Your explanations are so clear and detailed, allowing me to grasp the content quickly without having to rewatch multiple times. I feel much more confident applying what I’ve learned from this video
*My family and I gather around the fireplace for dinner and watch your videos. Thanks for the calm and relaxing vibes your videos give us. We love you!*
Chinese 🇨🇳 people just love the Mooncakes 🥮 , as we all eat them when they are sold throughout Hong Kong before the Mid-Autumn Festival. The best ones are done with black sesame fillings. These few decades, there are cold ice-cream ‘Mooncakes’ that are even more delicious 🤤 😋😋😋
Modern mooncake factories can produce thousands of mooncakes every hour thanks to advanced machinery that automates the process from dough preparation to packaging.
The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, or Zhongqiu Festival, is one of China's traditional festivals, with origins that can be traced back to ancient moon worship practices. According to historical records, the origins of the Mid-Autumn Festival include the following main aspects: 1. **Moon Worship Tradition**: In ancient China, agricultural culture was predominant, and people believed that various natural phenomena were closely related to human destiny. There was a tradition of worshiping the moon in the autumn, praying for a good harvest and peace. This moon worship gradually evolved into the Mid-Autumn Festival. 2. **Mythological Tales**: Another origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the famous myth of Chang'e flying to the moon. It is said that Chang'e stole the elixir of immortality from her husband, Hou Yi, and flew to the moon, becoming the Moon Goddess. This legend adds a mysterious color and cultural significance to the Mid-Autumn Festival. 3. **Historical Development**: The fixed date and customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival gradually took shape during the Tang Dynasty. At that time, the festival was combined with moon viewing, poetry, and other activities, becoming an important festival for literati to express their feelings. By the Song Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival had become a popular festival for all, with customs such as eating mooncakes and appreciating the moon. 4. **Agricultural Culture**: The Mid-Autumn Festival falls during the autumn harvest season, and thus also carries the meaning of celebrating the harvest. During this time, families gather to share the joy of the harvest, and moon-viewing and eating mooncakes have become important activities of the festival. The Mid-Autumn Festival is not only an important traditional festival in China but is also widely celebrated in many Asian countries. Countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Vietnam have similar festivals and ways of celebration. The Mid-Autumn Festival represents reunion, harmony, and abundance, and is a significant part of traditional Chinese culture.
The Mid-Autumn Festival is an autumn harvest celebration which is also observed by the Vietnamese, Japanese, Koreans and Mongolians*. It's not a religious festival and the mooncakes are NOT used as an offering to the moon goddess but a symbol of good fortune and reunion. A Malay Muslim lady who made and sold cakes once produced halal mooncakes during this festival in Singapore which prides itself in racial and religious harmony. Unfortunately, some of her fellow Muslims, who misunderstood this festival as a religious one, criticized her. Chinese people should STOP fictionalizing superstitious elements into our festivals hoping to make them more colourful. Instead of telling foreigners the Lunar New Year originated from a beast called Nian. Let them know the Chinese were highly intelligent people who could observe the movements of the sun, moon and stars and created the lunar calendar with precise accuracy. *If this festival is to mark the uprising of Han Chinese against Mongol rule, what are the Mongolians celebrating for?
Have you ever explored how different cultures interpret the same festival in their own unique ways? Do you think that emphasizing the historical and scientific aspects of these festivals could help bridge cultural misunderstandings, or is there value in preserving the traditional stories and myths as well?
chatgpt: The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, or Zhongqiu Festival, is one of China's traditional festivals, with origins that can be traced back to ancient moon worship practices. According to historical records, the origins of the Mid-Autumn Festival include the following main aspects: 1. **Moon Worship Tradition**: In ancient China, agricultural culture was predominant, and people believed that various natural phenomena were closely related to human destiny. There was a tradition of worshiping the moon in the autumn, praying for a good harvest and peace. This moon worship gradually evolved into the Mid-Autumn Festival. 2. **Mythological Tales**: Another origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the famous myth of Chang'e flying to the moon. It is said that Chang'e stole the elixir of immortality from her husband, Hou Yi, and flew to the moon, becoming the Moon Goddess. This legend adds a mysterious color and cultural significance to the Mid-Autumn Festival. 3. **Historical Development**: The fixed date and customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival gradually took shape during the Tang Dynasty. At that time, the festival was combined with moon viewing, poetry, and other activities, becoming an important festival for literati to express their feelings. By the Song Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival had become a popular festival for all, with customs such as eating mooncakes and appreciating the moon. 4. **Agricultural Culture**: The Mid-Autumn Festival falls during the autumn harvest season, and thus also carries the meaning of celebrating the harvest. During this time, families gather to share the joy of the harvest, and moon-viewing and eating mooncakes have become important activities of the festival. The Mid-Autumn Festival is not only an important traditional festival in China but is also widely celebrated in many Asian countries. Countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Vietnam have similar festivals and ways of celebration. The Mid-Autumn Festival represents reunion, harmony, and abundance, and is a significant part of traditional Chinese culture.
The transition at 4:05 was just amazing! You really know how to keep the audience engaged
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Your explanations are so clear and detailed, allowing me to grasp the content quickly without having to rewatch multiple times. I feel much more confident applying what I’ve learned from this video
Great to hear!
*My family and I gather around the fireplace for dinner and watch your videos. Thanks for the calm and relaxing vibes your videos give us. We love you!*
♥️
its a entire ai channel and im sure your ai also
good job
The transition at 4:05 was just amazing! You really know how to keep the audience engaged
Your videos are not only informative but also incredibly entertaining
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Love to watch this ❤️❤️❤️ I love moon cakes with salted egg yolks 🥰🥰🥰
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good
I love the ones with the salty duck egg yolks, double preferably, because the saltiness balances out the sweetness of the paste filling.
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Anything that has salted duck yolk, l love it......
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The moon cakes are so attractive
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right
I tried this cake once. It's really delicious
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I want to try! Where can i buy this ?
Chinese 🇨🇳 people just love the Mooncakes 🥮 , as we all eat them when they are sold throughout Hong Kong before the Mid-Autumn Festival. The best ones are done with black sesame fillings. These few decades, there are cold ice-cream ‘Mooncakes’ that are even more delicious 🤤 😋😋😋
♥️
Amazing moon cake produce alots of cake every hour.
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Modern mooncake factories can produce thousands of mooncakes every hour thanks to advanced machinery that automates the process from dough preparation to packaging.
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Nice video. ❤❤❤God bless you❤❤I
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My favorite is moon cake
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please tell me where can i buy this? i want to try
I love these production processes
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Fantastic Video Clip 😊😊😊🎉🎉🎉😂😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
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I love moon cake.😊😊😊
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looks delicious
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The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, or Zhongqiu Festival, is one of China's traditional festivals, with origins that can be traced back to ancient moon worship practices. According to historical records, the origins of the Mid-Autumn Festival include the following main aspects:
1. **Moon Worship Tradition**: In ancient China, agricultural culture was predominant, and people believed that various natural phenomena were closely related to human destiny. There was a tradition of worshiping the moon in the autumn, praying for a good harvest and peace. This moon worship gradually evolved into the Mid-Autumn Festival.
2. **Mythological Tales**: Another origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the famous myth of Chang'e flying to the moon. It is said that Chang'e stole the elixir of immortality from her husband, Hou Yi, and flew to the moon, becoming the Moon Goddess. This legend adds a mysterious color and cultural significance to the Mid-Autumn Festival.
3. **Historical Development**: The fixed date and customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival gradually took shape during the Tang Dynasty. At that time, the festival was combined with moon viewing, poetry, and other activities, becoming an important festival for literati to express their feelings. By the Song Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival had become a popular festival for all, with customs such as eating mooncakes and appreciating the moon.
4. **Agricultural Culture**: The Mid-Autumn Festival falls during the autumn harvest season, and thus also carries the meaning of celebrating the harvest. During this time, families gather to share the joy of the harvest, and moon-viewing and eating mooncakes have become important activities of the festival.
The Mid-Autumn Festival is not only an important traditional festival in China but is also widely celebrated in many Asian countries. Countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Vietnam have similar festivals and ways of celebration. The Mid-Autumn Festival represents reunion, harmony, and abundance, and is a significant part of traditional Chinese culture.
👍
Nice😊
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Awesome factory ❤
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The whole process is very good, you explain very well, I like it very much.
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This should’ve been a 2 min and 30 sec video because that’s when the mooncake making part ends. 😐
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Wow so nice n yummy😢😅😊
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right
are you try this ?
I like this video ❤
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The Mid-Autumn Festival is an autumn harvest celebration which is also observed by the Vietnamese, Japanese, Koreans and Mongolians*. It's not a religious festival and the mooncakes are NOT used as an offering to the moon goddess but a symbol of good fortune and reunion. A Malay Muslim lady who made and sold cakes once produced halal mooncakes during this festival in Singapore which prides itself in racial and religious harmony. Unfortunately, some of her fellow Muslims, who misunderstood this festival as a religious one, criticized her. Chinese people should STOP fictionalizing superstitious elements into our festivals hoping to make them more colourful. Instead of telling foreigners the Lunar New Year originated from a beast called Nian. Let them know the Chinese were highly intelligent people who could observe the movements of the sun, moon and stars and created the lunar calendar with precise accuracy. *If this festival is to mark the uprising of Han Chinese against Mongol rule, what are the Mongolians celebrating for?
😳
过别人的节日,还强词夺理。真有意思。
Have you ever explored how different cultures interpret the same festival in their own unique ways? Do you think that emphasizing the historical and scientific aspects of these festivals could help bridge cultural misunderstandings, or is there value in preserving the traditional stories and myths as well?
你有脑子吗😅,
chatgpt:
The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, or Zhongqiu Festival, is one of China's traditional festivals, with origins that can be traced back to ancient moon worship practices. According to historical records, the origins of the Mid-Autumn Festival include the following main aspects:
1. **Moon Worship Tradition**: In ancient China, agricultural culture was predominant, and people believed that various natural phenomena were closely related to human destiny. There was a tradition of worshiping the moon in the autumn, praying for a good harvest and peace. This moon worship gradually evolved into the Mid-Autumn Festival.
2. **Mythological Tales**: Another origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the famous myth of Chang'e flying to the moon. It is said that Chang'e stole the elixir of immortality from her husband, Hou Yi, and flew to the moon, becoming the Moon Goddess. This legend adds a mysterious color and cultural significance to the Mid-Autumn Festival.
3. **Historical Development**: The fixed date and customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival gradually took shape during the Tang Dynasty. At that time, the festival was combined with moon viewing, poetry, and other activities, becoming an important festival for literati to express their feelings. By the Song Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival had become a popular festival for all, with customs such as eating mooncakes and appreciating the moon.
4. **Agricultural Culture**: The Mid-Autumn Festival falls during the autumn harvest season, and thus also carries the meaning of celebrating the harvest. During this time, families gather to share the joy of the harvest, and moon-viewing and eating mooncakes have become important activities of the festival.
The Mid-Autumn Festival is not only an important traditional festival in China but is also widely celebrated in many Asian countries. Countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Vietnam have similar festivals and ways of celebration. The Mid-Autumn Festival represents reunion, harmony, and abundance, and is a significant part of traditional Chinese culture.
กองทุนขอซื้อขนมหวานและทั่วโลกและอื่นๆ.......5คันรถและอื่นๆ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤คุณเพ็ญนภาพรรณ จันทร์บัว/คุณนาจาพรรณ ชุมแสง/คุณนาจานภัสสร ชุมแสง/คุณชลนาจาพร ชุมแสง❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤และกองทุนหนุนหลังและอื่นๆ........พ่อร๑และพ่อร๑๑........และอื่นๆ,
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Is that on Singapore
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i remember trying this in Downtown Core
the cakes are delicious
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@@Processzonevideos wonderful
สุดๆๆไปเลย
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What kind of cake is moon cake?
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The cake is made during the full moon season
Very interesting chanel
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chanel as in fashion designer Coco Chanel. Channel as in RUclips channel.
good
I'm wondering where did you get those process food video?
I’ve team for research.
nice!
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i am old school. i like mine handmade. not gaint machines
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Has anyone tried this yet?
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try the handmade mooncake. it is more delicious..
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So expensive and too sweet.
Not those made in Taiwan. Delicious!!!
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The most over-priced flour+water+sugar.
Have you tasted one lately? Overpriced yes, they need to make some money Once A Year!
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love mooncakes, just not the bean ones with eggs in them
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The title of this video should be, “How Mooncakes and Other Crap Are Made.”
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They should be name Suncake. The yolk is orange colour.
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so they should be name orange cake 🤣
I want to know why they are so epensive per box?
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a lot of oil added ! unhealthy food! profitable too !
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Kue bulan paling Hongkong punja walaupun harganja mahal
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Ridiculous! Why are all the images flipped backwards? Trying to escape copyright infringement?
🤔
Why don't you try turning your screen upside down?
So much packaging, so much waste.
Pretty sure they didn't use individually wrapped MCs in the years gone by.
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The title of the video is misleading.
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May並啊五 JeanGarcia#這晏呢Garcia
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I wasn't appear some factories use perfectly dirty water to make their salty duck eggs. Are you referring to China's most populated neighbor?
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IN THE NETHERLANDS THEY HAVE SNACKS THAT I WOULD NOT EVEN GIVE TO MY DOG
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😅
NOT ONLY IN NETHERLANDS....😊