Year of the OX!

This weekend was a big one at our house.  We had two different Chinese New Year events.

The first was a CNY party at a friend’s house.  The majority of the families there were adoptive families, but all but one family had a parent who was Chinese (ok, mostly it was the moms who were chinese except for our family where it was the dad).   We had a great time making jiaozi and then we ate a huge Chinese feast.  The gluttonous kids snatched up all their hongbao and spent the evening running around like sugar-crazed maniacs  (the sugar was mostly from the chocolate money in the hongbao).

On Sunday, I overcame a huge personal hurdle and cooked CNY dinner for Mr. A’s family.  In the past, I have refused to ever cook anything Chinese for anyone who is actually Chinese for good reason.  That reason being my Chinese cooking sucked.  But this year, I have actually learned to cook it much better with the help of  two excellent cookbooks.

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We made several varieties of jiaozi (steamed & fried / with cabbage and without), Mr. A’s famous long-life noodles, tofu and a veggie dish.  Mr. A’s sister brought the homemade mochi and the meat.  I also made steamed banana cake (which is not chinese at all.  It is vietnamese but oh so yummy, so I made it anyway.)  If I must say so myself, it was a pretty decent and edible spread.

Here is Mr. A’s dad making jiaozi for the first time ever.  We asked if he ever helped make them in Taiwan and his answer was “No! Boys do not do that!”

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Here is a picture of L and M in their new year’s clothes.  M didn’t get a “chinese” outfit this year for her dance class so she is wearing a new red shirt and her birth-year gold jewelry (outfit and accessories chosen by M herself).   L’s shirt isn’t new, it is a Chinese hoochi mama shirt that MIL gave M a long time ago, but L likes to wear for dress  up.   She chose it (with a more than a little encouragement from M.)

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We also made the girls and their two cousins bow for their hongbao. (I was video taping, so no photos this year.)  We threw firecrackers and did our now-traditional lion dance.  (This is L shaking her caboose.)  We also lit incense and burned ghost money for the ancestors.

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All in all, we had a great Chinese New Year this year.  Because Mr. A’s family didn’t do much of the this  stuff when he was little (cleaning the house, new clothes, etc.),  we have been creating our own traditions for the girls.  The first couple years we did it, it felt a little weird.  Now that we have done it for a few years, it feels comfortable.

Hooray for the Year of the Ox!  I hope it is a lucky one!

Xin Nian Kuai Le!

18 comments to Year of the OX!

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