Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What food stick figures did you eat in China?

What food stick figures did you eat in China?

What food did you eat in China? The stick figures are as follows:

1, draw an ellipse first. Surround the ellipse with wavy lines. Then outline the bottom of the moon cake with wavy lines. Its water chestnut is outlined with vertical lines on the side. Write "five benevolence" on the surface of the moon cake. This is a five-kernel moon cake. Then draw a pattern on the surface of the moon cake with lines. Draw a rectangle beside it. This is a cut moon cake.

2. Draw a semicircle under the rectangle. The semicircle is surrounded by wavy lines. Draw an ellipse and an egg yolk moon cake on the surface of the rectangle. Then draw a pattern on the surface of the egg yolk moon cake. Then draw the shape of a plate under the moon cake. Finally, let's paint the painted moon cakes with beautiful colors.

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 offerings 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, use them to worship the moon and give them to relatives and friends. As an offering to worship the moon god, moon cakes have a long history. The word moon cake was first included in Liang Lumeng written by Wu in the Southern Song Dynasty. The combination of moon cakes and local food customs has developed Cantonese cuisine, Jin cuisine, Beijing cuisine, Jiangsu cuisine, Chaozhou cuisine and Yunnan cuisine, which are deeply loved by people all over the country.