Le̍k-tāu-phòng or Lǜdòu pèng is a traditional Taiwanese mooncake. The filling is made of sweet mung bean paste stuffed with lard and shallots and baked, and sometimes a little pork is added. In recent years, due to the emphasis on health, many operators have also introduced versions that do not contain pork, lard and other ingredients, and are purely filled with mung bean puree.[2]

Lek-tau-phong
Alternative namesLudoupong, Taiwan Mung Bean Pastry[1]
Place of originTaiwan
Serving temperatureCold
Main ingredientsflour, sugar, pork, lard, mung bean
Le̍k-tāu-phòng
Traditional Chinese綠豆椪
Simplified Chinese绿豆椪
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLǜdòu pèng
Southern Min
Hokkien POJle̍k-tāu-phòng

Traditional Taiwanese mooncakes are large in size (as big as the palm of your hand). Since the early 1980s, the industry in Fengyuan District, Taichung, known as the "Pastry Capital" of Taiwan, has invented small mooncakes that have no lard residue and are filled with mung bean puree filling. The portion is half the size of traditional mooncakes.[3]

History

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The Lek-tau-phong emerged in the 1940s. During the Japanese colonial period in Taiwan, Japanese confectionery culture moved into Taiwan. In order to cater to Japanese tastes, Fengyuan's local pastry manufacturers learned Japanese wagashi technology, used sweeter fillings, and reduced the size of pastries, promoting the popularity of Japanese confectionery. Fengyuan's local cake shops also developed a small mooncake with mung bean paste as the filling, called Gourd Dun Cake (葫蘆墩餅), which is the predecessor of Lek-tau-phong[4]。.


See also

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References

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  1. ^ Marvellina (2021-09-15). "TAIWAN MUNG BEAN MINCED MEAT MOONCAKE". whattocooktoday.com. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
  2. ^ 余宗翰 (2018-09-18). "細說台式月餅,蛋黃酥源自綠豆椪,鳳梨酥源自冬瓜酥". today.line.me. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
  3. ^ "雪花齋餅行 (Chinese)". travel.taichung.gov.tw. 2021-08-13. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
  4. ^ 李佳芳. "百年老店雪花齋──為「島內製菓」爭一口氣". 獨立評論. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
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