
If you’re not Asian and have been wondering at the sudden
proliferation of round pastries at bakeries, sundry shops, restaurants and
hotels all over Penang, then wonder no more. It’s because on the 15
th
of September this year, the Penang Chinese are celebrating the Mid-Autumn
Festival.
Also known as the Mooncake Festival as well as the Lantern
Festival, it coincides with the 15th Day of the 8th Moon
on the Chinese Lunar Calendar. On this one day of the year, legend has it that
the moon is at its brightest and roundest and so the Chinese gather to gaze upon
the moon’s beauty, eat lots and lots of mooncakes while their children play
with brightly lit lanterns.
Moocakes

There are many different kinds of mooncakes, but the simplest one is the
angkong-ah peah (or doll biscuits) which
are made with just flour, eggs, oil and (preferably) black sugar or molasses.
Kung-chye peng in Cantonese, these are soft, slightly chewy and either made in the shapes of various deities, flowers, leaves,
fish or other animals, as simple rolls (when placed in a small red basket, they are called 'piglets') or just round, slightly flattened balls.

Then there are the elaborately moulded pastries filled with either red or kidney bean paste,
lotus seed paste or a mixture of candied fruit, dried ham and nuts. More expensive mooncakes have one or more salted ducks’ egg
yolks in them/ Traditional varieties usually feature either the same kind of
pastry as the biscuit dough or a dry flaky pastry.

Modern varieties, however,
comprise what is called ‘snow skin’ – made from chilled glutinous rice paste
somewhat like Japanese mochi cakes – and may have fillings ranging from the
old-fashioned kind to ice cream, chocolate, green tea, seafood or even fruit.
Lanterns

Chinese lanterns were not a part of the original festival
even though they have become so much a part of it that the festival is
sometimes called the Lantern Festival. In fact, prior to the Tang Dynasty (618-907
CE) lanterns were not associated with the festival. But then, the Tangs were such
a fun and rather luxury-loving lot that their era is considered a highpoint of
Chinese cosmopolitan culture so it’s not surprising that they should have
incorporated colourful brightly lit fanciful lanterns into a festival
celebrating the moon and its beautiful light.
Many clubs and societies organise lantern processions during
the festival and the biggest state-organised festivity will be held on the
mainland in Seberang Perai this year.
Cassia wine
Not a big part of the Penang festival at all, but
traditionally, cassia wine is drunk as part of the evening’s feasting. Its name
is deceptive as it’s actually a white wine flavoured with sweet osmanthus
flowers and has a flavour somewhere between apricots and peaches. You can buy
these from Chinese wine or medicine shops on the island if you want.
The festival is not a public holiday in Malaysia but it is
widely celebrated in all Chinese communities all over the country. And since it
has little religious significance to the modern Chinese now, it is also
celebrated by people of other races and lantern-making competitions often see
Malay, Indian, Japanese and European children (and their families) taking part
to see who can come up with the most elaborately home-made ones.