New Straits Times

Popular Hong Kong chef’s mooncakes cost RM283

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HONG KONG: It is one of Hong Kong’s most treasured food traditions: the buying, giving and eating of “mooncakes” to mark the mid-autumn festival, celebrated in Chinese communitie­s around the world next month.

Bakeries and supermarke­ts are packed with boxes of the dense pastries, traditiona­lly filled with a heavy sweet concoction of lotus seed paste and egg yolks.

But, not all mooncakes are made equal.

Picky customers will queue outside the most popular stores to ensure they bag their favourite brand.

Mooncakes by chef Yip Wingwah of Hong Kong’s Peninsula Hotel are among the most in demand — and the priciest.

Boxes of eight of his Spring Moon mini egg custard mooncakes cost HK$520 (RM283), and are only available in a three-day pre-order sale online, to avoid previous unseemly queues at the hotel.

This year’s sale took place in August and sold out, weeks ahead of the festival.

Now 65, Yip invented what has become his signature mooncake 30 years ago when he worked as a dim sum chef at the hotel’s Spring Moon restaurant.

It was inspired by gooey egg custard buns, a classic dim sum dish, and is smaller and lighter than traditiona­l mooncakes, although it still packs a sugary, buttery punch.

“I have an emotional attachment to it, really I do, because I would never have guessed that it would grow more popular every year,” said Yip, who started to work in Hong Kong restaurant kitchens at 13.

Deep in the Peninsula’s basement, Yip kneads elastic golden dough to show how he and his team will make this year’s new lychee-flavoured spin on his original classic.

Rolling it out into lengths, he plucks small pieces off and flattens them between his hands before using them to encase sweet filling.

Each dough ball is then pressed individual­ly into a mooncakesh­aped hole in a heavy wooden holder, which Yip bangs three times on a worktop to pop out a perfect pastry.

Those who get hold of a box will share them with friends, family and business associates as part of the festival, which is the second largest in Hong Kong after the lunar new year.

The legend behind it revolves around a beautiful woman called Chang E, who drank an elixir of immortal life to keep it out of the hands of a rival of her husband.

It caused her to ascend to the moon, leaving her distraught husband on Earth. He took her favourite foods to an altar and offered them as a sacrifice to her, a ritual then adopted by local people.

“Mid-autumn festival is about coming together as a family to eat mooncakes and fruits and to admire the moon,” says Lam Mei Yu, 40, biting into one on Hong Ko n g ’ s h a r b o u r f r o n t d u r i n g a visit from her home in the southern mainland Chinese province of Guangdong.

For his part, Yip vows to continue to bake them as long as he is able.

“As I make more I become happier,” he said. AFP

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Chef Yip Wing-wah showing his freshly baked signature Spring Moon mini egg custard mooncakes at the Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong recently.
AFP PIC Chef Yip Wing-wah showing his freshly baked signature Spring Moon mini egg custard mooncakes at the Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong recently.

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