Mooncake is a Chinese dessert that has been enjoyed for centuries. It’s traditionally eaten during the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival, and it’s definitely worth a try! Mooncakes come in many flavors, colors, shapes, and sizes. They are usually round or rectangular and filled with different kinds of sweet fillings such as lotus seed paste.
Learn how to make traditional Chinese mooncakes with egg yolk, and collect all the important tips for the perfect Mooncake for the Chinese Mid Autumn Day.
Mooncakes- overpriced Chinese gifts
Elaine was born on a Mid Autumn day 30 years ago. Eating mooncakes and homemade sticky rice cake along with the birthday cake have been our family activities for 30 years.
Mooncakes have become increasingly popular over the years and are now considered a luxury item. We bought well-pancaked mooncakes and use them as gifts for families and friends, this has led to them becoming quite expensive — some Chinese delicacies can cost up to 500 Chinese Yuan ($71 USD) per piece! But the ingredients used for mooncakes are quite simple and humble.
Types of mooncakes
Since it has a great popularity, we also developed lots of other types of mooncakes from no-baking versions- snow skin versions made with wrappers from sticky rice flour to traditional versions made from particular dough combinations and fillings like lotus seed paste or red bean paste. Other more modern mooncake recipes have also risen in popularity, such as Oreo mooncakes.
Shapes of Mooncakes- with the mold
Starting last year, Elaine makes mooncakes for my family instead of purchasing some from the market. Chinese eat mooncakes to celebrate family reunion day. In order to make the mooncake, you need to buy mooncake molds. Those mooncake molds are either round or square-shaped. We also have flower mooncake molds now. Most of the traditional mooncakes are round. The roundness symbolizes completeness and reunion. Family members usually share mooncakes together.
Mooncake Fillings
Mooncakes fillings can be different too. Recently mooncakes are a large group, for example, Su style savory mooncakes(minced pork as filling), snow skin mooncake (this one does not need baking), Yunnan ham and flower mooncakes, ice cream mooncakes, chocolate mooncakes, etc.
We even heard of reman noodles mooncake this year. Cantonese sweet mooncakes usually use different pastes, nuts, and egg yolk as the ingredients for the filling including lotus seed paste, red bean paste, black sesame paste, mung bean pastes, or mixed nuts(五仁月饼).
Lye water (枧水)
Lye water sometimes called alkaline salt is an alkaline solution. Tradition Chinese lye water is made with Kansui powder (蓬灰) and alkaline. But today’s version is a combined alkaline solution containing potassium carbonate and sodium carbonate. The ingredient label on the store-bought bottle contains 80% pure water, 15% sodium carbonate, and 5% potassium carbonate. The lye water can raise the alkalinity (pH) to neutralize the acid in the golden syrup. Baking soda does too, but sodium hydroxide is far more potent. Another purpose is the Maillard reaction, which is responsible for the crisping and browning of crust skins.
Where to get lye water and how to substitute
Lye water might quite hard to find. Lye water You can try to search for it at large Asian stores, especially with lots of bakery ingredients. There are several approaches to making substitutes for lye water used in mooncakes. They might work slightly differently but can yield a very similar result.
Approach 1: dietary alkali powder with clean water at a ratio of 1:4.
Approach 2: If you use baking soda directly, you will get a much softer and less browned crust. So first bake baking soda on a lined baking tray at 120 degrees C for around 1 hour to turn it into stronger alkali. Do not touch it during the process to prevent skin irritation. And then mix 1 teaspoon of baked soda with 4 teaspoons of water.
Approach 3: A better substitute than baking soda due to its high pH is sodium carbonate. The pH value is between the pH of baking soda and lye water. I find this one on amazon.
Golden syrup
known as artificial honey usually used in moon cakes and other cakes to replace sugar. It can add a sweet taste, create a deep dark color of the final cakes and maintain the water. You can either choose the homemade version or a store-bought version.
If there is any chance that you need to make mooncakes soon and do not want to bother simmering for 40 minutes or access Asian stores, you can replace golden syrup with honey at the same amount. I have tested several batches last year. Honey can work as a reliable substitute. The following picture is the batch using honey instead of golden syrup. There is little difference in texture and taste, but it yields a light color compared with the ones using golden syrup.
I have tested several times with my fellow housewives, golden syrup can be replaced by honey.
💭Tips for homemade Mooncakes
- You need a kitchen scale to measure all the ingredients, accurate amount really matters to the final texture and taste.
- Success mooncakes=well balanced taste+well wrapped fillings+well kept shape (including the clear pattern on the surface)
- If you are using homemade paste filling, make sure your paste is dry enough. Moist fillings might cause cracks on the skin.
- Cover all the fillings and divided the wrapper dough with a plastic wrapper to prevent drying out.
- Do not use too much flour to dust, otherwise, it influences the pattern.
- Mooncake assembling needs patience and skill. I even spoil my first one during this batch(as it is my first batch this year). But wearing plastic gloves can make the process easier. But be gentle and slow down when pushing the wrapper up.
How to Make Mooncake at home
Attention: The following recipe is based on 7: 3 (filling vs wrapper) for 14 moon cakes around 50g. If you want to use a ratio of 8:2, adjust the ingredients accordingly. And this is based on a 50g moon cake shaping tool. If your egg yolk is too large, divide them into halves and wrap it in two moon cakes. I am using New Moon Cake Decoration Mold mold to shape my moon cakes.
Mooncake dough wrapper
prepare all the other ingredients: golden syrup, alkaline water, flour, and vegetable oil together. Combine golden syrup with vegetable oil and alkaline water in a large mixing bowl. Add flour in. Mix well. Knead to a ball, wrap with a plastic wrapper, and knead several times until smooth. Reset for 2-3 hours in the refrigerator.
Firstly all of the fillings should be prepared previously. I usually make them on the previous day. I combine lotus seed paste, mung bean paste, red bean paste, and black sesame paste this time. But it is ok if you choose only one filling.
Prepare the egg yolk
If you can find fresh salted duck egg, crack the egg and then wash the egg yolk in clean water. Set aside to drain before using. If you are using packaged salted duck egg yolk, remember to sprinkle some white spirit (白酒) on the surface to remove raw taste.
Prepare the filling
I made 14 mooncakes in the video tutorial and 8 of them are loaded with salted egg yolk (Measure: egg yolk+paste filling=35g) and 6 of them are pure filling (30g).
Wrap the egg yolk with the filling
Carefully shape it into a round ball and set it aside. It is quite important to cover all of the ready fillings with plastic wrappers to prevent drying out.
- When the crust dough is ready, use a kitchen scale to divide them into 14 balls (each 15g). Take one portion of the wrapper, press it into a round wrapper (larger is better but do not break the wrapper), and then place one filling ball in the center.
- Push the wrapper from bottom to top little by little until the whole ball is completely wrapped.
- Shape it into a round ball. This step can help to make the skin as even as possible. Then slightly shape the ball into an oval so you can easily place it into the mold.
- Dust your mold with flour and then shake it several times to remove the extra amount of flour. Use a mooncake mold to shape it.
- When the assembling process is done, coat the ball with a layer of flour. Also, coat your tool, please. Place the ball on your board, then carefully cover it with the shaping tool, press the rod, and gently remove the cake from the tool.
How to bake mooncake
Preheat oven to 180 degrees C (356F). Spaying a very very thin layer of water on the surface of the mooncake can help to avoid cracking surfaces. But too much water will spoil the pattern on the surface. Bake for 5 minutes to firm the shape.
In a small bowl, whisk one egg yolk with 1 tablespoon of egg whites. Transfer the mooncakes out and brush a very very very thin layer of egg wash on the surface. Low the oven temperature to 170 degrees C and put them back in the oven and bake for another 15 to 20 minutes. I baked around 16 minutes.
When well-baked, transfer out the cooling rack to cool down completely.
How to keep Mooncakes
When the mooncakes are out of the oven, the skin is not oily like the ones on the market. We need the last step: place them in an airtight container (I am using a single package as I need to ship them to my family). Wait for around 1 or 2 days for the pasty to become soft (This process is named”回油”, meaning the process of returning the oil to the surface). After this last step, mooncakes can be kept for around 2 weeks in the fridge.
Other mooncake recipes
1. Snow skin mooncakes – no baking, a super soft and lovely wrapper made from sticky rice flour.
2. Nuts mooncake – if you are tired of sweet filling, check out this version with lots of nuts.
Chinese Mooncakes—Traditional Version
Ingredients
Wrapper dough
- 115 g plain flour
- 28 g peanut oil ,around 2 tablespoons, or other vegetable oil
- 1 tablespoon flour for coating the tool
- 75 g golden syrup homemade or store bought
- 2 g lye water
Filling:
- 8 salted egg yolks ,each 10g
- 380 g bean paste or black sesame filling ,25g*8+30g*6
egg wash:
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 tablespoon egg white
Instructions
To make the wrapper
- Combine lye water, golden syrup, and vegetable oil in a small bowl and then mix with flour. Stir until well combined. Wrap with plastic wrapper and then knead several times until smooth. Set aside in fridge for 2-3 hours.
- Transfer out and then divide into 14 equal balls (each one 15g)
Assembling
- Measure the fillings for egg yolk mooncake: paste+ egg yolk=35g. Measure the fillings for pure paste filling: paste filling=30g. Wrap the egg yolks with paste firstly. And shape all the filling into round balls. Take one portion of the wrapper, press into a round wrapper and then place one filling ball in center. Push the wrapper from bottom to top little by little until the whole ball is completely sealed. Shape it into a round ball firstly and then into an oval.Slightly dust your mooncake tool and press the rod and gently remove the cake from the tool.
- Preheat oven to 180C (356F). Spray a very thin layer of water on surface to avoid cracking surface (especially you used larger amount of dusting flour). Bake for 5 minutes.
- In a small bowl, whisked the egg yolk and combine with egg whites. Transfer mooncakes out and brush a very thin layer of egg wash on the surface.
- Continue bake for around 15 to 20 minutes until the mooncake becomes well browned.
- Transfer out to a cooling down crack to cool down completely. Place in an airtight containers. Wait for around 1 or 2 days for the pasty to become soft and oily. After the “oil return” process, keep the mooncakes in fridge up to 2 weeks.
Video
Notes
When pushing the outer wrappers, be carefully and slow down your process. Do not break the wrapper. If you do, pinch any small holes together. The time needed for assemble one moon cake should be around 1 minute even you are quite skilled. Be patient during the process.
Nutrition
How to serve mooncakes
With tea or coffee: Mooncakes can be served as a dessert with tea or coffee. Chinese mooncakes are usually served as a snack in the afternoon and can be enjoyed with family and friends. Chinese mooncakes are a perfect companion for Chinese tea. Chinese people often pair the pastry with Chinese tea such as pu-erh or oolong. The flavor of tea can bring out the sweetness and fragrance of Chinese mooncakes. To serve Chinese mooncakes, you should first slice them into small wedges for easier sharing.
Serve as breakfast: Mooncakes can also be served as breakfast. Chinese people enjoy mooncakes with hot soy milk or even congee in the morning. It contains a lot of nutritious ingredients such as sesame, nuts, Chinese dates, and lotus seeds. So will be a good energy boost for a day.
FAQs about Mooncakes
What’s inside mooncakes
You may encounter different types of fillings in a mooncake, including but not limited to the followings: red bean paste, lotus seed paste, mung bean paste, date paste, taro paste, black sesame paste, mixed nuts, custard filling, salted egg yolk or even pork.
Is mooncake healthy
Mooncakes are generally not considered to be healthy. The majority of mooncakes are made with high amounts of sugar and refined carbohydrates, such as wheat flour and sugar. Additionally, many varieties contain high levels of fat from lard or vegetable oil. While there are some healthier versions available that use whole wheat flour and less sugar. Therefore, it is best to enjoy mooncakes in limited amounts every day.
Why it is called mooncake
The shape and design of these cakes often symbolize the moon and its symbolic importance for cultural celebrations. The name mooncake comes from this symbolism, as it is a cake typically shaped like a full or crescent moon, which is associated with the festival’s celebration of the autumnal equinox. Moon means 月 while the cake is 饼 in Chinese (cakes, pastry, and such).
Hope you have a nice felling about this lovely Chinese traditional desserts and also has a perfect life with families.
Thank you for sharing the recipe. I try the snow skin mooncake and it come out perfect.
For the above mooncake recipe do you have the ratio for 75g mold and 100g mold?
Thank you.
Hi Lee,
I do not make larger mooncake previously so currently unable to provide precise amounts. But you can simple calculating by multiplication based on the amount given in the recipe. For example, if you plan to make 75g mooncakes, use 1.5 times for both filling and wrappers.
Hi Elaine, I have bought a 100g mold instead of 50g. May I know if the baking time And temperature will still be the same or different
For larger ones, you need to increase the time by 8 to 10 mins.
These are beautiful snapshots of your creation. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you!
Hi! I don’t know if you remember but I was the one who asked a little while ago about my mooncakes being too dry- well I tried it again, except this time with your lotus filling- and it was great!! My parents really liked it (and they really liked the maltose taste- I’ve never had it before, but my parents loved it! 🙂 My mum had a little nostalgia since she used to eat maltose sweets as a kid!)
But I have another problem now… I noticed that when I take my mooncakes out of the oven and they cool down, the filling shrinks (from when it expanded in the oven) but the skin doesn’t, so between the filling and skin there are air bubbles?? Like when I push down I feel air trapped between the skin and filling! Any suggestions??
Thanks for the great recipe (I will try the red bean filling next time with the suggestions you made!) and wishing you a happy Mid-Autumn festival!!
Thanks for the great recipe (I will try the red bean filling next time with the suggestions you made!) and wishing you a happy Mid-Autumn festival!!
Oh no I’m sorry I meant to give it 5 stars but I clicked 4 by accident (I’m on my phone)!! I don’t know how to change it so I’ll leave this comment here so others know what I meant!!
Sorry!!
Never Jasmine for the wrong rating. I have already updated your two comments together.
As for your problem, the most possible reason is that there are too much water in your filling. After baking, the water runs away and make the filling shrinks.
Hi Elaine! I left a comment I think 2 days or so ago but I just checked and for some reason it’s disappeared?? So I’m leaving another comment here because I had a question in my other comment I wanted your help on!!
The mooncakes turned out great but when I take them out of the oven and the filling shrinks (from when it expanded in the oven) there are air bubbles between the filling and skin! Like when I push the skin lightly on the sides I can feel air trapped between the filling and skin.
Any suggestions to solve this? Thanks so much!
Hi! Just wondering about the question I asked! Sorry to be annoying, but a reply would be super appreciated!!
Sorry Jasmine for the late reply. I did not notice the previous question. If the filling shrinks too much, the most possible reason is too much water in the filling. I believe most of your problem happens because of the filling. Can you purchase any store-made filling on your side?
Hello, it’s no problem at all, thanks so much for replying! I haven’t seen store bought filling before but I’m sure I could find it!
I do want to make it myself though! Thank you so much for the advice- do you think my oven temp or how I wrap the filling could be issues as well?
Is leaving it for 3 days required or optional?
Required.
Hi Elaine, Mid-Autumn Festival is almost here and I would like to make some mooncakes but searching online, I can only find the typical recipes for the filling but cannot find one for winter melon filling. Would you happen to know a recipe for winter melon filling mooncake? Do you think it’s the same as the ones for a sweetheart cake (lo-por bang)?
I know the filling. We usually use it for Lo Por Bang, I believe should be wife’s cake. Will try to make this one after back home.
That sounds great! If you end up making it please do post it!
To be honest, I never tried a Chinese recipe before but my husband insisted me on trying this one. Looks yummy and you did an awesome job sharing these wonderful pictures inside the article.
Thanks so much, Emily. I love to make my mooncakes present appealing.
I will try your recipe for the moon cakes
Happy cooking!
Hi, thank you for the recipe! Your mooncakes look beautiful. Can you use store bought canned red bean paste? If so, do you need to remove the moisture?
You can use canned red bean paste. I still recommend fry the paste in non-stick pan to remove some of the moisture for mooncakes.
Hi Elaine,
Do you recommend waiting 2 days for the mooncakes to become soft & oily before shipping to family? Also, do you have recommendations on shipping mooncakes? I’m wondering things like containers, bags, using ice packs, etc. Thank you for sharing a great recipe and all the work you put into this. 🙂
Maggie,
There are mooncake packages sold online. You can wait for 1 or 2 days before shipping. The oily and soften process can be further finished with the shipping.