This is Joanna from Hebei Feixiang Roll Forming Machinery. Tomorrow is LABA FESTIVAL. All people are so excited. One thing is that i will go to the factory to deliver goods.There is an old saying"After the Laba Festival, the Spring Festival is coming soon". I introduced LABA Festival a few days age. So here is a complete one.
The
majority Han Chinese have long followed the tradition of eating laba rice
porridge on the eighth day of the twelfth lunar month. The date usually falls
in min-January and is a traditional Chinese festival.
Legend about the origin of this festivity abounds
One maintains that over 3,000 years ago sacrificial rites were held in the
twelfth lunar month when people offered up their prey to the gods of heaven and
earth. The Chinese characters for the hunt and the twelfth month (lie and la)
were interchangeable then, and ever since la has been used to refer to both.
Since the festival was held on the eighth day of the last month, people later
appended the number eighth (ba in Chinese), giving us the current laba.
Buddhism was well accepted in the areas inhabited
Han Chinese, who believed that Sakyamuni, the first Buddha and founder of the
religion, attained enlightenment on 12/8. Sutras were chanted in the temples
and rice porridge with beans, nuts and dried fruit was prepared for the Buddha.
With time the custom extended, especially in rural areas where peasants would
pray for a plentiful harvest in this way.
There is, however, another touching story.
When Sakyamuni was on his way into the high mountains in his quest for
understanding and enlightenment, he grew tired and hungry. Exhausted from days
of walking, he passed into unconsciousness by a river in India. A shepherdess
found him there and fed him her lunch—porridge made
with beans and rice. With such nourishment he was able to continue his journey.
After six years of strict discipline, he finally realized his dream of full
enlightenment on the eighth day of the twelfth lunar month. Ever since, monks
have prepared rice porridge on the eve ad held a ceremony the following day,
during which they chant the sutras and offer porridge to Buddha. Thus, the
tradition of eating laba porridge was based in religion, though with time the
food itself became a popular winter dish especially in cold northern China.
Laba porridge is made with local specialties
such as ginkgo fruits, water chestnuts, chestnuts, lotus seeds and red beans in
addition to the rice. Actually eight ingredients are used, cooked with sugar to
make the porridge wonderfully sweet. Northerners prefer to use glutinous rice,
red beans, dates, lotus sees, dried longan pulp, walnuts, pine nuts and other
dried fruits in their porridge; southerners like a salty porridge prepared with
rice, soybeans, peanuts, broad beans, taro, water chestnuts, walnuts,
vegetables and diced meat. Some people like to add cinnamon and other
condiments to inject flavor. Controlling the heat is of great importance in the
outcome. At the start, the flame must be high, but the fire is then turned down
to let the porridge simmer until it begins to emit avery delicious smell. The process
is time-consuming but not complicated.
Laba porridge is not only easy to prepare,
but also a nutritious winter food because it contains amino acids, protein and
other vitamins people need. Cooked nuts and dried fruit are good for smoothing
nerves, nourishing one’s heart and vitality, and
strengthening the spleen. Perhaps that is why it is also called babao (Eight
Treasure) porridge.
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