2009年5月27日星期三

Traditional Chinese Festival Dragon Boat & Zongzi

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Racers compete in a dragon boat competition near Fuzhou, Fujian Province in 2008. (Photo source: Global Times/Agencies)

BEIJING, May 27 -- Parks, lakes and rivers around the country will be alive with the sounds of drummers pounding out furious beats and racers vigorously urging their dragon boats across the water tomorrow to celebrate the traditional Dragon Boat Festival(duanwujie). Celebrated on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month of every year, the Dragon Boat Festival is one of the country’s oldest festivals, dating back some 2300 years. According to legend, the festival celebrates the patriot, poet and exiled minister Qu Yuan, who drowned himself in grief when his home state of Chu was invaded.

Zongzi, a type of rice dumpling eaten during the traditional Dragon Boat Festival. (Photo source: Global Times/Agencies)

Thousands of years later, people continue to celebrate the holiday by racing dragon boats and eating zongzi, which are a type of rice dumpling originally thrown into the river to keep fish away from Qu’s body.
About Zhongzi
Many traditional Chinese foods are intended to honor either the gods or divine persons in history. Zong Zi - a glutinous rice dumpling wrapped in bamboo or reed leaves - is no exception. It is meant to honor Qu Yuan (340-278 BC.), the pioneer poet of ancient China.

Qu Yuan was a famous poet who was also concerned about the fate of his government. Unfortunately his stature aroused the jealousy of the king, who banished him to a remote area. The poet despaired of the government and its policies. When the state's capital was captured by enemies, he committed suicide by drowning himself in the Miluo River (on May 5th according to the Chinese lunar calendar). The Chinese people felt this loss deeply, as he was a much beloved poet. Local folk searched for him in the river, meanwhile dropping dumplings of glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo or reed leaves into the river in order to keep the fishes from attacking Qu Yuan's body.
Since that time, it has been customary on this day to enjoy Zong Zi dumplings as a memorial to the patriotic poet. In addition, there is also a festival called the Duan Wu or Dragon Boat Festival. If you ever visit China during the Dragon Boat Festival, you can't miss the nationwide custom of enjoying Zong Zi. You are sure to be impressed with the delicacy of this snack, and with the faint scent of the leaves imprinted on the skin of the dumplings.
I still remember making and enjoying Zong Zi as a child. Along with my brothers and sisters I hovered around the stove, begging to have a taste, unable to wait until they were cooked. We were very eager since the food was made only once a year on May 5th. But now it is quite different. The Chinese Zong Zi is not only made for the Duan Wu Festival. It is available at any time of the year. And local areas have developed their own styles and varieties of dumpling.
The main ingredient of Zong Zi is the glutinous rice. The next most important ingredient is the bamboo or reed leaves which form the wrapping and make Zong Zi distinct from other types of Chinese dumplings. The filling often contains either dates or sweetened red bean paste. These are the ones I once had in my family. I like them much more than the ones with meat but my brother doesn't. He says the meat ones are terrific.
The leading place for the food is Jia Xing, an ancient town in Zhejiang province. Many different types of Zong Zi are made here. At Wu Fang Zhai, a monopolistic food processor, you'll find all the ingredients you need: the dumplings with meat, sweetened bean paste and chestnuts, lotus seeds, dates, and yolk of egg.
If the materials are available to you, it is quite possible for you to make Chinese Zong Zi at home; both for pleasure and maybe also to honor the great poet, Qu Yuan. By the way, in the year 2006 the Dragon Boat Festival happens to fall on May 31st, according to the solar calendar. You'd better prepare a net for the fish.
Here is a recipe for Zong Zi:
(makes ten dumplings)
1. 50 sheets of bamboo or reed leaves
2. Glutinous rice (1 kilogram)
3. Chinese dates (250 grams)

Directions:
1.Soak the rice and the dates 12 hours or more till they are soaked thoroughly.
2.Wash the leaves.
3.A chopping board is necessary for laying out the leaves.
4.Fold the leaves flat at the leafstalk to make a sheet.
5.Hold the sheet, fold it round in the middle and make a funnel till both ends are laid over each other in one direction.
6.Use about 1/10 kg. of rice and 6 dates for each dumpling. The dates must be covered by the rice so that they won't lose too much syrup in cooking.
7.Fold the leaves up to seal the open side of the funnel and tie the bundle with a band made of twisted leaves. Make sure that the bundle is tied neither too tight nor too loose. This helps make sure that the ingredients are well cooked.
8.Put the dumplings in a pot, cover with water and make sure they are pressed and kept still while being boiled.
9.Cooking time: 40 minutes in a pressure cooker; 2 hours in an ordinary pot.
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2009年5月25日星期一

Witness China Total Solar Eclipse in 300 Years

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Solar Eclipse 2009, total solar eclipse, China solar eclipse tour
According to a joint news conference held by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the National Astronomical Observatories and other departments on May 19, the longest total solar eclipse in 2,000 years, also the most important one of this century, will occur from around 8 to 11 am on July 22 this year. China will be the best place in the world to observe this spectacle.

See more information about the itinerary of  Shanghai & Anji 5 Days Tour-- Total Solar Eclipse Watching


According to the experts attending the news conference, the total solar eclipse will last more than two hours from its first stage of "Eclipse Begins" to the final stage of "Eclipse Ends." It will be possible to observe the total solar eclipse from China for up to six minutes, and there will be a 250km-wide belt on which a total solar eclipse can be observed. From west to east, the belt will cover southern Tibet Autonomous Region, central Sichuan Province, southern Hubei, Henan, Anhui and Jiangsu Provinces, northern Zhejiang Province and Shanghai.
According to sources, the total solar eclipse will be the longest in 2,143 years. “An ordinary total solar eclipse lasts about three minutes on average, but it is rare that a five or six minute total solar eclipse can be observed in the middle and lower reaches of China’s Yangtze River,” said Zhao Gang, Director-General of the Chinese Astronomical Society and Deputy Director of the CAS National Astronomical Observatories.

At the news conference held on May 19, the Chinese Astronomical Society and the CAS National Astronomical Observatories also issued plaques and certificates indicating “designated sites for the observation of the 2009 total solar eclipse” to eight cities including Tongling, Tongcheng, Yixian, Jiaxing, Suzhou, Gaochun, Changzhou and Wuxi.
Partial solar eclipse can be observed in Beijing
Zhao noted that apart from the total solar eclipse belt traversing China where a total solar eclipse can be observed, people in other places across China can also observe a partial solar eclipse at varying degrees. Beijing residents can observe a partial solar eclipse, with about 70 to 80 percent of the sun blocked out; “People will sense a feeling of darkness, but it will not be obvious.” He advised city residents wishing to observe the spectacle to use special equipment instead of watching the partial solar eclipse directly with naked eyes.
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2009年5月15日星期五

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