I have never bake traditional mooncakes before nor have I made the snow skin types too. I am not a fan of mooncakes as they are usually very sweet if buy from the shops. So I seldom buy it unless someone gave this for me. I can't remember when was the last time I had mooncakes. Well, seeing so many bloggers made so beautiful mooncakes on the blog it has inspired and motivated me to do so this year.
I have been going through from one blog to another and another, reading the steps again and again trying to make this mooncakes. Until I really can't decide which one to follow.....and still so indecisive so I used Jessie of CookingMoments on her Taro Mooncakes recipe as well as using Anncoo Journal recipe on her Traditional Mooncake as reference.
TRADITIONAL MOONCAKES
Recipe reference
source from Jessie-CookingMoments & Anncoo Journal
(made 10pcs)
(Plunger mould 6cm diameter /80gm)
Skin Ingredients
200g Hong Kong Flour
130g
Golden Syrup
50g
Vegetable Oil
6g
Alkaline Water, available in Chinese Grocery Shop
Yolk Ingredients
5 Salted
Egg Yolks
Filling Ingredients
45g x 10 White
Lotus paste, store-bought
Egg Wash Ingredients
1 Small
Egg yolk + 1tbsp Water
Whisk
until well-combined. Pass through a fine sieve, set aside.
Method:
1. Remove salted egg yolk whites and rinse under gentle
running water. Place yolks on
steaaming plate, add 1 tbsp cooking wine and a
drop of sesame oil, mix well with
yolks. Steam for 5 minutes at high heat. Leave to cool and cut to half.
2. Weight white lotus paste to 45g and wrapped half
of yolk inside. Roll into ball again.
Repeat the
rest.
3 . To make the “skin,” mix golden syrup, oil
& alkaline water with a whisk until well-
combined.
Rest for 1 hour.
4. Place flour in a big bowl, make a well in the
center. Pour syrup mixture into the flour.
Mix with a spatula until a soft dough is
formed. Cover with cling wrap and & rest for
40 minutes to an hour.
5. Divide dough into 10 equal portions, roll
into balls.
6. Grab one dough, flatten into a disc, then wrap
a filling inside. Roll into a ball again.
7. Dust mooncake mold with some flour. Pour out
the excess flour.
8. Place
the dough ball in the center of the mold. Gently press from the center until
the
dough
fill up the mold completely. Release the ring & unmold carefully, place the
mooncake on a lined tray.
9. Repeat for the rest of the ingredients.
10. Lightly spray the mooncakes with some water
and bake in a 160C-preheated oven at
lower middle level for 10 minutes.
11.
Remove to cool down for 10-15 minutes. (Important to let mooncakes to cool
down) .
12. Brush
egg wash on all sides of the mooncakes. Bake for another 5 minutes or until the
egg wash are dried & the mooncakes
look golden.
13.
Remove to cool down on a wire rack completely. Wait for 2-3 days for the
mooncakes to become soft again (to
release oil) before consuming.
Remember to let the mooncakes to rest for 2-3 days before consuming.... this is to let the skin to turn soft.
My first attempt of baking mooncakes and much cheaper than store bought!
Mel, your mooncakes look so irresistible! Lovely colour and beautiful print. Are they mini ones?
ReplyDeleteHi Veronica,
ReplyDeleteThank you! Yes, these mooncakes are mini ones in 6cm diameter.
Your moon cakes are so pretty! Love the intricate design.
ReplyDeleteThese mini mooncakes are really beautifully done, mel! Just like the store bought ones ~ so pro! ^^
ReplyDeleteAh mui manyak pandai lah! Seriously, Mel, these mooncakes look so beautiful! I like molds with flower for mooncakes as I think now that I'm getting older, I prefer the traditional pattern for the traditional recipes. Thanks for mentioning my name here. My hubby doesn't like salted egg yolks so I didn't add in my moocakes but I actually prefer to eat with them. So now you know what should do lah, belanjar, hahaha!
ReplyDeleteYour mooncakes look golden and the pattern also look beautiful, well done Mel.
ReplyDeleteagree with Sonia! these are so nicely done it looks like those food on display!
ReplyDeleteHi Mel,
ReplyDeleteYour mooncakes looks perfect, I would never know that this is your first time making them! Great job!
Congrats, Mel. Your first attempt is very well done, nicely baked and I like all the designs. Thumbs up!
ReplyDeleteHi Mel, I think your mooncakes looks beautiful! Cannot believe it is the first time you are making this! Yep, making mooncakes ourselves are so much cheaper than buying although the packaging can be really tempting:D
ReplyDeleteHi Mel, your mooncakes look perfect and delicious! Like you, I'm not a fan of those mooncakes sold outside because they are mostly too sweet and they are getting so expensive!
ReplyDeleteThose look so beautiful and perfect! I love mooncakes but wait until someone gives them to me as a present. They are so expensive here, £7+ each. I bought some mooncake moulds in Malaysia but have yet to embark on the daunting task of using them.
ReplyDeleteGood afternoon,
ReplyDeleteThe mooncakes truly looks so beautiful and perfect. The patterns are so interesting too.
Hi Mel, WAAAA.... your mooncakes look so perfectly done & lovely! I've not tried this traditional mooncake before , only made some snowskin mooncakes . Thanks for sharing this recipe, bookmarking again! hehehehehhe
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos! These sound so delicious and so wholesome - love it!
ReplyDeleteMel, hats off to you for the beautiful mooncakes!
ReplyDeleteMel, first time and you're doing it like a pro! Really beautiful mooncakes.
ReplyDeleteMel, your mooncakes absolutely looks good and beautiful, great job!!!
ReplyDeleteI have no time to bake mooncake this year, hopefully can try it next year, hehe!
Mel, your mooncakes are so pretty! One day I'd love to make it from scratch. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Mel,
ReplyDeleteAre you sure this is your first attempt? You made them so beautifully.
They look great. ( like store bought)
mui