What to eat on Chinese Valentine’s Day? What traditional food do you eat on the Qixi Festival?

What to eat on Chinese Valentine’s Day? What traditional food do you eat on the Qixi Festival?
Qixi Festival is a traditional festival representing love, which falls on the seventh day of the seventh month of the lunar calendar, during summer. What to eat on Chinese Valentine's Day in hot weather? What traditional food is eaten on Qixi Festival? "Er Ya Shi Tian" says: "The seventh month is Xiang, and the eighth month is Zhuang." Therefore, the seventh month of the lunar calendar is also called "Xiang Yue". Come and follow Mr. Shui Mo's website to learn about every day of the seventh lunar month in 2019!

What to eat on Chinese Valentine’s Day? What traditional food is eaten on Qixi Festival?

dumpling
In Juancheng, Caoxian, Pingyuan and other places, on the Chinese Valentine's Day, seven good girls make dumplings together, putting a copper coin, a needle and a red date into three dumplings respectively. After the begging activity, they gather together to eat dumplings. It is said that the one who eats the money will be blessed, the one who eats the needle will be dexterous, and the one who eats the date will get married early.
Chocolate
Qiaoguo, also known as Qiqiao fruit, is one of the foods for the Chinese Valentine's Day and a specialty pastry in Shanghai. It is made of flour and sesame seeds and has many styles. It is now more popular in Hangzhou, Ningbo and Wenzhou in Zhejiang Province. In Wenzhou, on the seventh day of July, relatives from the mother's side will give qiaoguo as gifts to their grandchildren.
Choy Bud Noodles
In addition to eating qiaoguo, in some places, people eat qiaoya noodles on the seventh day of the seventh month. The bean sprouts used to make Qiao Ya noodles must be grown seven days in advance. Choose a small bowl of green beans that are not worm-eaten, wash them, spread them flat on a plate, cover them with wet gauze to block out the sunlight, place them on the head of the kang, and spray them with water several times a day to keep them moist. After seven days, when the bean sprouts grow to two or three centimeters long, you can make hand-rolled noodles. Boil them in a pan and rinse them with cold water. Then heat the pan with oil, add the diced meat and stir-fry, sauté the scallions and ginger, add soy sauce and vinegar, add the mung bean sprouts and stir-fry, add water and boil, then add salt and MSG to make bean sprout soup. Put the noodles in a bowl, pour the bean sprout soup on it and eat.
Eat noodles
On the Chinese Valentine's Day, people in some places eat Qiaoya noodles. Bean sprout soup is made with bean sprouts that have been sprouted seven days in advance. The cooked hand-kneaded noodles are then put into a bowl and poured with the bean sprout soup. People in Linyi, Shandong eat cloud noodles made from dew on this day, and eating it can bring luck and fortune. It is said that eating seven noodles on the Chinese Valentine's Day will keep family members connected. When eating noodles, two noodles are thrown outside to reward the magpies that built the magpie bridge.
Eat flower melon
On the Qixi Festival, people pray for cleverness and cleverness by carving melons into various patterns, such as exotic flowers and birds or relief patterns. Some other dexterous women will use the fermented dough to shape various pastries related to the Qixi legend.
Eat glutinous rice noodles
Old Nanjing people eat glutinous rice noodles during the Chinese Valentine's Day. Jiangmi noodles are made with glutinous rice flour, bean powder, flour and maltose water. After it is proofed, it is cut into pieces and rolled into long round strips. They are fried in a pan until slightly yellow. Then, white sugar is boiled into syrup and poured into the fried Jiangmi noodles. Stir well and let it cool before eating.
Eat broad beans
In Fuzhou, there is a custom of "dividing beans to form a bond" on the Chinese Valentine's Day. On this day, neighbors and friends give each other broad beans and eat them and chat under the moonlight to commemorate their friendship. After eating broad beans, there will be no more quarrels, and all previous grudges will disappear.
Eat stir-fried bean tea
During the Chinese Valentine's Day, people in Tong'an, Xiamen, prepare a traditional delicacy - fried bean tea, which symbolizes sweet love and life.
Eat pomegranate
On Dongshan Island in Fujian, almost every household buys the Chinese medicinal herb Quisqualis and the fruit "pomegranate" on Chinese Valentine's Day. For dinner that day, crabs, small squids, or eggs, lean meat, and pig intestines are cooked with Quisqualis edulis. After the party, the adults would ask the younger generations to put pomegranates between the door and the threshold to break them, and the whole family would share the food.

Cultural relics related to the Qixi Festival

Niu Su and Nu Su (Han Dynasty stone relief) (Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD), Nanyang Museum of Han Dynasty Painting, Nanyang, Henan)
Portrait of a Azure Dragon, a White Tiger, the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl (Han Dynasty (202 BC - 220 AD), unearthed in Xinshengchang, Pi County, Sichuan): The main subject is a Azure Dragon and a White Tiger holding a wall, with the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl holding a shuttle carved above the dragon and the tiger.
Palace Banquet (Northern Song Dynasty imitation of Tang Dynasty, 10th century, collected by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
The Han Palace Begging for Skill (Song Dynasty, Li Song, from the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing)
Picture of Han Palace (Song Dynasty, Zhao Boju, collection of National Palace Museum, Taipei): This is a small booklet in the form of a silk fan, depicting the story of the Qixi Festival in the Han Palace, describing the custom of palace maids going up to the Needle Tower to pray for dexterity on the Qixi Festival when the night sky was as cool as water.
Qiqiao Tu (Ming Dynasty, Qiu Ying, collected by the National Palace Museum, Taipei): This scroll uses the line drawing method to depict the scene of women lighting candles and offering sacrifices in the courtyard on the night of the Chinese Valentine's Day.
Begging for Skill under the Paulownia Tree (Qing Dynasty, Chen Mei, August part of Yueman Qingyou Album): It depicts the scene of ladies in Beijing begging for skill on the seventh day of the seventh month. On the night of the seventh day of the seventh month, the women place bowls of water in the courtyard and then scatter a bunch of needles in the bowls. People rush to see the patterns formed in the water. It is said that the more beautiful the shape of the pattern, the more dexterous the hands of the person who places the needles.
Silk brocade scroll with a picture of praying for good luck on the Chinese Valentine's Day (Qing Dynasty) : This scroll is brocaded in colored patterns on a natural background and depicts a scene in which the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl meet on the Magpie Bridge in the sky on the Chinese Valentine's Day, while women on earth either lean on the railing to gaze into the distance or pray for good luck in the air. The work adopts the decorative method of one to two colors, and is woven using techniques such as flat kesi, structured kesi, and kejin. The pattern is outlined with lines over a large area and then filled with color. The pavilions, towers, rolling curtains, couches and walls in the picture were drawn with a ruler in full accordance with the procedures of boundary painting.

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