
CELEBRATORY CONFECTIONS. A worker (top photo) packs a new year gift box
with traditional pastries at a branch of Daoxiangcun, one of the best-known
Chinese bakeries in Beijing, China, last month. Pictured in the bottom photo
are baked goods (from left): Year of the Rabbit milk bread, a two-tier Lunar
New Year cake with a Year of the Rabbit theme, and a sourdough boule with an
illustration of Miffy, a rabbit from a popular Dutch picture book series. In
this age of social media, food savvy, and cultural pride, younger
generations of Asians are getting more inspired to bring desserts to the
family dinner table that are whimsical and creative. (AP Photo/Caroline
Chen)
From The Asian Reporter, V33, #2 (February 6, 2023), page 15.

Lunar New Year desserts: customary or "cute-ified"
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
Every Lunar New Year without fail, Kat Lieu’s mother would make her
steamed nian gao, which is a sweet rice — or mochi — cake. It was a tasty
tradition of having dessert for breakfast.
The Seattle-based author of the Modern Asian Baking at Home
cookbook and founder of the Subtle Asian Baking online group switches things
up for her 9-year-old son. He gets mochi waffles made with bright green
pandan the first morning of the new year.
"This year again I’m going to make the waffles," said Lieu, who is half
Chinese and half Vietnamese. "I’m also going to make the steamed nian gao
and things like that, and try to have him appreciate it more, too."
Unlike Thanksgiving, when pie is a given at many households, desserts and
confections at Lunar New Year are as varied as the Asian diasporas around
the world that celebrate it.
Families from China to the U.S. to Vietnam marked the new year on January
22 with the usual customs such as elaborate dinners and red envelopes with
money for children. And there were customary sweet snacks like nian gao. But
in this age of social media, food savviness, and cultural pride, younger
generations of Asians also are getting more inspired to have dessert courses
that are whimsical and creative — from black sesame financiers to peanut
butter miso cookies.
In Beijing, residents have been flocking to the flagship store of
Daoxiangcun, one of the city’s best-known bakeries, for new year-themed
dessert gift boxes in which some of the pastries were shaped like The
Rabbit, the animal of this year’s Chinese zodiac.
On Saturday, people stood in line outside the store for hours for the
chance to buy baked goods, according to a staffer. Even at a less popular
branch half a block away, customers still had to wait 40 minutes.
For Lexi Li, it was about bringing a little something to loved ones even
though it meant waiting in the line for seven hours in sub-freezing
temperatures.
"I don’t really like desserts and pastries, but I just want to bring
something home as a gift," said the 30-year-old, who walked out with a stack
of eight boxes for friends and family in her hometown of Taiyuan, in central
China’s Shanxi province.
Known for its diverse food culture, China offers a variety of Lunar New
Year desserts that are usually rice-based or flour-based. They include tang
yuan, which are mochi-esque rice balls with black sesame or peanut paste in
soup, as well as sesame balls, almond cookies, candied lotus seeds, and fat
goh — steamed cakes also known as prosperity cakes.
Nian gao remains one of the most popular options. Its key ingredient is
glutinous rice flour, along with other things such as taro, dates, jujube,
and red bean paste, depending on the variety. Its name is a homonym for
"higher year" in Chinese, meaning a more prosperous year ahead and
expressing wishes for children to grow taller.
The well-preserved tradition plays a vital role in passing on Chinese
culture because it keeps alive a food culture honoring grains and reminding
people of how festivals are celebrated going back to the seventh century,
according to Siu Yan Ho, a Hong Kong-based expert in Chinese food culture.
"Food is memory, and this memory is connected with festivals," Siu said.
In Vietnam, which last month welcomed the Year of the Cat, sweets also
differ by region. Vietnamese people eat nian gao, which they call banh to.
They also eat che kho gao nep, a pudding made with sticky rice and a mixture
of water, ginger, and either sugar or molasses. Other delectables include
che kho dau xanh — a mung bean pudding made with coconut milk and sugar —
and banh tet chuoi, a glutinous rice cake with bananas.
"On Lunar New Year, for three days you go visit family, friends, and
teachers," said Linh Trinh, a Vietnamese food historian who is getting a
Ph.D. in the subject at the University of Michigan. "So everybody has to
store a lot of snacks in their house for people to come visit and have tea.
It becomes like the pride of the household to serve their traditional
snacks."
More U.S. companies are finding a sweet spot in incorporating Lunar New
Year elements. Cupcake chain Sprinkles, in collaboration with the pan-Asian
cultural support nonprofit Gold House, is selling red velvet cupcakes with
an almond cookie crust and almond cream cheese frosting. At Disney
California Adventure Park, guests can order milk tea cheesecake with taro
mousse.
Judging by the 150,000-plus membership of the Subtle Asian Baking
Facebook group, a lot of Asians are more about showing off something they
made for the holiday rather than bought. The community has come a long way
from when Lieu started it in 2020. For the third year, there has been a
virtual Lunar New Year bake-off on Facebook and Instagram where members
share photos of stunning macarons, chiffon cakes, and other pastries.
"You’re innovating. You’re bringing appreciation to all these amazing
ingredients," Lieu said. "And then you’re making it your own traditions,
which is amazing."
Kelson Herman, of San Francisco, crafted a sourdough boule with an
illustration of Miffy, a girl bunny from a popular Dutch children’s book
series, for the Lunar New Year. Already an avid baker, the 44-year-old got
inspired by seeing online what other people were doing.
"I see a lot of boundaries being pushed, people trying to not just one-up
each other but be more creative," Herman said. "I feel like it always comes
down to flavors that bring back kind of familial memories. ... It could be
things that just evoke conversation and family."
In Queens, New York, Karen Chin made a two-tier cake frosted in coconut
buttercream topped with a white chocolate rabbit. One layer was vanilla with
red bean paste. The other was spiced cake with cardamom and mango curd. It’s
a far cry from the fat goh her grandmother makes.
"I told my grandma that I was going to make a cake. And she’s like,
‘Don’t make it too complicated,’" Chin said, chuckling.
Yet, Chin’s creativity yielded some special family moments.
"I was so touched because last time when she came and she ate something,
she’s like ‘You make good food.’ I was like, ‘Wow, that’s the first time she
complimented me,’" Chin said.
Sue Ng, who was born and raised in Canada but now lives in Hong Kong,
loves to "cute-ify" pastries for special occasions. During the pandemic, she
found a passion for combining baking and her love of Asian pop culture. Past
Lunar New Year creations included a rolled cake that looked like a White
Rabbit Creamy Candy, a Chinese brand as iconic as the Hershey bar.
Ng said that because her two school-age daughters have grown up in Hong
Kong, they’ve learned the importance of the Lunar New Year, including the
food. But she also likes to throw in something different, such as black
sesame financiers and salted egg yolk cookies.
"A Lunar New Year dessert to me is something made using Asian elements
with reference to traditionally-made goods during this time," Ng said in an
e-mail. "Now we can be creative and make something like nian gao-filled
cookies and the ideas are limitless! Sweet treats are a must during this
time because it symbolizes a sweet life."
Associated Press news assistant Caroline Chen in Beijing contributed to
this report.
Tang is a member of The Associated Press’ Race and Ethnicity team.
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