A few new mooncakes that I like


black sesame snow skin rum raisin lin yoong
has a very mellow sweet taste that is both cooling and refreshing.
Almost taste like ice-cream, the centre filling goes excellently
with the seasame seed 'cold skin'. One of the best for new
mooncakes.



'Salt' moon cakes (suyan yuebing) is the one on the top right hand corner,
which has a delicate sweet, salty and clean taste that is like no other.
You'll have to taste it to understand. It doesn't bear with the extra rich
taste like a lot of other traditional mooncakes. Yet it has a classic
taste and bite that will linger in your mouth even after a long while.



black diamond mooncake bamboo charcoal
has a single yolk in the centre with lotus paste and a little mix of nuts.
Covered in edible bamboo charcoal, the taste bears contemporary flavour that
is now considered as one of the most popular mooncakes in the market.




5 kernel moon cake (wuren yuebing)
is healthy as it is delicious. As the name implies, the mooncake consists of 5 differnt kinds of seeds
and nuts chopped into finer pieces. The mixture is then mixed with maltose to hold them up together in a paste.
This mixture can differ from dialect groups in the Chinese race. Some add in delicate pieces of jinhua huotui (ham)
and further sweeten with wintermelon. It is usually the best among the traditional mooncakes
and it is usually the most expensive too.

I didn't have a lot of time enjoying the Moon cake festival this year.
But it seems that I have a few very nice surprises for mooncakes that
cheer my days up. --- Karen Fu

Mooncake Festival

August 9, 2010

P8074079-1
The Mooncake festival falls on the 15th day of the 8th moon, of the Chinese Lunar Calendar every year, meaning, it is just around the corner.

When you wish upon a moon..

In my country, this is a big deal for the Chinese who look forward to eating these little delectable ‘parcels from the moon’. No that’s not even completely accurate. Most people in Malaysia, even the non-Chinese look forward to eating Mooncake and this is the time where beautifully packaged Mooncakes are exchanged as gifts and tokens of appreciation. Many Chinese restaurants now have the  ‘halal’ version of these sweet Chinese desserts and to tell you the truth they taste so good it is hard to tell which ones are halal and which ones are not these days. Not only that, the new buzz is for restaurants and mooncake makers to try and top each other in producing new contemporary flavours. From solid chocolate mooncakes to unusual yam or charcoal baked flavours, you name it, they’ve thought of it.. and now, it’s for sale!
Anyway, if you are wondering how it all started, the Mooncake Festival or Lantern Festival or Mid-Autumn Festival is believed to have originated from the ancient ceremony of Sacrificing to the Moon Goddess for the year’s end harvest. This is when families return to celebrate and give thanks for the year’s bounty.

P8074080

Why the moon?

The Mid-Autumn Festival is a traditional festivity for the Han people of China plus the other minority tribes. The custom of worshiping the moon can be traced back for yoinks. The Han would sacrifice to the Moon Goddess in thanksgiving for the year’s crops and harvest. Families would return from the fields to celebrate – this was normally a time of reunion and mooncakes would be baked and exchanged as gifts. It was a really cool tradition to give 13 mooncakes as a gift because this symbolized a full year. Why 13? well, the extra one represents the leap year (my ancestors were really smart people!)

How did the Mooncake Festival become so widely celebrated?

During the Yuan dynasty, China was ruled by the Mongolians. Rebels plotted to overthrow the ruling government and they did this by baking tactical warfare instructions into the mooncakes. . As the Mid-Autumn Festival drew near, the rebels ordered cakes baked and distributed throughout the villages.
Needless to say, the tactics worked and on the night of the Festival, the rebels with the help of local villagers, successfully overthrew the government! After this, it was the reign of the Ming Dynasty as we know it. And that my friend, is the true meaning behind the Mooncake.
So the next time you indulge in a piece of mooncake, make sure you gaze up at the moon and contemplate just how pivotal this innocent-looking, sweet dessert was in carving the fate and history of the Chinese.

Mooncake is celebration but mooncake is also creation..

P8074159
Red Yeast Sweet Potato
Red yeast filling with sweet potato skin and paste. Red yeast has an ability to lower cholesterol but don’t ask about the sugar!
P8074152
Espresso Chestnut
An extremely creative coffee skin and paste with chestnut to add a nutty flavour to the mooncake.. talk about getting nuts over mooncake!
P8074109
German Black Forest
Chocolate skin with blackcurrant and chocolate chip.. super sweet and chocolate-y this one!
P8074103-2

Charcoal-Baked Yam
Delicious yam paste with tantalizing bamboo-charcoal skin.. one of my favourites!
P8074086
Red Bean Green Tea
This is the classic mooncake with a read bean paste and green tea center.. only for green tea lovers.

The Mooncakes featured in this post are from the Equatorial Hotel Kuala Lumpur, and they include both classic as well as contemporary flavours. Contemporary flavours range from RM18-19 per piece whilst the Original range from RM14-20 the most expensive being the double yolk. All these mooncakes are all HALAL.




Finally..

P8084362

this Mooncake Festival.. make sure you balance your Yin and Yang..

Bamboo Hazelnut a unique combination of bamboo-charcoal skin with hazelnut paste and chocolate goes hand in hand with.. Charcoal-Baked Yam a gorgeous yam paste with an amazing, aromatic bamboo-charcoal skin.
These two were by far, Cumi & Ciki’s favourites!


Our review on the Blogger’s Event at the Spanking new Golden Phoenix Chinese Restaurant at Equatorial Hotel, up next. The food was so good, it deserves a post all on its own.. stay tuned!

Add:
HOTEL EQUATORIAL KUALA LUMPUR
Jalan Sultan Ismail
50250 Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
Tel: +60 3 2161 7777
Fax: +60 3 2161 9020
Check out their mooncake homepage here
    Related Posts with Thumbnails
    Posted on Monday, August 9th, 2010 under All Posts, Chinese cuisine, Culture, Desserts, Food Type, Misc. Subscribe to this comment feed. Leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
    Moon cake hybrids always fascinate me. The entire making process involves not only the style and image of the packagings and the entire look of the mooncakes; but also the baking skills that are involved. Many other nationalities have been trying to emulate the mooncake making process and come up with variants in different ingredients like ice cream, cookies, wine, fruit, cream, nuts, egg yolk, etc.
    However the classic ones are still the traditional ones. But once in a while, we need some special varieties. So enjoy the selection above. I'm having mine for brunch. Of course with some tea/fruit juice.

    Creative Mooncakes

    The commonest mooncakes that we see during the Mid-Autumn Festival are typically round or square in shape, with either a baked brown crust or snow-skin exterior. Then in 1994, Raffles Hotel created the innovative and highly sought after champagne truffle mooncakes. That spawned a new line of exciting modern mooncakes!
    Since then, mooncakes never really did quite stay the same. Merchants strive to outdo each other in concocting the most unusual and delicious mooncake recipes. Here are some of the more unique and innovative modern mooncakes.
    Mooncakes from the Japanese confectionery, Minamoto Kitchoan
    Photo by Scuzzi
    Well-known for their attention to aesthetics, the Japanese have created some very beautiful mooncakes. These mooncakes from Japanese confectionery, minamoto kitchoan, are handmade with red or white bean paste. Aren’t these the sweetest?
    Rainbow Soda Snow-skin & Pandan Custard Lotus Snow-skin MooncakesPhoto by bossacafez
    Not to be outdone, local baker, bossacafez, has come out with a line of very colorful mooncakes made using unique recipes. I especially like the candy-colored ones on the left that are made with aerated mineral water. The green ones are pandan custard lotus snow-skin mooncakes.
    Cherry Coconut Snow-skin & Apple-shaped Flaky Pastry MooncakesPhoto by bossacafez
    More sweetness! Milky white snow-skin mooncakes filled with a mixture of cherries, desiccated and moist flaky coconut. Pretty!
    What’s more, she has even made colorful apple-shaped mooncakes, complete with green leaves!
    Mooncake CupcakesPhoto by chockylit
    Mooncake cupcakes! East meets west! The fusion of these two types of pastries is concocted by yet another talented baker, chockylit.
    Mooncake CupcakePhoto by chockylit
    Her mooncake cupcakes have date-pineapple cream cheese frosting and a red bean paste filling.
    Mini mooncakesPhoto by Triple-Y
    Okay, I know these aren’t exactly real mooncakes… But look! How cute!
    Mini mooncakesPhoto by Triple-Y
    I am a total sucker for all things miniature, and these wee little mooncakes are just too darn cute!
    Mini mooncakesPhoto by Triple-Y
    Even babies love ‘em!
    Pig-shaped mooncake biscuitPhoto by pastababe
    Remember these adorable piggy-shaped mooncake biscuits? In Chinese, they are known as “猪仔饼”. I ate a lot of this when I was young. They tend to come in little colorful cages and hence they are also called “猪笼饼”. Eating this just brings back fond memories!
    More creative mooncakes to follow tomorrow! Stay tuned!
    Also in this series
    Raffles Hotel: Snow-skin Mooncake with Champagne Truffle & Ganache
    Raffles Hotel: Snow-skin Mooncake with Champagne Truffle & Ganache
    Mooncakes with a Difference! (Part 2)
    Mooncakes with a Difference! (Part 2)

    My Fingers Are So Smart, They Measure!

    Go back into the history of measurements and we know that in the ancient times, body parts used to be the standard for measurements; hence ‘a foot’. The need for uniformity paved way for the metric and imperial systems that are now commonly used. However our basic instincts still make us want to use ‘a span’, ‘two finger spaces’ or ‘an arm’s length’; old habits die hard I guess! To resolve this and bridge the gap between digital accuracy and human approximations is the Smart Finger. It is a device that caps your thumb and forefinger (or any 2 fingers) and uses the signals relayed between the two finger points to calculate the measurement.

    • The Smart Finger is made from silicon to offer a comfortable fit to any finger size.
    • It can help measure length, breadth, and volume in a very intuitive way through simple button operations.
    • The distance (measurement) is calculated on the basis of the time taken by the signal to beam from one finger tip to the other and back.
    • The measured distance is displayed through LED.
    • The device sports 2 buttons that help display the measurements in different units, record and store the measurement, calculate volume and area plus view the information in text format (details on how to operate are explained in the images).

    Designers: Choi Hyong-Suk, Jung Ji-hye & Yoo-Jin Park

    Very good article on measurement that I cannot miss. Its one of the most natural and probably one of the most accurate ways of measuring.

    Posted via email from Daring to Posterous-ly Change

    Innovation Using Design Process - IDEO shopping cart

    Sino-Singapore Tianjin Project

    <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">

    Read this indirectly from Prof Heng's article in the Straits Times on 'Soft Power'.

    Posted via email from Daring to Posterous-ly Change

    Clever User Interface Sony Alpha NEX-5

    I was introduced to this digital camera just today & I loved it very much mainly for its fine fit in users' hands. Also liked how my hands could fiddle around the gadget & changing parameters on the camera with great ease. The LCD lens allow you to shoot and view comfortably at difficult angles. What attracted me most is its compact size that shows little compromise to professional photography. I also tried shooting a simple video and the quality was truly amazing -- at HD level. Sony hasn't been a household name for solid top class photography. But with this product in place, it seems like another worthwhile contender in the market that has solid substance apart from a solid style!

    It is exactly the kind of gadget that people would love -- taking great pics without the hassle and bulk!

    Posted via email from Daring to Posterous-ly Change