ℹ️ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 0.2 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html |
| Last Crawled | 2026-04-14 10:29:52 (4 days ago) |
| First Indexed | 2019-09-12 16:12:32 (6 years ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | Homemade Snow Skin Mooncakes - Dessert First |
| Meta Description | Homemade snow skin mooncakes recipe for the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival. These mooncakes have a soft mochi-like wrapper around a sweet custard filling. |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | It’s
Mid-Autumn Festival
on September 13, and I made homemade snow skin mooncakes for the first time! This is the very first time I’ve ever made mooncakes to celebrate this holiday, so I’m very excited at how they turned out!
The traditional Chinese mooncakes, the ones I saw in the bakeries and ate as a kid, are baked and have a golden brown, chewy crust, and a filling of lotus seed paste and a whole salted duck egg yolk, which represents the full moon. I’ll be honest, this was a bit of an acquired taste for me. It’s sweet and salty at the same time, and very rich. However you’re not supposed to eat one by yourself; mooncakes are meant to sliced into wedges and shared with your family, as a celebration of togetherness.
Click
here
to jump to recipe
When I was little, this seemed like the only kind of mooncake around; basically this was what mooncake was. However, in recent years Asian bakeries have realized the creative potential in modernizing mooncakes, and the market has virtually exploded, with a nearly endless variety of flavor and styles available. Many of them are much more appealing to younger tastes, with fillings of ice cream, chocolate, and fruit; I kind of wish these had been around when I was little! One very popular mooncake variant is snow skin mooncake, so called because the crust is made from glutinous rice flour and has a translucent white sheen. In Chinese it’s called “bing pei”, literally ice skin. Since it’s unbaked and made with rice flour, it’s very similar to mochi. It’s also supposed to be less caloric and healthier than traditional mooncakes, but when have the holidays ever been about healthy eating? I’m just looking for the yummy desserts.
When I decided to tackle making mooncakes, I quickly realized if I made the baked kind that no one in my household might actually eat them (sorry mom and dad in Hong Kong!) so I settled on making snow skin mooncakes instead. I was inspired by the recipes and gorgeous photos on
Omnivore’s Cookbook
,
Constellation Inspiration
, and
China Sichaun Food
, so definitely check out those wonderful websites.
There appear to be two common recipes for making snow skin mooncakes: one that mixes pre-cooked glutinous rice flour with confectioner’s sugar and shortening, and one that requires steaming a mixture of different flours and starches. The version I made is the latter, mostly because those were the recipes I came across first! But I also discovered after more researching that the pre-cooked glutinous rice flour, called
gao fen
in China, is actually fairly difficult to find overseas, and several other food bloggers found that trying to cook raw glutinous rice flour at home did not yield the same results as using precooked flour from the store. This is something I might have to experiment with myself another time, but for the meantime I’m quite satisfied with the recipe I used below. Some of the ingredients may also sound esoteric, but I found them easily at my local Asian groceries, plus you can find them online, so I think this is a more accessible recipe for cooks outside of Asia.
Tips for making snow skin mooncakes:
– The biggest tip is to cover all your work surfaces with plastic wrap; this will save you much heartache and frustration. Once cooked, the snow skin wrapper dough is VERY sticky and will adhere like glue to wooden boards, marble countertops, your hands, etc. In the same vein, wearing plastic/latex gloves when working with the dough will also make things much easier.
– The measurements are given in metric grams because precision is important in putting together the dough and in assembling the mooncakes. If you don’t have a
kitchen scale
, it’s an inexpensive and worthwhile investment that will benefit your baking immensely.
– If you’re haven’t worked with some of these ingredients, here are links to some of them; I found all of them at my local Asian grocery.
Glutinous rice flour
Rice flour
Wheat starch
– this is basically the starch part of wheat grains (wheat flour contains the starch and all the other parts of wheat, including the gluten, protein, etc.). Wheat starch is used as a thickener and gives the wrapper its translucent sheen. It’s a very common ingredient for Chinese dumpling wrappers. I have seen recipes where cornstarch is substituted for wheat starch but the result may look and taste a little different.
Custard powder
: this is mainly cornstarch with some color and flavoring added, and used to give a more yellow hue and sweet flavor to the filling. If you can’t find it or don’t want to use it, you can always just use regular cornstarch in place of it and some vanilla extract.
– Molding the mooncakes is the best part of making them. This recipe is sized for 50g molds – here are the
ones
that
I used . Traditionally mooncakes were made in wooden molds, which you can still find, but I found the plunger molds to work just as well and they come in many more fun design options.
– If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops of gel food coloring to the dough before you roll it out. I did not knead the color all the way through to get a marbling effect.
Some progress shots that might be helpful: the custard filling formed into balls, ready to go into the wrappers. Notice they’re not completely smooth, which is ok. As long as the consistency is smooth and thick, it’s good.
Wrapper dough divided out and formed into balls. Notice the plate is lined with plastic wrap to prevent sticking. It helps to wear gloves when forming the balls too.
The dough rolled out between plastic. If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops like I did here.
Forming the dough around the filling. This is where weighing out the filling and dough precisely on the scale is useful, as it ensures all the mooncakes are the same size (and right size) to fit in the molds, and that there’s enough dough to fit around the filling. If it seems like you have too much dough, you can pinch off a bit to keep the dough even around the filling.
Roll the wrapper and filling gently between your hands to form a ball and seal the seams.
Dust the mold lightly (using a pastry brush helps you get it into all the crevices without getting too much flour in there).
Push the mooncake ball gently into the mold, seam side facing down.
Holding the mold firmly down on the work surface, push the plunger down to stamp the design into the top of the mooncake. My daughter loved helping me with this part!
And there’s your mooncake!
So thrilled that they turned out so well. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival!
Snow Skin Mooncakes
Cuisine:
Chinese
4½ tablespoons cornstarch
1½ tablespoons custard powder
100 g sugar
460 g whole milk
5 large egg yolks
30 g unsalted butter
90 g glutinous rice flour
70 g rice flour
40 g wheat starch or cornstarch
80 g confectioners' sugar
370 g whole milk
36 g vegetable oil
â…“ cup glutinous rice flour or cornstarch for coating
Combine cornstarch, custard powder, and half of the sugar together in a large bowl.
Combine remaining sugar and milk in a medium saucepan and heat over medium-low heat until sugar is dissolved, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching. Don't let milk come to a boil.
Add egg yolks to cornstarch mixture and whisk together to form a thick, smooth paste.
Add in the warm milk a third at a time, whisking vigorously so that eggs don't cook.
Once the milk is incorporated, pour the mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon.
Cook for about 5 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent scorching, until mixture thickens and comes together. This will happen quickly, so don't leave the stove and don't stop stirring once it starts to thicken.
Once the mixture thickens, remove immediately from heat and add in butter. Stir until butter melts and is incorporated.
Turn out mixture into a bowl and press a piece of plastic wrap over the surface. Place in refrigerator and chill for at least 30 minutes until mixture is cool and has solidified enough to scoop.
Combine the glutinous rice flour, rice flour, wheat starch, and confectioner's sugar in a large bowl and whisk to together to combine.
Combine the milk and vegetable oil together in a bowl. Pour into the flour mixture and stir to combine.
Strain the mixture into a clean heatproof bowl and let sit for 30 minutes. It will thicken slightly.
Place bowl on a steamer rack in a steamer, or you can improvise a steamer with a large lidded saucepan partially filled with boiling water.
Steam for about 25-30 minutes until the mixture is solid, has turned slightly translucent, and a knife inserted into the mixture comes out nearly clean (a few drops of liquid is ok).
Remove from steamer and let sit on a towel or rack for a few moments to cool.
Scoop the dough out onto a clean surface lined with plastic wrap (it is very important to use plastic wrap - the dough will stick to any other surface. Do not use try to use another surface like marble dusted with flour).
Cover the dough with another piece of plastic wrap and knead for several minutes until the dough is very soft and has an oily sheen. This is very important so the dough stays soft and workable later. Also it's important to use the plastic wrap on top of the dough as again if you use bare hands the dough will stick to your hands.
Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and chill for about 3 hours until fully cool. You can also chill it overnight but it may be a little stiffer when first removed from the refrigerator.
Put the glutinous rice flour in a large frying pan and cook on medium heat, stirring with a wooden spoon, until it starts to turn golden brown and smells fragrant. Remove and let cool.
Take the filling out of the refrigerator. Scoop out 25g portions and roll into balls. It's ok if they aren't completely smooth. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap and place back in the refrigerator.
Cover your worksurface with plastic wrap.
Take the dough out of the refrigerator. Cut off 25g portions and roll into balls. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap. If they get too soft and sticky at any time, you can put them back in the refrigerator for a few minutes to firm up.
Dust a 50g mooncake mold lightly with toasted glutinous rice flour, or cornstarch.
Take a piece of dough and roll it out on the plastic wrap with another sheet of plastic wrap on top, into a round disc. Don't make it too thin.
Place a ball of filling in the center and wrap the dough around it. Roll it lightly between your palms to seal the dough and ensure it's evenly wrapped around the filling.
Fit the mooncake seam side down into the mold and press in gently. Place the mold on the work surface and holding it in place, press down firmly to stamp the top.
Gently press the mooncake out of the mold.
Place in an airtight container lined with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a few hours. Snow skin mooncakes are typically served cold - if they seem really firm, you can let them sit for 10-15 minutes at room temperature first. They will keep for a couple weeks but are best eaten within a few days of making them. |
| Markdown | [Dessert First](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/)
a san francisco food and travel blog \| all things sweet
- [About Me](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/about-pastrygirl)
- [about pastrygirl](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/about-pastrygirl)
- [faq](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/nota-bene)
- [press](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/mentions-in-the-press)
- [Contact Me](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/contact-me)
- [Disclosure](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/disclosure)
- [Privacy Policy](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/privacy-policy)
- [My Books](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/books-2)
- [Recipes](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/recipe-index-2)
- [Breads](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/breads)
- [Cakes](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/cakes)
- [Candy](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/candy)
- [Chocolate](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/chocolate)
- [Cookies](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/cookies)
- [Custards](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/custards)
- [Fruit](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/fruit)
- [Ice Cream](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/ice-cream)
- [Pastry](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/pastry)
- [Tarts](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/tarts)
- [Sweet San Francisco](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/san-francisco)
- [Sweet Spots](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/san-francisco/sweet-spots-sf)
- [SF Events](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/san-francisco/events-sf)
- [Travel](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/travel)
- [Asia](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/travel/asia)
- [Europe](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/travel/europe)
- [California](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/travel/california)
- [Hawaii](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/hawaii)
- [reviews and recs](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/review-index)
- [Cookbooks](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/cookbooks)
- [Chocolate](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/reviews/chocolate-product)
- [Tools](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/tools)
- [Conversions](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/baking-conversions)
# Homemade Snow Skin Mooncakes
Sep 12 by [Anita](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/author/pastrygirl) [2 Comments](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#comments)

It’s [Mid-Autumn Festival](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2006/09/mooncakes.html) on September 13, and I made homemade snow skin mooncakes for the first time! This is the very first time I’ve ever made mooncakes to celebrate this holiday, so I’m very excited at how they turned out\!
The traditional Chinese mooncakes, the ones I saw in the bakeries and ate as a kid, are baked and have a golden brown, chewy crust, and a filling of lotus seed paste and a whole salted duck egg yolk, which represents the full moon. I’ll be honest, this was a bit of an acquired taste for me. It’s sweet and salty at the same time, and very rich. However you’re not supposed to eat one by yourself; mooncakes are meant to sliced into wedges and shared with your family, as a celebration of togetherness.
**Click [here](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes/#recipejump) to jump to recipe**

When I was little, this seemed like the only kind of mooncake around; basically this was what mooncake was. However, in recent years Asian bakeries have realized the creative potential in modernizing mooncakes, and the market has virtually exploded, with a nearly endless variety of flavor and styles available. Many of them are much more appealing to younger tastes, with fillings of ice cream, chocolate, and fruit; I kind of wish these had been around when I was little! One very popular mooncake variant is snow skin mooncake, so called because the crust is made from glutinous rice flour and has a translucent white sheen. In Chinese it’s called “bing pei”, literally ice skin. Since it’s unbaked and made with rice flour, it’s very similar to mochi. It’s also supposed to be less caloric and healthier than traditional mooncakes, but when have the holidays ever been about healthy eating? I’m just looking for the yummy desserts.

When I decided to tackle making mooncakes, I quickly realized if I made the baked kind that no one in my household might actually eat them (sorry mom and dad in Hong Kong!) so I settled on making snow skin mooncakes instead. I was inspired by the recipes and gorgeous photos on [Omnivore’s Cookbook](https://omnivorescookbook.com/snow-skin-mooncake-custard), [Constellation Inspiration](http://www.constellationinspiration.com/2018/09/taro-coconut-mooncakes.html), and [China Sichaun Food](https://www.chinasichuanfood.com/snow-skin-mooncake-video-recipe-with-custard-filling/), so definitely check out those wonderful websites.

There appear to be two common recipes for making snow skin mooncakes: one that mixes pre-cooked glutinous rice flour with confectioner’s sugar and shortening, and one that requires steaming a mixture of different flours and starches. The version I made is the latter, mostly because those were the recipes I came across first! But I also discovered after more researching that the pre-cooked glutinous rice flour, called *gao fen* in China, is actually fairly difficult to find overseas, and several other food bloggers found that trying to cook raw glutinous rice flour at home did not yield the same results as using precooked flour from the store. This is something I might have to experiment with myself another time, but for the meantime I’m quite satisfied with the recipe I used below. Some of the ingredients may also sound esoteric, but I found them easily at my local Asian groceries, plus you can find them online, so I think this is a more accessible recipe for cooks outside of Asia.

# Tips for making snow skin mooncakes:
- – The biggest tip is to cover all your work surfaces with plastic wrap; this will save you much heartache and frustration. Once cooked, the snow skin wrapper dough is VERY sticky and will adhere like glue to wooden boards, marble countertops, your hands, etc. In the same vein, wearing plastic/latex gloves when working with the dough will also make things much easier.
- – The measurements are given in metric grams because precision is important in putting together the dough and in assembling the mooncakes. If you don’t have a [kitchen scale](https://amzn.to/2AeneuJ), it’s an inexpensive and worthwhile investment that will benefit your baking immensely.
- – If you’re haven’t worked with some of these ingredients, here are links to some of them; I found all of them at my local Asian grocery.
- [Glutinous rice flour](https://amzn.to/2O6Htmz)
- [Rice flour](https://amzn.to/2NWGjtJ)
- [Wheat starch](https://amzn.to/304v9Fy) – this is basically the starch part of wheat grains (wheat flour contains the starch and all the other parts of wheat, including the gluten, protein, etc.). Wheat starch is used as a thickener and gives the wrapper its translucent sheen. It’s a very common ingredient for Chinese dumpling wrappers. I have seen recipes where cornstarch is substituted for wheat starch but the result may look and taste a little different.
- [Custard powder](https://amzn.to/2QfwLfQ): this is mainly cornstarch with some color and flavoring added, and used to give a more yellow hue and sweet flavor to the filling. If you can’t find it or don’t want to use it, you can always just use regular cornstarch in place of it and some vanilla extract.
- – Molding the mooncakes is the best part of making them. This recipe is sized for 50g molds – here are the [ones](https://amzn.to/2I29980) [that](https://amzn.to/2Q7gMR5) I used . Traditionally mooncakes were made in wooden molds, which you can still find, but I found the plunger molds to work just as well and they come in many more fun design options.
- – If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops of gel food coloring to the dough before you roll it out. I did not knead the color all the way through to get a marbling effect.

Some progress shots that might be helpful: the custard filling formed into balls, ready to go into the wrappers. Notice they’re not completely smooth, which is ok. As long as the consistency is smooth and thick, it’s good.

Wrapper dough divided out and formed into balls. Notice the plate is lined with plastic wrap to prevent sticking. It helps to wear gloves when forming the balls too.

The dough rolled out between plastic. If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops like I did here.

Forming the dough around the filling. This is where weighing out the filling and dough precisely on the scale is useful, as it ensures all the mooncakes are the same size (and right size) to fit in the molds, and that there’s enough dough to fit around the filling. If it seems like you have too much dough, you can pinch off a bit to keep the dough even around the filling.

Roll the wrapper and filling gently between your hands to form a ball and seal the seams.

Dust the mold lightly (using a pastry brush helps you get it into all the crevices without getting too much flour in there).

Push the mooncake ball gently into the mold, seam side facing down.

Holding the mold firmly down on the work surface, push the plunger down to stamp the design into the top of the mooncake. My daughter loved helping me with this part\!

And there’s your mooncake\!
So thrilled that they turned out so well. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival\!

Snow Skin Mooncakes

[Print](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/easyrecipe-print/7438-0/)
Author: Anita Chu
Cuisine: Chinese
Serves: 20 mooncakes
Ingredients
Custard Filling:
- 4\½ tablespoons cornstarch
- 1\½ tablespoons custard powder
- 100 g sugar
- 460 g whole milk
- 5 large egg yolks
- 30 g unsalted butter
Wrapper:
- 90 g glutinous rice flour
- 70 g rice flour
- 40 g wheat starch or cornstarch
- 80 g confectioners' sugar
- 370 g whole milk
- 36 g vegetable oil
- â…“ cup glutinous rice flour or cornstarch for coating
Instructions
For the filling:
1. Combine cornstarch, custard powder, and half of the sugar together in a large bowl.
2. Combine remaining sugar and milk in a medium saucepan and heat over medium-low heat until sugar is dissolved, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching. Don't let milk come to a boil.
3. Add egg yolks to cornstarch mixture and whisk together to form a thick, smooth paste.
4. Add in the warm milk a third at a time, whisking vigorously so that eggs don't cook.
5. Once the milk is incorporated, pour the mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon.
6. Cook for about 5 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent scorching, until mixture thickens and comes together. This will happen quickly, so don't leave the stove and don't stop stirring once it starts to thicken.
7. Once the mixture thickens, remove immediately from heat and add in butter. Stir until butter melts and is incorporated.
8. Turn out mixture into a bowl and press a piece of plastic wrap over the surface. Place in refrigerator and chill for at least 30 minutes until mixture is cool and has solidified enough to scoop.
For the wrapper:
1. Combine the glutinous rice flour, rice flour, wheat starch, and confectioner's sugar in a large bowl and whisk to together to combine.
2. Combine the milk and vegetable oil together in a bowl. Pour into the flour mixture and stir to combine.
3. Strain the mixture into a clean heatproof bowl and let sit for 30 minutes. It will thicken slightly.
4. Place bowl on a steamer rack in a steamer, or you can improvise a steamer with a large lidded saucepan partially filled with boiling water.
5. Steam for about 25-30 minutes until the mixture is solid, has turned slightly translucent, and a knife inserted into the mixture comes out nearly clean (a few drops of liquid is ok).
6. Remove from steamer and let sit on a towel or rack for a few moments to cool.
7. Scoop the dough out onto a clean surface lined with plastic wrap (it is very important to use plastic wrap - the dough will stick to any other surface. Do not use try to use another surface like marble dusted with flour).
8. Cover the dough with another piece of plastic wrap and knead for several minutes until the dough is very soft and has an oily sheen. This is very important so the dough stays soft and workable later. Also it's important to use the plastic wrap on top of the dough as again if you use bare hands the dough will stick to your hands.
9. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and chill for about 3 hours until fully cool. You can also chill it overnight but it may be a little stiffer when first removed from the refrigerator.
To make the mooncakes:
1. Put the glutinous rice flour in a large frying pan and cook on medium heat, stirring with a wooden spoon, until it starts to turn golden brown and smells fragrant. Remove and let cool.
2. Take the filling out of the refrigerator. Scoop out 25g portions and roll into balls. It's ok if they aren't completely smooth. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap and place back in the refrigerator.
3. Cover your worksurface with plastic wrap.
4. Take the dough out of the refrigerator. Cut off 25g portions and roll into balls. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap. If they get too soft and sticky at any time, you can put them back in the refrigerator for a few minutes to firm up.
5. Dust a 50g mooncake mold lightly with toasted glutinous rice flour, or cornstarch.
6. Take a piece of dough and roll it out on the plastic wrap with another sheet of plastic wrap on top, into a round disc. Don't make it too thin.
7. Place a ball of filling in the center and wrap the dough around it. Roll it lightly between your palms to seal the dough and ensure it's evenly wrapped around the filling.
8. Fit the mooncake seam side down into the mold and press in gently. Place the mold on the work surface and holding it in place, press down firmly to stamp the top.
9. Gently press the mooncake out of the mold.
10. Place in an airtight container lined with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a few hours. Snow skin mooncakes are typically served cold - if they seem really firm, you can let them sit for 10-15 minutes at room temperature first. They will keep for a couple weeks but are best eaten within a few days of making them.
3\.5.3228
Filed Under: [Pastry](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes/pastry), [Recipes](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/recipes) Tagged With: [homemade snow skin mooncakes](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/tag/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes), [mid-autumn festival](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/tag/mid-autumn-festival), [mooncake](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/tag/mooncake), [snow skin mooncake](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/tag/snow-skin-mooncake)
### Related Posts
- [Mooncakes in Mid-Autumn](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2006/09/mooncakes.html "Permanent Link toMooncakes in Mid-Autumn")
- [Valrhona and Measured Indulgence: New Lemon White Chocolate Tart](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2013/08/valrhona-and-measured-indulgence-new-lemon-tart.html "Permanent Link toValrhona and Measured Indulgence: New Lemon White Chocolate Tart")
- [Perfection, Once Again](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2008/03/perfection-once.html "Permanent Link toPerfection, Once Again")
- [World Bread Day: Brioche](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2006/10/world_bread_day.html "Permanent Link toWorld Bread Day: Brioche")
- [Happy Birthday to Me: Strawberry Pink Velvet Cake](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2016/05/strawberry-pink-velvet-cake.html "Permanent Link toHappy Birthday to Me: Strawberry Pink Velvet Cake")
[« {South Bay}:Best Spots in Los Altos](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/best-spots-in-los-altos.html)
[Stone Fruit Pavlova with Guava Curd »](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/stone-fruit-pavlova-with-guava-curd.html)
### Comments
1. 1
Moon says
[Sep 17 at 9:49 am](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#comment-489117)
I’m not sure what I did, but when I made the custard filling and had it in the fridge overnight; it was still a custardy consistency and not firm. Does it depend on the type/brand of custard powder? I used Bird’s Custard Powder.
[Reply](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#comment-489117)
- 2
[Anita](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/) says
[Sep 23 at 10:07 pm](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#comment-489222)
Hi there, I haven’t had that issue before but I think the custard powder wouldn’t be an issue unless you added more than the recipe said. When you cooked it, did it thicken up on the stove? It should become fairly thick before you remove it – it’s almost like pastry cream. If it’s still very custardy and liquidy, it may not have cooked enough and it won’t thicken any more after you put it in the fridge. Give it a try – good luck\!
[Reply](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#comment-489222)
### Leave a Reply [Cancel reply](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html#respond)
[About Me](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/about-pastrygirl)[Mentions in the Press](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/mentions-in-the-press)[Want to go to pastry school?](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/want-to-go-to-pastry-scho)[Email me](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#1776797e63765773726464726563717e656463707e657b3974787a)
subscribe to receive posts in your inbox
[](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2010/03/saveurs-best-food-blog-awards-ive-been-nominated.html)
#### Archives
Archives
#### best of dessert first
[The Making of Macarons (Sucre Cuit Style)](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2010/10/making-macarons.html) [ Hong Kong Eggettes (Daan Jai)](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2011/05/hong-kong-eggettes-daan-jai-for-mothers-day.html)
[Tis the Season (Chocolate Mint Macarons)](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/12/tis-the-season.html) [A Better Brioche](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/10/do-bad-things-a.html)
[Consider the Humble Chocolate Chip Cookie](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/10/considering-the.html) [A Feast of Figs](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/09/shf35-a-feast-o.html)
[Pure Dessert, Pure Inspiration (Chocolate Citrus Tart)](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/09/bittersweet-cit.html) [My Own Remembrance of Things Past: Daan Tats](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/08/post-1.html)
[The Slow Drip of Coffee on a Languorous Summer's Day](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/06/post_2.html) [Still Life of Strawberry Tart](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2007/05/still_life_of_s.html)
#### disclosure
This site uses affiliate links. Purchasing through the links will give this site commissions. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
#### about pastrygirl
Anita Chu, also known as pastrygirl, is a baker, writer, and photographer with a passion for pastry. She trained at Tante Marie's Cooking School and is the author of Field Guide to Cookies, Field Guide to Candy, and Lollipop Love. Anita lives in San Francisco with her husband, daughter, and dog Max. [More about pastrygirl](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/about-pastrygirl)
#### my cookbooks
[](https://amzn.to/3yy22So) [](https://amzn.to/4dFxuNu) [](https://amzn.to/3Ae3HwL)
#### contact me
Please e-mail anita {at} dessertfirstgirl {dot} com with all collaboration inquiries, pastry questions, or just to say hi! I look forward to hearing from you\!
- [home](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/)
- [my books](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/books-2)
- [recipes](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/recipe-index-2)
- [sweet san francisco](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/category/san-francisco)
- [reviews](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/review-index)
- [conversions](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/baking-conversions)
- [shop](http://astore.amazon.com/dessertfirst-20)
- [archives](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/archives-2)

© 2006–2026 Anita Chu. All Rights Reserved.  Design by [Deluxe Designs](http://www.deluxe-designs.com/)
[](https://statcounter.com/ "web analytics") |
| Readable Markdown | 
It’s [Mid-Autumn Festival](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2006/09/mooncakes.html) on September 13, and I made homemade snow skin mooncakes for the first time! This is the very first time I’ve ever made mooncakes to celebrate this holiday, so I’m very excited at how they turned out\!
The traditional Chinese mooncakes, the ones I saw in the bakeries and ate as a kid, are baked and have a golden brown, chewy crust, and a filling of lotus seed paste and a whole salted duck egg yolk, which represents the full moon. I’ll be honest, this was a bit of an acquired taste for me. It’s sweet and salty at the same time, and very rich. However you’re not supposed to eat one by yourself; mooncakes are meant to sliced into wedges and shared with your family, as a celebration of togetherness.
**Click [here](https://dessertfirstgirl.com/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes/#recipejump) to jump to recipe**

When I was little, this seemed like the only kind of mooncake around; basically this was what mooncake was. However, in recent years Asian bakeries have realized the creative potential in modernizing mooncakes, and the market has virtually exploded, with a nearly endless variety of flavor and styles available. Many of them are much more appealing to younger tastes, with fillings of ice cream, chocolate, and fruit; I kind of wish these had been around when I was little! One very popular mooncake variant is snow skin mooncake, so called because the crust is made from glutinous rice flour and has a translucent white sheen. In Chinese it’s called “bing pei”, literally ice skin. Since it’s unbaked and made with rice flour, it’s very similar to mochi. It’s also supposed to be less caloric and healthier than traditional mooncakes, but when have the holidays ever been about healthy eating? I’m just looking for the yummy desserts.

When I decided to tackle making mooncakes, I quickly realized if I made the baked kind that no one in my household might actually eat them (sorry mom and dad in Hong Kong!) so I settled on making snow skin mooncakes instead. I was inspired by the recipes and gorgeous photos on [Omnivore’s Cookbook](https://omnivorescookbook.com/snow-skin-mooncake-custard), [Constellation Inspiration](http://www.constellationinspiration.com/2018/09/taro-coconut-mooncakes.html), and [China Sichaun Food](https://www.chinasichuanfood.com/snow-skin-mooncake-video-recipe-with-custard-filling/), so definitely check out those wonderful websites.

There appear to be two common recipes for making snow skin mooncakes: one that mixes pre-cooked glutinous rice flour with confectioner’s sugar and shortening, and one that requires steaming a mixture of different flours and starches. The version I made is the latter, mostly because those were the recipes I came across first! But I also discovered after more researching that the pre-cooked glutinous rice flour, called *gao fen* in China, is actually fairly difficult to find overseas, and several other food bloggers found that trying to cook raw glutinous rice flour at home did not yield the same results as using precooked flour from the store. This is something I might have to experiment with myself another time, but for the meantime I’m quite satisfied with the recipe I used below. Some of the ingredients may also sound esoteric, but I found them easily at my local Asian groceries, plus you can find them online, so I think this is a more accessible recipe for cooks outside of Asia.

## Tips for making snow skin mooncakes:
- – The biggest tip is to cover all your work surfaces with plastic wrap; this will save you much heartache and frustration. Once cooked, the snow skin wrapper dough is VERY sticky and will adhere like glue to wooden boards, marble countertops, your hands, etc. In the same vein, wearing plastic/latex gloves when working with the dough will also make things much easier.
- – The measurements are given in metric grams because precision is important in putting together the dough and in assembling the mooncakes. If you don’t have a [kitchen scale](https://amzn.to/2AeneuJ), it’s an inexpensive and worthwhile investment that will benefit your baking immensely.
- – If you’re haven’t worked with some of these ingredients, here are links to some of them; I found all of them at my local Asian grocery.
- [Glutinous rice flour](https://amzn.to/2O6Htmz)
- [Rice flour](https://amzn.to/2NWGjtJ)
- [Wheat starch](https://amzn.to/304v9Fy) – this is basically the starch part of wheat grains (wheat flour contains the starch and all the other parts of wheat, including the gluten, protein, etc.). Wheat starch is used as a thickener and gives the wrapper its translucent sheen. It’s a very common ingredient for Chinese dumpling wrappers. I have seen recipes where cornstarch is substituted for wheat starch but the result may look and taste a little different.
- [Custard powder](https://amzn.to/2QfwLfQ): this is mainly cornstarch with some color and flavoring added, and used to give a more yellow hue and sweet flavor to the filling. If you can’t find it or don’t want to use it, you can always just use regular cornstarch in place of it and some vanilla extract.
- – Molding the mooncakes is the best part of making them. This recipe is sized for 50g molds – here are the [ones](https://amzn.to/2I29980) [that](https://amzn.to/2Q7gMR5) I used . Traditionally mooncakes were made in wooden molds, which you can still find, but I found the plunger molds to work just as well and they come in many more fun design options.
- – If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops of gel food coloring to the dough before you roll it out. I did not knead the color all the way through to get a marbling effect.

Some progress shots that might be helpful: the custard filling formed into balls, ready to go into the wrappers. Notice they’re not completely smooth, which is ok. As long as the consistency is smooth and thick, it’s good.

Wrapper dough divided out and formed into balls. Notice the plate is lined with plastic wrap to prevent sticking. It helps to wear gloves when forming the balls too.

The dough rolled out between plastic. If you want to color the dough, you can add a few drops like I did here.

Forming the dough around the filling. This is where weighing out the filling and dough precisely on the scale is useful, as it ensures all the mooncakes are the same size (and right size) to fit in the molds, and that there’s enough dough to fit around the filling. If it seems like you have too much dough, you can pinch off a bit to keep the dough even around the filling.

Roll the wrapper and filling gently between your hands to form a ball and seal the seams.

Dust the mold lightly (using a pastry brush helps you get it into all the crevices without getting too much flour in there).

Push the mooncake ball gently into the mold, seam side facing down.

Holding the mold firmly down on the work surface, push the plunger down to stamp the design into the top of the mooncake. My daughter loved helping me with this part\!

And there’s your mooncake\!
So thrilled that they turned out so well. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival\!

Snow Skin Mooncakes

Cuisine: Chinese
- 4\½ tablespoons cornstarch
- 1\½ tablespoons custard powder
- 100 g sugar
- 460 g whole milk
- 5 large egg yolks
- 30 g unsalted butter
- 90 g glutinous rice flour
- 70 g rice flour
- 40 g wheat starch or cornstarch
- 80 g confectioners' sugar
- 370 g whole milk
- 36 g vegetable oil
- â…“ cup glutinous rice flour or cornstarch for coating
1. Combine cornstarch, custard powder, and half of the sugar together in a large bowl.
2. Combine remaining sugar and milk in a medium saucepan and heat over medium-low heat until sugar is dissolved, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching. Don't let milk come to a boil.
3. Add egg yolks to cornstarch mixture and whisk together to form a thick, smooth paste.
4. Add in the warm milk a third at a time, whisking vigorously so that eggs don't cook.
5. Once the milk is incorporated, pour the mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon.
6. Cook for about 5 minutes, stirring constantly to prevent scorching, until mixture thickens and comes together. This will happen quickly, so don't leave the stove and don't stop stirring once it starts to thicken.
7. Once the mixture thickens, remove immediately from heat and add in butter. Stir until butter melts and is incorporated.
8. Turn out mixture into a bowl and press a piece of plastic wrap over the surface. Place in refrigerator and chill for at least 30 minutes until mixture is cool and has solidified enough to scoop.
1. Combine the glutinous rice flour, rice flour, wheat starch, and confectioner's sugar in a large bowl and whisk to together to combine.
2. Combine the milk and vegetable oil together in a bowl. Pour into the flour mixture and stir to combine.
3. Strain the mixture into a clean heatproof bowl and let sit for 30 minutes. It will thicken slightly.
4. Place bowl on a steamer rack in a steamer, or you can improvise a steamer with a large lidded saucepan partially filled with boiling water.
5. Steam for about 25-30 minutes until the mixture is solid, has turned slightly translucent, and a knife inserted into the mixture comes out nearly clean (a few drops of liquid is ok).
6. Remove from steamer and let sit on a towel or rack for a few moments to cool.
7. Scoop the dough out onto a clean surface lined with plastic wrap (it is very important to use plastic wrap - the dough will stick to any other surface. Do not use try to use another surface like marble dusted with flour).
8. Cover the dough with another piece of plastic wrap and knead for several minutes until the dough is very soft and has an oily sheen. This is very important so the dough stays soft and workable later. Also it's important to use the plastic wrap on top of the dough as again if you use bare hands the dough will stick to your hands.
9. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and chill for about 3 hours until fully cool. You can also chill it overnight but it may be a little stiffer when first removed from the refrigerator.
1. Put the glutinous rice flour in a large frying pan and cook on medium heat, stirring with a wooden spoon, until it starts to turn golden brown and smells fragrant. Remove and let cool.
2. Take the filling out of the refrigerator. Scoop out 25g portions and roll into balls. It's ok if they aren't completely smooth. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap and place back in the refrigerator.
3. Cover your worksurface with plastic wrap.
4. Take the dough out of the refrigerator. Cut off 25g portions and roll into balls. Place on a plate lined with plastic wrap. If they get too soft and sticky at any time, you can put them back in the refrigerator for a few minutes to firm up.
5. Dust a 50g mooncake mold lightly with toasted glutinous rice flour, or cornstarch.
6. Take a piece of dough and roll it out on the plastic wrap with another sheet of plastic wrap on top, into a round disc. Don't make it too thin.
7. Place a ball of filling in the center and wrap the dough around it. Roll it lightly between your palms to seal the dough and ensure it's evenly wrapped around the filling.
8. Fit the mooncake seam side down into the mold and press in gently. Place the mold on the work surface and holding it in place, press down firmly to stamp the top.
9. Gently press the mooncake out of the mold.
10. Place in an airtight container lined with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a few hours. Snow skin mooncakes are typically served cold - if they seem really firm, you can let them sit for 10-15 minutes at room temperature first. They will keep for a couple weeks but are best eaten within a few days of making them. |
| Shard | 181 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 17218609771117039381 |
| Unparsed URL | com,dessertfirstgirl!/2019/09/homemade-snow-skin-mooncakes.html s443 |