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Eaten during the Lantern Festival, tangyuan '湯圓' (Southern China, Taiwan and Southeast Asia) or yuanxiao '元宵' (Northern China) is a glutinous rice ball typically filled with sweet red bean paste, sesame paste, or peanut butter. Tangyuan is different from
- 15th day of the 1st lunar month
- Flying of paper lanterns;, Consumption of tangyuan
- Chinese
- Marks the end of the Chinese New Year
Romanization. thaon deu. [tʰã dø] Tangyuan are a traditional Chinese dessert made of glutinous rice shaped into balls that are served in a hot broth or syrup. They come in varying sizes, anything between a marble to a ping pong ball, [1] and are sometimes stuffed with filling.
Yuanxiao (Chinese: 元宵; pinyin: yuánxiāo; lit. 'first night') are dumplings of glutinous rice flour, filled with sesame or peanut powder and sugar, or sweet red bean paste, eaten in a soup during the Lantern Festival, the fifteenth day of the Chinese New Year.
Tangyuan (Chinese : 汤圆 or 湯圓) - plain white or coloured sweet dumplings made from glutinous rice flour. Traditionally homemade and eaten during Yuanxiao (Chinese : 元宵) as well as the Dongzhi Festival (Chinese : 冬至), tangyuan is now available year around sold as dessert.
Rice dumplings, or tangyuan (simplified Chinese: 汤圆; traditional Chinese: 湯圓; pinyin: tang yuán), a sweet glutinous rice ball brewed in a soup, are eaten this day. Candles are lit outside houses as a way to guide wayward spirits home.
Tangyuan (Chinese : 汤圆 or 湯圓), plain white or coloured sweet dumplings made from glutinous rice flour. Traditionally homemade and eaten during Yuanxiao (Chinese : 元宵) as well as the Dongzhi Festival (Chinese : 冬至), tangyuan is now available year around sold as dessert.
Tangyuan. Tangyuan or Tang Yuan, or variation may refer to: Tangyuan (food) (汤圆), Chinese food made from glutinous rice flour. Tangyuan County (汤原县), of Jiamusi, Heilongjiang, China. Tangyuan, Shandong (唐园镇), a town in Linqing, Shandong, China. Tang Yuan (唐渊, born 1989), Chinese soccer player.