On December 22, we ushered in the 22nd of the 24 solar terms and the fourth solar term of winter - the winter solstice. The winter solstice is regarded as a big day in winter, and there is a saying in ancient folks that "the winter solstice is as big as a year".
In the south, there is a custom of feasting and drinking on the winter solstice;In the north, eating a meal of dumplings is essential. No matter what you eat, you can't do without the stove that processes and makes delicious food. Come on!Let's take a look at this Han Dynasty cooking "artifact".
One stove, three pots.
Start work at the same time, easy to do!
This three-fire eye stove is called "Dragon's Head Bronze Stove".
It came from the Han Dynasty and is now in the Inner Mongolia Museum.
The dragon's head bronze stove consists of a stove, a kettle, a retort, and a chimney.
Integral system.
The stove is in the shape of a ship's bow, and the front is a rectangular stove door.
There are three kettles attached to the kettle on the cooktop, and the two sides are decorated with the first ring pattern.
Retort Han Dynasty "steamer", the bottom has a steam permeable hole.
Chimney A roaring faucet used to exhaust smoke.
This artifact is delicately shaped.
It is relatively well preserved.
It is a miniature product of the Han Dynasty stove.
It was unearthed in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
It is in the bronze stove unearthed in Inner Mongolia.
The largest and highest-level burial goods.
According to Ding Yong, a researcher at the Inner Mongolia Museum.
This bronze stove with a dragon's head.
You can put three pots on one stove at the same time.
The chef can "shoot the bow left and right".
This reflects the abundance of food at the time.
It has a long stove, a narrow door, and a high dragon-shaped chimney.
These designs are good for suction and extraction.
Thereby increasing firepower.
From the shape, design, and shape of this cultural relic.
It can be seen that the metal smelting skills at that time were superb.
This bronze stove with a dragon's head.
Excavated from tombs in the Inner Mongolia region.
But it is a typical product of Central Plains culture.
This shows the Inner Mongolia region at that time.
It is a place where many ethnic groups live.
It not only allows us to appreciate the wisdom of the ancestors.
It also allows us to experience cultural integration.
Bring peace and beauty.
As early as about two thousand years ago.
Central Plains civilization and nomadic civilization.
It's here to socialize, communicate, mingle.
Winter solstice every year.
One year old and one healthy.
Today's winter solstice. No matter where you are.
Remember to eat well.
Winter solstice wallpaper sent on).
Curator: Qi Huijie.
Producer: Hu Guoxiang.
Final review: Yang Xia.
Reporter: Khalina.
Design: Wang Yuxuan.
Editor: Wang Jingjing, Qiu Xingxiang.
Technique: Miaki.
Academic support: Ding Yong, researcher of Inner Mongolia Museum.
Chinese traditional colors refer to "Chinese Traditional Colors: Color Aesthetics in the Forbidden City".
Acknowledgement: Inner Mongolia Museum.