Dongzhi Festival | |
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Observed by | Chinese people |
Type | Cultural |
Significance | Marks the winter solstice |
Observances | making and eating of tangyuan , ancestor worship |
Date | December solstice (between December 21 and December 23) |
Frequency | annual |
Related to | Winter solstice |
Dongzhi Festival | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chinese | 冬至 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | winter's extreme (i.e. winter solstice) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Alternative Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 冬節 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 冬节 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | winter festival | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Korean name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hangul | 동지 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanja | 冬至 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Dongzhi Festival or Winter Solstice Festival is a traditional Chinese festival celebrated during the Dongzhi solar term (winter solstice),which falls between December 21 and December 23. [1] [2]
The origins of this festival can be traced back to the yin and yang philosophy of balance and harmony in the cosmos. [3] After this celebration,it is believed that days will have longer daylight hours and therefore create an increase in positive energy flowing in. The philosophical significance of this is symbolized by the I Ching hexagram fu (Chinese :復,"Returning").
In Chinese,the word "Dong" means "winter" while "Zhi" means "arrival" giving the literal meaning of the festival "the coming of winter". Dongzhi celebrates the winter solstice,usually around December 21 to 23,and is observed on the longest night of the year. Symbolizing the victory of light over darkness,Dongzhi,represents that the days will start to grow longer and bring a sense of balance and harmony to people's lives. Based on Chinese beliefs of yin yang,"Yang" represents positive energy,warmth,and light. Following the Dongzhi Festival,daytime will gradually lengthen,as "Yang" will also increase. [4] It was also believed by some that it was the day the Kitchen God went to heaven to report to the Jade Emperor the conduct of a family. [5]
The festival was first celebrated by the Chinese people during the Zhou dynasty (1045 BCE–256 BCE) and declared an official celebration during the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE). The Han people would take a break from work to celebrate with their families. They would hold heaven worshipping as well as honoring their ancestors by burning joss paper at their ancestral shrines to show gratitude. [6] In ancient times,the day was also known as the "festival of extreme length (traditional Chinese :長至節; simplified Chinese :长至节; pinyin :Cháng ZhìJié) as the sun's extreme position lengthens shadows. [7] : 238 It was traditionally a very important holiday,comparable to Chinese New Year. [7] : 240–241
The Chinese people still celebrate certain practices during the Dongzhi festival,such as the union of family. [8] In Hong Kong,many businesses let employees off early to spend time with their families on this day, [8] while in some areas shops close for the holiday. [7] : 241 In Suzhou,it is traditional to light incense at dawn. [7] : 241
The Dongzhi Festival has historically been associated with various agricultural activities in China,particularly in rural areas. As the festival represents the winter solstice,it is a crucial time to harvest winter crops,such as wheat,barley,and radishes. It is also an important time to pay respect to certain livestock and feed these animals special meals to celebrate the occasion. [9]
Traditionally,the Dongzhi Festival is a time for families to eat together. [8] One activity that occurs during these get-togethers (especially in the Asia and in Overseas Asian communities) is the making and eating of tangyuan (湯圓) or balls of glutinous rice,which symbolize reunion. [10] Tangyuan are made of glutinous rice flour and are sometimes coloured pink or green. Each family member receives at least one large tangyuan in addition to several small ones. The flour balls are cooked in a sweet soup or savory broth with both the ball and the soup/broth served in one bowl. It is also often served with jiuniang, a mildly alcoholic,unfiltered rice wine containing whole grains of glutinous rice (and often also sweet osmanthus flowers). [11]
People typically eat Winter Solstice dumplings (Chinese :冬至糰; pinyin :dōngzhìtuán), [12] which sounds like "reunion". This custom is said to have been started by the celebrated physician Zhang Zhongjing during the Han dynasty. One cold winter's day,he noticed that the poor were afflicted with chilblains on their ears. Moved to pity,he ordered his apprentices to make dumplings with lamb and other ingredients,and distribute them among the poor to keep them warm and prevent their ears from getting chilblains. Since the dumplings were shaped like ears,Zhang named the dish "qùhán jiāoěr tāng" (祛寒嬌耳湯) or dumpling soup that expels the cold. From that time on,it has been a tradition to eat dumplings on the day of Dongzhi. Dumplings are not only eaten by the family,but also shared with friends and relatives as a blessing. The dumplings may be molded into the shapes of animals such as dogs and cats. [12] Common superstitions include that married people should leave two uneaten to have their wishes come true,and a single person should leave one for an auspicious year. [12] According to one tradition,the dumplings should be eaten by an even number of people for good luck. [12] Many people take some of the tangyuan that have been used as offerings and stick them on the back of the door or on windows and tables and other pieces of furniture. [12] These "empowered" tangyuan serve as protective talismans to keep evil spirits away from children.
Old traditions also require people with the same surname or from the same clan to gather at their ancestral temples to worship on this day. There is always a grand reunion dinner following the sacrificial ceremony.
Other traditional foods include hot pot [13] and wontons. [7] : 241 Shuijiao dumplings are popular in northern China. [7] : 241
The festive food is also a reminder that celebrators are now a year older and should behave better in the coming year. Even today,many Chinese around the world,especially the elderly,still insist that one is "a year older" right after the Dongzhi celebration instead of waiting for the Chinese New Year.
In Taiwan,like in the culturally related province of Fujian,Dongzhi is a day for spending time with families and making offerings to ancestors. [12] It is also a tradition for Taiwanese to eat tangyuan on this day. They also use the festive food as an offering dish to worship the ancestors.
As well as following some of the customs practiced on mainland China,the people of Taiwan have a unique custom of offering nine-layer cakes as a ceremonial sacrifice to worship their ancestors. These cakes are made using glutinous rice flour in the shape of a chicken,duck,tortoise,pig,cow,or sheep,and then steamed in different layers of a pot. These animals all signify auspiciousness in Chinese tradition.
Many people take invigorating tonic foods during this particular winter festival. To the Taiwanese,winter is a time when most physical activities should be limited and you should eat well to nourish your body. This practice follows the habits shown by many animals which follow the law of nature and hibernate throughout winter months to rejuvenate and to preserve life. In order to fight cold temperatures,it is necessary to eat more fatty and meaty foods during winter when your body can better absorb the rich and nutritional foods at this time due to a slower metabolic rate.
Since Dongzhi is the "extreme of winter",Taiwanese regard it as the best time of the year to take tonic foods. Some of the most widely popular winter tonic foods enjoyed by Taiwanese to fight cold and strengthen the body's resistance are mutton hot pot and ginger duck hot pot. Other foods like chicken,pork,and abalone are also common ingredients used in making tonic foods with nurturing herbs such as ginseng,deer horn,and the fungus cordyceps. [14]
The Dragon Boat Festival is a traditional Chinese holiday that occurs on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese calendar, which corresponds to late May or early June in the Gregorian calendar. The holiday commemorates Qu Yuan who was the beloved prime minister of the southern Chinese state of Chu during the Warring States period, about 600 B.C. to 200 B.C., and is celebrated by holding dragon boat races and eating sticky rice dumplings called zongzi, which were southern Chinese traditions. Dragon Boat Festival integrates praying for good luck and taking respite from the summer heat.
The Lantern Festival, also called Shangyuan Festival and Cap Go Meh, is a Chinese traditional festival celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month in the lunisolar Chinese calendar, during the full moon. Usually falling in February or early March on the Gregorian calendar, it marks the final day of the traditional Chinese New Year celebrations. As early as the Western Han dynasty, it had become a festival with great significance.
Zongzi, rouzong, or simply zong is a traditional Chinese rice dish made of glutinous rice stuffed with different fillings and wrapped in bamboo leaves. Fillings can be either sweet, such as red bean paste, or savory, such as pork belly or Chinese sausage. The bamboo for wrapping the zongzi is generally of the species Indocalamus tessellatus, although sometimes reed or other large flat leaves may be used. Zongzi are cooked by steaming or boiling. People in the Eastern world often translate this dish into English as rice dumplings or sticky rice dumplings, although the Chinese government has registered Zongzi as the formal name in global use.
Xiàzhì is the 10th solar term, and marks the summer solstice, in the traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar dividing a year into 24 solar terms.
The traditional Chinese calendar divides a year into 24 solar terms. Dōngzhì, Tōji, Dongji, Tunji, or Đông chí is the 22nd solar term, and marks the winter solstice. The term begins when the Sun reaches the celestial longitude of 270° and ends when it reaches the longitude of 285°. In the Gregorian calendar, it usually begins around 21 December and ends around 5 January.
A rice cake may be any kind of food item made from rice that has been shaped, condensed, or otherwise combined into a single object. A wide variety of rice cakes exist in many different cultures in which rice is eaten. Common variations include cakes made with rice flour, those made from ground rice, and those made from whole grains of rice compressed together or combined with some other binding substance.
Tangyuan are a traditional Chinese dessert made of glutinous rice shaped into balls that are served in a hot broth or syrup. They come in varying sizes, anything between a marble to a ping-pong ball, and are sometimes stuffed with filling. Tangyuan are traditionally eaten during the Lantern Festival, but because the name is a homophone for reunion and symbolizes togetherness and completeness, this dish is also served at weddings, family reunions, Chinese New Year, and the Dōngzhì festival.
The winter solstice, or hibernal solstice, occurs when either of Earth's poles reaches its maximum tilt away from the Sun. This happens twice yearly, once in each hemisphere. For that hemisphere, the winter solstice is the day with the shortest period of daylight and longest night of the year, and when the Sun is at its lowest daily maximum elevation in the sky. Each polar region experiences continuous darkness or twilight around its winter solstice. The opposite event is the summer solstice.
Qīngtuán, also written as Tsingtuan, is a green-colored dumpling originating from Jiangnan and common throughout China. It is made of glutinous rice mixed with Chinese mugwort or barley grass. It is usually filled with sweet red or black bean paste. The exact technique for making qingtuan is quite complicated and the grass involved is only edible in the early spring, so it is typically only available around the time of the Qingming Festival (April 4 or 5), with which the rice cake has become associated. Nowadays, qingtuan sold in most convenience stores in China are made of glutinous rice mixed with matcha. Modern versions use a wider variety of fillings, such as rousong or salted egg yolk.
Chinese New Year, or the Spring Festival, is a festival that celebrates the beginning of a new year on the traditional lunisolar Chinese calendar. Marking the end of winter and the beginning of spring, this festival takes place from Chinese New Year's Eve, the evening preceding the first day of the year, to the Lantern Festival, held on the 15th day of the year. The first day of Chinese New Year begins on the new moon that appears between 21 January and 20 February.
Jiuniang is a sweet, soup- or pudding-like dish in Chinese cuisine. It is also known as sweet wine or sweet rice wine. It consists of a mixture of partially digested rice grains floating in a sweet saccharified liquid, with small amounts of alcohol (1.5–2%) and lactic acid (0.5%). It is made by fermenting glutinous rice with a starter called jiuqu containing Rhizopus oryzae or Aspergillus oryzae and often yeast and bacteria.
Yuanxiao are dumplings of glutinous rice flour, filled with sesame or peanut powder and sugar, or sweet red bean paste, eaten in a soup during the Lantern Festival, the fifteenth day of the Chinese New Year. They are similar to tangyuan, but are traditionally prepared in a basket, and served mainly in Northern China.
Ang ku kueh, also known as red tortoise cake, is a small round or oval-shaped Chinese sweet dumpling with soft, sticky glutinous rice flour skin wrapped around a sweet central filling. It is molded to resemble a tortoise shell and is presented resting on a square piece of banana leaf. As suggested by its name, red tortoise cakes are traditionally red in color and has a sticky, chewy texture when eaten. Red tortoise cakes are shaped like tortoise shells because the Chinese traditionally believed that eating tortoises would bring longevity, good fortune and prosperity. Considered to be auspicious items, these sweet pastries are especially prepared during important festivals such as Chinese New Year as offerings to the Chinese deities.
Sì is a traditional spherical dessert made from glutinous rice, eaten in celebration of the Winter Solstice festival in Fuzhou, Fujian Province, China. It is usually produced without filling, in contrast to the tangyuan. The sì is made by grinding glutinous rice into a powder, pressing the powder until almost dry, and then rolling the dry powder into a spherical shape, and finally adding fried soybean powder mixed with brown sugar onto the glutinous rice sphere.
Bua loi or bua loy is a Thai dessert. It consists of rice flour rolled into small balls, and cooked in coconut milk and sugar. Some Bua loi also adds sweet egg into the recipe. It was inspired by Tangyuan, a Chinese dessert that is traditionally eaten around the Lantern festival. Bua Loi is also traditionally eaten during the Dongzhi Festival in Thailand, which is a festival for the Chinese-Thai bloodline. There are a variety of versions of Bua loi such as ones that use food coloring instead of natural color, use soy milk instead of Coconut cream, add sliced pumpkin inside the rice balls, et cetera. There are other types of Bua loi from other countries such as China, Japan, Indonesia, Myanmar, Philippines, Southern Vietnam and Malaysia. 1 cup of Bua Loy has total calories of 295.5 kilocalories, protein of 10.4 grams, carbohydrate of 6.3 grams, and fat of 25 grams.
Dumpling is a broad class of dishes that consist of pieces of cooked dough, often wrapped around a filling. The dough can be based on bread, wheat or other flours, or potatoes, and it may be filled with meat, fish, tofu, cheese, vegetables, or a combination. Dumplings may be prepared using a variety of cooking methods and are found in many world cuisines.
Mont lone yay baw is a traditional Burmese dessert commonly associated with the Burmese New Year, Thingyan season. The dessert plays an important role in Burmese history as it is a traditional snack served during the Thingyan festival. It is usually made in a group and served to the public as a good deed during the new year. Mont Lone Yay Paw is a savory rice ball made from rice flour stuffed with sweet palm jaggery inside, which creates an excellent mix of textures and flavors.
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