An ancient poem about Laba: "Laba Day"? Tao Yuanming of the Jin Dynasty? The wind and snow send away the remaining luck, so it doesn't hurt that the time is at peace. Plum willows are planted between the doors, and there are beautiful flowers along one side. I sing your words well, how much wine can I drink!?
Laba generally refers to the Laba Festival. ?Laba Festival, which is the eighth day of the twelfth lunar month every year, is also known as the "Dharma Treasure Festival", "Buddha Enlightenment Festival", "Enlightenment Meeting", etc. Originally a Buddhist festival commemorating the enlightenment of Sakyamuni Buddha, it gradually became a folk festival. Laba porridge, also known as "Seven Treasures and Five Flavors Porridge", "Buddha Porridge", "Everyone's Rice", etc., is a kind of porridge made from a variety of ingredients.
Laba porridge, also known as "Seven Treasures and Five Flavors Porridge", "Buddha Porridge", "Everyone's Rice", etc., is a kind of porridge made from a variety of ingredients. The earliest written records of Laba porridge were recorded in the Song Dynasty.
Wu Zimu's "Meng Liang Lu" of the Southern Song Dynasty records: "On the eighth day of this month, the temple is called Laba. Temples such as Dasha and other temples all serve five-flavor porridge, which is called Laba porridge."
my country The history of eating Laba porridge has been more than a thousand years. On Laba day, no matter the government, monasteries or ordinary people’s homes, they must make Laba porridge. In the Qing Dynasty, the custom of drinking Laba porridge became even more popular. ?
In northern my country, there is a saying, “Children, don’t be greedy, it’s the New Year after Laba Festival.” Celebrating Laba Festival means the beginning of the New Year. Every Laba Festival, people in the north are busy peeling garlic to make vinegar, soaking Laba garlic, and eating Laba noodles and Laba porridge. Laba Festival is rarely mentioned in the south, and the Laba Festival is a typical northern festival.