Autumn is upon us, which means it's almost time for Mid-Autumn Festival, a yearly celebration of moon-watching and the harvest observed in Chinese culture. Mid-Autumn Festival is sometimes referred to ...
Mooncakes are eaten during the Mid-Autumn Festival. They represent completeness and family reunion. The one pictured here is filled with lotus paste and salted duck egg yolk. Today is the Mid-Autumn ...
Mooncakes are synonymous with Mid-Autumn Festival (also known as the Moon Festival or Mooncake Festival), but really, they're so delicious that we wouldn't be surprised if you choose to make them all ...
An all-over-the-place assortment of stood-behind products culled from this very website that appears in the most recent October issue of New York Magazine. “It advertises itself as the gum you chew ...
Cutting into a rich mooncake while having tea steeping as you admire the moon is just one way East and Southeast Asians celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival, the Salem Statesman Journal, a USA TODAY ...
My most vivid memory of celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival isn’t devouring mooncakes but reciting a poem: Li Bai’s “Quiet Night Thought” (静夜思, Jìng yè sī). It was an exercise for Chinese school; our ...
For centuries, mooncakes have been the signature component – equivalent to treats such as chocolate eggs or hot cross buns for Easter – for the Mid-Autumn Festival, a widely celebrated Asian holiday ...
Cutting into a rich mooncake while having tea steeping as you admire the moon is just one of the ways East and Southeast Asians celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival. The Mid-Autumn Festival celebrates ...
As a little kid growing up in Taipei, I remember celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival with my family. We would sit on our enclosed patio with its garden, water feature and swing set, and my family and ...