Food & Drink Magazine

Honey Mini Mooncake

By Zoebakeforhappykids @bake4happykids

I have to say that my homemade mooncakes are never the same as the store bought mooncakes. All because my subconscious tells me that I have baked these mooncakes with all my love - LOL! ... thus with the most moderated amount of fat and sugar.
Without the adequate fat and sugar, I can't deny the texture of my homemade lotus paste in these mooncakes is never as smooth as the commercially made ones but I can assure you that these 100% home baked mooncakes can be as tasty as the commercially made ones if you see them in different perspectives.
Different perspectives? After enjoying a reasonable amount of smooth and rich mooncake, do you feel like you are satisfied but sort of had enough? Is this a good feeling... or bad? To me, the enjoyment of the deliciously rich mooncake always end sadly after I swallow the last mouthful of them. To ease my digestion, I always have to drink warm Chinese tea or any acidic drinks after munching the mooncakes.
I hope that I don't sound like I'm hard selling saying this... My less sinfully homemade mooncakes like these mini custard mooncakes and thousand layer flaky yam mooncakes never give me the had-enough after feeling and yet they can be nice and satisfying with its mildly sweet taste.
These honey mooncakes are also made with love! LOL! Yeah... because I made these mooncake with good honey, not syrup :)

200g homemade lotus paste, recipe at
Here's the recipe.
Traditional mooncake pastry with honey that is mostly adapted from here
Makes about 12 mini mooncakes
100g honey
30g oil
1 tsp alkaline water
135g cake flour or any low protein flour
Makes about 12 portions of filling
30g honey*
*This amount is the best amount to use with my homemade lotus paste. You can use lesser honey if your paste is too runny to roll. If your paste is too soft and runny, you can firm it up by chilling it in a refrigerator for at least 30 mins.
here Egg wash:
1 egg yolk
1 tbsp milk
Using an electric mixer with paddle attachment, beat honey, oil and alkaline with medium speed until combined. Add flour and continue to mix with the lowest speed to form a soft dough. Wrap dough with cling wrap. Set aside to rest at room temperature for at least 1 hr.
Knead honey into the lotus paste until fully combined.
To make traditional honey mooncake pastry: To make the honey lotus paste:

Like I have said at Shaping the Mooncakes:
here before... As every mooncake mould is different, you have test the amount of dough and filling required to fill in each mould. To test, fill the mould with the maximum amount of pastry that you can fill and weigh the piece of dough. Mine is 40g each. For mooncakes with thinner pastry, 40% of each mooncake can be pastry and 60% can be filling but shaping mini mooncake with thin pastry can be challenging and so I have 40% of my mooncake to be filling and 60% to be pastry.
Divide the filling into 18g each and pastry dough into 22g each. Shape each into balls. Set aside.
Using a lightly floured hand, flatten a portion of pastry dough into a flat and round circle. Place a filling in the middle of the flatten dough. Enclose the filling inside the pastry and roll them into smooth balls.
Place each ball into a lightly floured mooncake mould and press it gently until all the edges of the mould are well-filled with the pastry. To release the mooncake from the mould, keep knocking the mould on tabletop at the sides of the mould to loosen the mooncakes from the mould and allow the mooncake to release off onto the lightly floured surface.
Preheat the oven to 180°C. Line two baking tray with baking paper. Place the shaped mooncakes on the prepared tray. Brush with a thin layer of egg wash and bake for 5 min. Remove and brush with second layer of egg wash and bake again for 5 min. Decrease oven temperature to 160°C. Remove and brush with third layer of egg wash and bake again for 5 min or until golden brown.
Allow all mooncakes to cool slightly on the tray for 10 mins and transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely.
Allow the mooncakes to rest in room temperature for more than 48 hours before serving as the freshly baked mooncakes can be cookie-like but on the next subsequent days, the moisture, flavours and texture of these mooncakes will develop.
Happy Baking

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