tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516657147976616254.post6722892631772587947..comments2023-04-26T09:37:22.481-03:00Comments on À sombra das bibliotecas em flor: Feliz 2017! / Happy 2017!Lucia Sasakihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08698589553453660688noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516657147976616254.post-32926965746505714292017-01-16T14:33:10.891-02:002017-01-16T14:33:10.891-02:00Your mom looks so happy making those mochis! Happy...Your mom looks so happy making those mochis! Happy New Year Lucia!!Leahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12572183461508385106noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516657147976616254.post-84078394405135281872017-01-08T19:58:03.201-02:002017-01-08T19:58:03.201-02:00Hi Sheila, thanks for writing!
Mochis are a Japane...Hi Sheila, thanks for writing!<br />Mochis are a Japanese tradition, I don't know if Korean people observe it too. But I have seen my mother doing these rice balls since I was a child as a signal of the beginning of the year. Yes, mothers are the base of our civilization... doing complicated food that take days to be made stubbornly keep old traditions. Keeping old familiar traditions is a good way to begin the year.<br />Thanks again!Lucia Sasakihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08698589553453660688noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7516657147976616254.post-78956899758188095832017-01-05T01:01:35.187-02:002017-01-05T01:01:35.187-02:00Happy 2017 to you too! Wish I could try one of the...Happy 2017 to you too! Wish I could try one of these - is it a Korean tradition? And yes, mothers - how they do it I'll never know but they do indeed get up early or stay up late to see to the holiday foods, smiling and loving us and always a model for how to live our lives. May your mother live many more joyful years. :-)The Idaho Beautyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09979439849662755082noreply@blogger.com