mooncake, Chinese pastry traditionally consumed during the Mid-Autumn Festival.
Mooncakes are as central to the Mid-Autumn Festival, also called the Moon Festival, as lanterns, candles, and gazing at the full harvest moon. Traditionally, these round or square pastries were simple: a slightly sweet thin pastry molded around a rich filling generally made of sacred lotus seed paste. At some point, a whole salted egg yolk was added to symbolize the Moon.
Today mooncakes are more varied, as top hotels and restaurants from Beijing to Singapore vie to create exotic (and expensive) new versions. Some bakeries add four or more salted egg yolks in their recipes, while fillings can include red bean paste, nuts, seeds, salted ham, durian paste, mashed taro, and even edible bird’s nest (a delicacy made from the saliva of swiftlets). “Snowy” mooncakes have a wrapper of sweetened rice flour paste, and ice cream mooncakes come in various flavours with a core of mango sorbet to stand in for the egg yolk.
Although they are relatively small, mooncakes are rarely eaten whole, because of their rich filling. Instead, they are cut into wedges, the better to appreciate the “moon” at the centre.
Mooncakes allegedly played a role in the overthrow of the Mongol Yuan dynasty that ruled China during the 13th and 14th centuries: messages outlining plans for the revolts were hidden in mooncakes, which were given as gifts to supporters.