriff! I suppose they're original to British hash pies at Christmas.

Cassia is a factory with artistic significance in China and strong connections with the moon, featuring in one of the four legends about the Moon Festival. In this story a man called Wu Gang couldn't settle in any of the internships he took up and ultimately decided he wanted to be immortal rather. He prayed an immortal living in the coming vale to educate him, but formerly again, Wu Gang failed; showing no tolerance to work on any of the tasks assigned to him. As a discipline, the immortal banished Wu Gang to the moon and told him that he could only return to earth once he'd diced down a large Cassia tree. This being a magical tree, the Cassia regenerated overnight and, try as he might, Wu Gang could noway fully cut it down, so remains on the moon to this day. The magical Cassia may well be a reference to the regenerative parcels of the Chinese Cinnamon tree. The dinghy of this tree is an important source of the spice cinnamon and, thanks to the continual regrowth of the dinghy, it can be cut and gathered time on time read more

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