Rice dumpling

Wrapped Rice Dumpling
The
rice dumpling (粽子 or 糭子,
pinyin: zòngzi,
WG: tsung-tzu) is a traditional
Chinese food.
The origins of rice dumplings are traced to the
legend of
Qu Yuan, a well-loved
poet who drowned himself in a
river. To stop the
fish from eating his body, people made rice dumplings and threw them into the river. Another version of the legend states that the dumplings were to placate a
dragon that lived in the river.
Rice dumplings are made for the
Dragon Boat Festival, which falls on the fifth day of the fifth month of the
Chinese calendar.
The fillings for the dumplings vary from region to region but the
rice used is always
glutinous rice. Fillings may be sweet, such as mashed yellow
beans or savoury and may include
pork, Chinese
mushrooms, salted
egg, chestnuts or even no filling at all and eaten with
sugar or
syrup.
The rice dumpling is usually a pyramid of rice which encloses the filling and wrapped in dried
lotus leaves or bamboo leaves. Wrapping a dumpling neatly is a skill which is passed down through
families, as are the recipes. Dumpling-making is usually a family event with everyone helping out.

Unwrapped Rice Dumpling
The dumplings need to be
steamed for several hours and one
superstition says that dumplings will never cook if a pregnant woman enters the kitchen whilst they are being steamed.
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See also
\n* Chinese cuisine
Category:Chinese cuisine