Sunday, March 6, 2022

Cyprus 2020 - Christmas


Technical Details:
Issuing Date: 19 November 2020
Width: 35.50 mm
Height: 36.00 mm
Set of 3
Format Sheet of 8 of 1 Design
Perforations: 13.50 x 13.25
Issuing authority: Department of Postal Services (Cyprus Post)
Printer: Baltijas Banknote, Latvia


Christmas is undoubtedly a celebration of love, joy and offering. All the houses are festively decorated and the housewives prepare all kinds of traditional sweets, filling the house with aromas and tastes.
The two stamps present traditional Cypriot sweets in Christmas format.
The €0.64 stamp illustrates the Nativity of Christ, from a fresco (end of the 12th century) in the Christos Antifonitis Church in Kalograia, which is an interpretation of the style of the Constantinople’s post-Comnenian art. At the opening of the cave, the Virgin Mary is depicted lying on a bed. On the left, in a built manger-sarcophagus, Christ is depicted swaddled. On the right are the Shepherds and below the bathing scene. After the Turkish invasion, the figure of the Virgin Mary was removed, irreparably destroying this unique composition.

Cyprus 2015 - Cypriot Dishes - Sweets


Technical Details:
Issuing Date: 02 April 2015
Cypriot Dishes - Sweets - Cherry
Width: 38.00 mm
Height: 38.00 mm
Set of 3
Format Sheet of 8
Perforations: 13.5 x 13.5
Issuing Authority: Department of Postal Services
Printer: Giesecke & Devrient Matsoukis SA Greece
Designer: Elena Eliadou
Quantities:
€0,34 = 190,000 - Plats chypriotes - Douceurs - Orange amère
€0,41 = 275,000 - Cypriot Dishes - Sweets - Bitter Orange
€1,88 = 90,000 - Cypriot Dishes - Sweets - Cherry

Preserves have always played an integral part in traditional Cyprus hospitality. The preservation of fruit and vegetables with sugar, as the main preserving agent has always been part of home economics especially at the villages. Products that were plentiful at times and scarce in others, either due to them being out of season or their market value too high could be processed and used throughout the year. In our days, these products are used both domestically and on an industrial scale forming part of our export trade. These sweets were the first item to be offered to guests when visiting friends and acquaintances.

Saturday, March 5, 2022

Republic of China (Taiwan) 1999 - Chinese Gourmet Food

Technical Details:
Stamp Name: Chinese Gourmet Food
Issue Date: 20 August 1999
Dimension of Stamps: 40 mm x 30 mm
Printer: China Color Printing Co.,Inc.,R.O.C.
Designer: Lee Kuang-chi
Sheet Composition: 16 (4x4)
Print Color: Colorful
Process: Deep Tech Offset
Paper: Phosphorescent Stamp Paper
Perforation: 11½ x11


Because of differences in climate, agriculture, lifestyle and customs, there are different kinds of cuisine in different regions of China and quite different culinary cultures. To promote Chinese food internationally, this Directorate is issuing a set of eight stamps, featuring eight great Chinese regional cuisines. All will have denominations of NT$5.00 and be released on August 20, 1999. The Directorate asked some master chefs who work for five-star tourist hotels to cook eight famous dishes. Mr. Lee Kuang-chi then made paintings of them for stamps that were printed by China Color Printing Co., Inc. in color deep-etch offset.

Descriptions of the eight stamps and the regional cuisines they depict follow:

1. Taiwan cuisine:
Taiwan cuisine is an off-shoot of Fukien cuisine. Soups abound in Taiwan cuisine. Influenced by Dutch and Japanese food, it incorporates many raw and lightly boiled foods. The stamp features the dish "Peony Lobster."
2. Fukien cuisine:
Fukien cuisine puts its stress on seafood. Its steamed seafood is out of the world. The taste of Fukien cuisine is mainly light, sour and sweet. Clear soups are regarded as representative of Fukien cuisine, and the stamp features one "Buddha Jumps the Wall."
3.Cantonese cuisine:
Canton has long been a hub of international trade, and its cooking has absorbed the strong points of many different places. The taste is light, fresh, aromatic, sweet, refreshing and tender. The stamp features "Hors d'oeuvres Cantonese."
4. Kiangsu and Chekiang cuisine:
This cuisine puts an emphasis on soup broths and heat control. The taste is light but not flat, with thoroughly cooked tender meat that nonetheless holds together and does not lose its original flavors. The stamp features "Dongpo Pork."
5. Shanghai cuisine
This is the most cosmopolitan of all Chinese regional cuisines. Shanghai cuisine uses large amounts of oil and sauce. The flavors of its sauces are rich, and the color of its dishes dark and shiny. The stamp features "Stewed Fish Jaws."
6. Hunan cuisine:
Hunan cuisine tends toward the sour, the spicy and the rich. It uses a lot of oil, and corn starch is often used to thicken soups or sauces. It makes ample use of smoked meats. The cuisine has strong local flavor. The stamp features "Beggar's Chicken."
7. Szechwan cuisine:
Vegetables take precedence to meat and fish, and the seasoning it uses is unique-spicy and funky, with lots of Szechwan peppers, hot red oil sauce, dried chili peppers. It's favored by people who have strong tastes. The stamp features "Carp Jumping over the Dragon's Gate."
8. Peking cuisine:
Peking was capital during the Jin, Yuan, Ming and Ching dynasties. Great chefs from all over China gathered there during this time, and their mutual interaction resulted in what is known today as Peking cuisine. At once elegant, graceful and regal, it stresses color coordination, shape, taste and nutrition. The stamp features "Peking Duck."

Friday, March 4, 2022

Guernsey 2022 - Bailiwick Cuisine


Technical Details:
Date of Issue: 19 February 2022
Designer: Mark Totty
Printer: WSP
Values: GY Letter, UK Letter, GY Large, EUR Letter, ROW Letter, UK Large
Process: Six colour digital printing in coil strips. Value and location identifier printed in thermography within a Royal Mail series II machine
Stamp Size: 25mm deep x 56mm wide
Paper: Self-adhesive
Perforation: Simulated

GY Letter: Guernsey Bean Jar
GY Large: Guernsey Gâche
UK Letter: Guernsey Biscuits
UK Large: Local Lobster and Shrimps
EUR Letter: Guernsey Gâche Méléé
ROW Letter: Local Chancre Crab

This latest Post & Go set celebrates the island’s delicious cuisine by depicting a selection of local recipes or popular local dishes on the six stamps.
Traditional dishes such as Guernsey Bean Jar, Guernsey Gâche Melee and locally available seafood feature on this set.
The Guernsey Ormer is depicted on the presentation pack cover and is a real gastronomic treat. This shellfish is a variety of abalone, which looks like a small sea snail and is harvested at low spring tides. They have been collected on the island for centuries but there are strict rules about when and where you can hunt for them, so they are only available in season and are much sought after.
Our Post and Go stamps remain a popular part of our annual programme, and we are particularly delighted to be able to showcase Guernsey’s wealth of natural ingredients from both its land and surrounding seas.

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Spain 2022 - Andalucia - Gazpacho


Technical Details:
Issue Date: 28 February 2022

Sunday, February 27, 2022

Colombia 2021 - Colombian Cuisine at the Table



Date of Issue: 24 September 2021
Presentation: Sheet with 10 Stamps
Size: 40 x 40 Millimeters
Printing: 20,000 Stamps
Face Value: $2,000 COP
Stamp Printer: Cartor Security Printing

Colombia 2021 - Sweet Flavors of Colombia



Date of Issue: 24 September 2021
Presentation: Sheet with 10 stamps
Size: 40 x 40 millimeters
Printing: 20,000 Stamps
Face Value: $2,000 COP
Stamp Printer: Cartor Security Printing

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Belarusia 2022 - Belarusian Cuisine


Technical Details:
Date of issue: 05 January 2022
Designer: Alexander Mityanin and Marina Vitkovskaya
Paper: chalky
Printing process: offset
Perforation: comb 13 : 13 1/2
Size of a stamp: 52 x 29,60 mm.
Size of the Miniature Sheet: 128 x 113 mm.
Printing run: 15.000


P - Ranberry Juice
P - Draniki (Potato Pancakes)

Face value P is equal to the air-mail tariff of a letter up to 20 gram abroad.
Active agriculture, the widespread use of local products, the influence of neighboring countries and settlers influenced the formation of the Belarusian cuisine.
Belarusian cuisine is one of the most diverse on the continent. It is similar to Russian, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, Polish, Jewish, but unique and tasty in its own way.
A distinctive feature of the Belarusian cuisine is the widespread use of potato dishes. Traditional draniki (potato pancakes) are especially popular.
An irreplaceable ingredient in Belarusian cuisine is cranberry. This is one of the most vitamin-rich berries. Our country has the largest plantations of this berry in Europe.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

France 2022 - Flowers and Sweets



Technical Details:
Date of Issued: 09 May 2022
Notebook: "Flowers and Sweets" - a mouthful of delicacies that will make your mouth water
Design and layout: Isabelle SIMLER © La Poste
Printing: Heliogravure
Support: Self-Adhesive Paper
Colour: Polychromy
Notebook format: H 256 x 54 mm
Format 12 TVP: V 24 x 38 mm (20 x 34)
Serrations: Wavy -
Face value: 12 TVP (at €1.16) - Green Letter, up to 20g - France
Booklet price: €13.92
Edition: 4,500,000

1st Section:
01 - Poppy and Poppy Candy
02 - Chestnut and Candied Chestnut
03 - Gum acacia and gumballs
04 - Marshmallow and Marshmallow

2th Section:
05 - The Mint and Stupidity of Cambrai
06 - Anise and Flavigny Anise
07 - Cocoa Tree and Chocolate Squares
08 - Violet and Violet Candy

3th Section:
09 - Bergamot and Bergamot from Nancy
10 - The Coconut Tree and the Coco Ball
11 - The Liquorice and Its Liquorice Roll
12 - The Almond Tree and The Dragee

Flowers and Sweets, a notebook full of delicacies that will make your mouth water. The world of flavors: the origins of confectionery merge with the beginnings of pharmacy. Pastes, jellies or sweet pastilles made from flowers, plants and honey were all remedies used by physicians such as Hippocrates of Cos (v.455 - 377 BC, Greek physician and philosopher) and Claudius Galen (v.129-v.201, Greek physician and writer). Around the year 1000, fondant kneaded sugar candies, candied fruits, jams and marmalades appeared. Some of these sweets are flavored with rose, violet, lavender, orange blossom, fresh or dried, or in the form of scented waters or oils and even flowers steeped in honey. Sold by apothecaries, sugar is used in the composition of remedies based on fruits, spices and flowers. Sugar is reserved for the nobility, along with fruit jellies and jams. These are also spices and dried fruits cooked in a layer of sugar. The insertion of flowers is also common in these sweets, especially rose and violet. In the 17th century, sugar became more democratic thanks to the plantations of the New World. Confectionery is appreciated for its taste and no longer for its therapeutic role. Books offering recipes are multiplying, giving rise to large compositions in spun sugar, candy or pastillage. Nutmeg rose marmalades, soft pasta with violets or crunchy carnations are a great success. When they are not eaten at the table, confectionery is kept within easy reach. of hand in small pocket bezels. Candies with crystallized flowers are arousing renewed interest (confiserie Florian in the Alpes de Hte-Provence).

01 - The poppy and the poppy candy: the poppy (papaver rhoeas) is a species of dicotyledonous plants of the papaveraceae family, native to Eurasia. It is an annual herbaceous plant, very abundant in freshly disturbed soils from spring, which is distinguished by the red color of its flowers and by the fact that it often forms large colored carpets visible from very far away. It belongs to the group of so-called messicole plants because it has been associated with agriculture for centuries. very old, thanks to its biological cycle adapted to cereal crops, with flowering and seed set taking place before harvest. Like all poppies, the poppy has narcotic effects due to the alkaloids it contains. Poppy petals are part of the composition of the pectoral flowers, in particular in the "tisanes of the four flowers" which in fact includes seven species. The poppy flower inspired many sweets of yesteryear. In Nemours (77-Seine-et-Marne), poppy sweets have been prepared since 1870 and poppy syrup and liqueur since 1996. poppy candy, made from natural products, is a little sweetness with a flowery taste, which also helps to calm coughs and colic in children.

02 - Chestnut and candied chestnut: the common chestnut (Castanea sativa) is a deciduous tree, from the Fagaceae family, which produces fruits widely consumed by humans: chestnuts. When numerous in a delimited territory, it forms a chestnut grove. The chestnuts, dried in clèdes (drying chestnuts), were for a long time the basis of the human diet in certain regions of Europe, generally devoid of cereal agriculture, which led to its being considered as a "food tree" to be valued. Around the Mediterranean, the chestnut tree was nicknamed "breadfruit" (or bread of the poor) because its fruits replaced cereals in times of famine. In the 17th century, Sieur Pierre François de La Varenne (1618-1678, chef and author of a first cookbook) gave us the first indications on the recipes called "marron glacé" and "marron au sec" that he made for the court of Louis XIV. Until the 19th century, candied chestnut was considered like a luxury confectionery made for special occasions. Chestnuts and chestnuts are the fruits of the same tree and its improved variety. At two years old, the chestnut tree receives a very specific graft, in order to obtain a well-formed chestnut. Many varieties of chestnuts are grown: the most popular are those say "peasant women" with the name: Comballe, chestnut from Lyon, Bouche de Clos or chestnut from Chevanceaux, etc. French production is mainly located in Ardèche, Dordogne and Var. A unique experience, with the fragrance, the effluvium and the perfume; then its aroma, taste and flavor. The candied chestnut is a delicate fruit, which must be opened in two, very gently, in order to discover the translucent flesh of the fruit moistened with its candy syrup.

03 - Gum acacia and gumballs: the acacia is a genus of trees and shrubs, belonging to the Fabaceae family, producing gum arabic. This gum comes mainly from the Senegalese acacia (Senegalia senegal, or acacia sap). It has been known since the Third Dynasty of Egypt (2650 BC), it is an essential raw material for the food industry and serves mainly as an emulsifier, especially for citrus oils, as a protective colloid in emulsions and carriers for flavorings. Acacia gum gives the rubbery texture to chewing gum, which coats many sweets, dragees but also medicine tablets. It is used in the composition of food products for its richness in natural, vegetable and organic dietary fibres. It has the advantage of not sticking to the teeth and not causing cavities.

04 - Marshmallow and marshmallow: Marshmallow officinalis (Althaea officinalis), also called Wild Marshmallow (or White Mallow), is a perennial herbaceous plant of the Malvaceae family, common in Europe. It is cultivated as a medicinal plant for its emollient properties, as an ornamental plant for its flowers and sometimes as a vegetable mainly for its roots. This plant was used in the composition of a soft and sweet confectionery, marshmallow paste, made originally from marshmallow root. It was made with the mucilage (vegetable substances) extracted from the marshmallow root, but which, in its form modern, is made of sugar, egg whites and gelatin. It has a spongy consistency and usually the shape of cubes or long, flexible sticks. It is naturally of a fairly neutral taste and white or pink in color but is often flavored and colored in pastel shades, the most common of which are pink, green, blue and yellow.

05 - Cambrai mint and stupidity: mints form a genus (Mentha) of perennial herbaceous plants of the Lamiaceae family. This genus includes many species, many of which are cultivated as aromatic and condiment, ornamental or medicinal plants. The original Bêtise de Cambrai with a refreshing scent of mint, or other flavors, is handcrafted at the Afchain confectionery in Cambrai (59-Nord). The story goes that Emile Afchain made a mistake when making berlingots, accidentally spilling mint when preparing the dough. He said nothing about it, until all the customers who had eaten this “nonsense” with such a good mint taste demanded it. Later Emile Afchain officially created La Bêtise de Cambrai, a delicacy produced around 1830. Since 1992, the Bêtise de Cambrai has been on the list of Culinary Heritage of Nord-Pas-de-Calais, and since 1994 of the national heritage of French confectionery, chocolate and biscuit specialties. Two companies share the "Bétises de Cambrai", Afchain and Despinoy. This candy has the shape of a small rectangular cushion, and it is flavored with mint, with stripes of caramelized sugar. Several new fragrances complete the variations: green apple, orange, lemon, praline, raspberry, violet and tutti frutti.

06 - Anise and Flavigny anise: Anise (Pimpinella anisum) is a species of herbaceous plants of the Apiaceae family, cultivated as a condiment plant for its aromatic leaves and seeds. The plant is sometimes called "green anise". "Anis de Flavigny" are sweets made in Flavigny-sur-Ozerain (21-Côte-d'Or). Each candy is made of a seed of green anise coated with flavored sugar syrup: natural anise, violet, rose, mint, liquorice, orange blossom…. It is a sugar-coating: the anise seed is covered with thin successive layers of sugar syrup. It takes fifteen days for the dragéiste to make from a small seed two milligrams a one gram candy. In 719, Benedictine monks, at the foundation of the Flavigny Abbey, started making this candy using anise brought back by the Roman traveler Flavius. Since 1591, the Benedictines, then the confectioners of the village have succeeded, remaining faithful to the recipe, but with various flavors.

07 - The cocoa tree and chocolate squares: the cocoa tree (Theobroma cacao - called cacao or cocoa tree) is a small evergreen tree of the genus Theobroma (the "Food of the Gods") of the family Sterculiaceae (classical classification) or Malvaceae (phylogenetic classification). It produces edible beans with different flavors depending on the varieties of cocoa tree, from which cocoa, the basic product of chocolate, is made. Cocoa is the powder obtained after grinding the kernels of cocoa beans. fermented and roasted cocoa produced by the cocoa tree. They are extracted from the berries, which are opened at harvest and left to dry. Chocolate (original term Mesoamerica), is a more or less sweet food produced from cocoa beans. The liquid cocoa mass from which the fat is extracted is called cocoa butter. cocoa. Chocolate is made up of the mixture, in varying proportions, of cocoa paste, cocoa butter and sugar; to which may be added spices, such as vanilla, or vegetable fats. Initially consumed as a xocoatl (a spicy drink of Aztec origin) in Mexico and Central America, chocolate became more democratic with the industrial revolution. In the XVI and century it is consumed in solid (dark or milk chocolate) or liquid (hot chocolate) form. Chocolate is found in many desserts such as confectionery, cookies, cakes, ice cream, pies, drinks, etc. Offering chocolate, molded in different ways, is become traditional during certain festivities. Many chocolatiers showcase their talent by making sculptures. The realization of the most beautiful sculpture (piece in chocolate) is the basis of any competition. Chocolate making is one of the disciplines in the "Meilleur Ouvrier de France" competition.

08 - The violet and the violet candy: the fragrant violet (Viola odorata) is a small herbaceous and perennial plant of the Violaceae family forming colonies more or less spreading, with stems forming stolons, with oval leaves, heart-shaped at the base, provided with a long petiole and with fragrant flowers, at the end of a thin stem. violets colonize meadows, woods and hedgerows. Violet is used in perfumery and herbalism. For its food use, the leaves rich in mucilages contain vitamin A, lots of vitamin C, mineral salts and saponins. The young leaves can be added raw to salads or the older, more fibrous, be cooked in soups which they thicken due to their mucilage (they swell on contact with water). The flowers are also used as decoration for pastries, fresh or candied with sugar; but also in confectionery, with violet sweets, such as "Toulouse violets" (1818, crystallized fresh flowers) or Vosges sweets.

09 - Bergamot and Nancy bergamot: bergamot is the fruit of the bergamot tree, a tree of the Rutaceae family. This citrus fruit is mainly grown in the province of Reggio Calabria (Italy) since the 18th century century and only on a narrow strip of the coast (Ionian and Tyrrhenian Seas) where bergamot still supplies a small local industry. The fruit is harvested mainly for the oil contained in its bark, which has a sweet and pungent fragrance. Half of this oil is used in the food sector and half in perfumery and cosmetics. Bergamot essence is used in several products, including bergamot (or bergamot) from Nancy. It is a slightly tart, square, flat, translucent, golden-coloured candy, flavored with bergamot essential oil, which the confectioners of Nancy (Lorraine) have made their specialty from 1830 (the confectioner Barbier-Duval). In 1898, the confectioner Louis Lefèvre-Denise registered the trademark "Bergamottes de Nancy".

10 - The coconut tree and the Coconut ball: the coconut tree (Cocos nucifera) is a species of palm from the Arecaceae family, it is not a tree but a monocotyledonous plant. Its fruit is the coconut: this large oval and hard fruit, light green or orange, turning brown when ripe, measures between 10 and 40 cm long and between 10 and 16 cm wide, weighs up to 1.5 kg and appears on a spathe (large membranous or leafy bract) between the long pinnate leaves; its seed has a brown, fibrous envelope; his white flesh (albumen) fresh or dried (copra) is edible, as well as coconut water (juice) and the embryo. Coconut is rich in potassium, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, copper and zinc, which gives it excellent nutritional value. When the fruit is green, the water it contains is consumed as a refreshing drink. blackberry, coconut almond is edible and serves as an ingredient in many tropical cuisine recipes due to its characteristic scent. The germ of the coconut which develops into occupying the space left by the coconut water, is also edible. It takes on a round shape covered with a thin layer of yellow color. The interior is made up of a whitish fibrous flesh with a sweet taste and steeped in coconut water. Once well dried, the pulp can be stored in an airtight jar away from heat and light. In small pieces, the coconut pulp can accompany a chocolate fondue, grated it is used in sauces. White or grilled, it can also be used frequently in desserts such as biscuits, ice cream, cakes, pound cakes and for decorating cakes. Coconut powder or shavings is marketed, it is used in the confection of pastry and confectionery. Coconut water is a refreshing drink, but it also goes into making of vinegars. Fermented, it forms a translucent gelatin called nata de coco.

11 - Licorice and its roll of licorice: glabrous licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra) is a perennial plant of the Fabaceae family, of the Faboideae subfamily, with aromatic roots. It is native to southern Europe and Asia. Licorice refers to the root of this plant. Elixir of long life for traditional medicine Chinese and according to Hippocrates of Cos, this root, with its characteristic sweet and bitter taste, has been harvested since antiquity on the Calabrian Ionic coast, where it grows naturally. Liquorice refers to the aromatic extract from the root of this plant, used in confectionery (he or she also refers to confectionery made from of this aroma). Licorice is used in the manufacture of syrup (one of the components of pastis) and candy dough. Chewing sticks and licorice candies.

12 - The almond tree and the dragee: the almond tree (Prunus dulcis) is a species of tree in the Rosaceae family, whose pinkish-white flowers appear before the leaves. It is the first fruit tree to flower in late winter, a time when it can still freeze in the morning. It produces a fleshy stone fruit (or drupe) whose flesh becomes dry when ripe and splits into two valves, releasing a kernel containing an edible kernel. Since antiquity, the tree, first domesticated in the Near East to produce sweet almonds, was cultivated all around the Mediterranean before being cultivated in modern times in many arid regions of the world where it adapts well. Almond sweetness arises as a result of mutation and bitterness being a recessive trait can by selection be eliminated. The almond is very rich in fatty acid unsaturated, proteins, carbohydrates and vitamins. It is an important component of Provençal and Oriental pastries. The new trends are to consume it in the form snack (cereal bar) or almond-based drink (almond milk). Some almond confectionery: dragees, nougats, pralines, marzipan, etc.

Jersey 2022 - Post & Go: Harvest of the Sea


Date of Issued: 17 February 2022
Designer: Ron Mills
Size: 25mm x 56mm
Process: Digital
Denominations: Six Weight Step Tariffs

Situated in the English Channel, the island of Jersey enjoys access to a wide range of fresh-caught seafood, which is featured prominently on the menus of local restaurants. The species found in Jersey waters are often Atlantic in origin, fresh caught each day and supplied to the local fish markets and eateries.

Local fishers often choose to adopt sustainable catching methods such as traditional potting methods for the lobster and hand diving for scallops. Often served alongside locally grown vegetables and the Island’s famous Jersey Royal potatoes, the quality of the local seafood is second to none. Six different seafoods have been selected for display on these Post & Go stamps.
More from this collection...

Monday, February 21, 2022

Cyprus 2020 - EUROMED, Traditional Gastronomy in the Mediterranean


For the seventh consecutive year, Member States of the Postal Union for the Mediterranean "Euromed Postal" issue a stamp with a common theme. This year's theme is "Traditional Gastronomy".

The stamp of Cyprus illustrates kolokasi, a purely traditional Cypriot food cooked in various ways.

With its characteristic conical shape and special taste, kolokasi is identified with the Cypriot Gastronomy and the whole culture of the island.

It has a high nutritional value and significantly shields the immune system. Kolokasi is rich in vitamins A and C, proteins, carbohydrates and contains fibres as well as amino acids.

 

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Malaysia 2022 - Art of Making Traditional Kuih


Date of Issued: 15 February 2022
Place of issue: Kuala Lumpur

In this day and age, Malaysian kuih are mostly commercially made with modern appliances to meet popular demand, hence the traditional way of kuih-making is a dying art.

The Seni Pembuatan Kuih Tradisional or Traditional Art of Making Kuih special stamp issue highlights the old-fashioned ways of making popular Malaysian kuih using brass moulds of various shapes and sizes, as well as materials including coconut shell, coconut fibre and charcoal while baking.

There are five conventional methods featured and they are of Kuih Akok, Kuih Bakar, Kuih Kapit, Kuih Jala and Kuih Bahulu.


Monday, February 7, 2022

Austria 2022 - Heimisches Superfood


Date of Issued: 03 January 2022

Some local foods are real energy bombs and nutrient stars that we can enjoy fresh and sustainable

Austria 2022 - Chocolate, Interesting facts from Josef Zotter


Date of Issued: 03 January 2022
 

Austria 2022 - Enjoyment Austria


Date of Issued: 03 January 2022

Monday, January 31, 2022

Mozambique 2013 - Local Dishes


Date of Issued: 25 June 2013
Perforation: 13¼

 

Singapore 2019 - Lo Hei, Chinese New Year Reunion


Technical Details:
Date of Issue: 4 February 2019
Denominations: $8.00
Size: A6 (105 x 148 mm)

Lo Hei Collector's Sheet

A special Collector's Sheet featuring Lo Hei, a popular dish eaten during the Chinese New Year Celebrations in Singapore.

Singapore 2020 - Steamboat, Chinese New Year Reunion

 


Technical Details:
Date of Issue: 24 January 2020
Denomination: $8.00
Stamp Size: 45mm x 45mm
Miniature Sheet Size: 120mm x 78mm
Perforation: 13 1/4
Paper: Unwatermarked
Printing Process: Offset Lithography
Printer: Cartor Security Print
Designer: Andy Koh

Chinese New Year Reunion - Steamboat Miniature Sheet

Chinese New Year or Lunar New Year is one of the most important festivals among the Chinese community in Singapore. On the eve of Chinese New Year, family members will return home for a reunion dinner (团圆饭) – an annual feast and significant tradition to reaffirm love and togetherness with one another. A popular way of having reunion dinner during this time is the Steamboat reunion dinner. Family members will gather around a hot pot of bubbling broth filled with delicious ingredients, and everyone from young to old will enjoy the sumptuous dinner in a joyful spirit. The simmering steamboat represents more than just good food, as the gathering over the feast is also a symbolic way to strengthen family bonding, sharing happiness with one another and wishes for a bountiful year ahead.

Singapore 2021 - Pen Cai, Chinese New Year Reunion



Technical Details:
Date of Issue: 11 February 2021
Denomination: $8
Stamp Size: 45mm x 44.76mm
Miniature Sheet Size: 120mm x 78mm
Perforation: 13
Paper: Unwatermarked
Printing Process: Offset Lithography with Gold Hot Stamping
Printer: Secura Singapore Pte Ltd
Designer: SNAP! Creative Pte Ltd

Chinese New Year Reunion - Pen Cai Miniature Sheet

Chinese New Year, also known as the Lunar New Year, is the most important traditional festival for the Chinese. The celebration lasts for 15 days and it is a great time for family reunions, visiting, feasting and collecting red packets (hongbao) for good fortune. One of the favourite get-togethers during the Chinese New Year is when families and friends celebrate by partaking in reunion feasts. The dish “pen cai” is a popular celebratory dish (comprising layers of ‘auspicious’ ingredients such as abalone, prawns, roast pork, and lotus root) during these get-togethers. As the old saying goes,“the family that eats together, stays together”. The annual reunion feasting is indeed significant and symbolic, and reaffirms love and togetherness with one another.

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Turkey 2020 - EUROMED, Traditional Gastronomy of the Mediterranean


 

Albania 2020 - EUROMED, Traditional Gastronomy of the Mediterranean


Date of Issued: 30 March 2021
The issue consists of 1 series with 4 stamps
Author: Petraq Papa
The value of stamps: 10 lekë, 80 lekë, 90 lekë and 120 lekë
Circulation: 4,000 stamps (10 lek), 134,000 stamps (80 lek), 4,000 stamps (90 lek), 4,000 stamps (120 lek)
Stamp dimensions: 40 x 40 mm
First day envelopes with series: 150 pieces
The price of the first day envelope with series: 540 ALL Printed in Albania by Adel CO

Belgium 2020 - Speculoos


Technical Details:
Issue Date: 26 October 2020
Designer: Evelyne Bleeckx - Art'n Wood Sculpture / Speculoos
Illustrator & Photo: Luc Longin
Printer: bpost Philately & Stamps Printing
Process: Offset
Values: € 9.80

About Speculoos

Speculoos mold with Saint-Nicolas figure and cinnamon sticks and Speculoos (Saint-Nicolas figure) and spices, including cloves and star anise.

Belgium 2022 - Regional Cheeses



Technical Details:
Issue Date: 24 January 2022
Designer: Leen Depooter
Printer: Stamps Production Belgium
Process: Offset
Colours: 4 Colours
Layout: Leen Depooter
Value of postage stamps: 1 EUROPE
Leaflet Price: €10.45
Format of postage stamps: a-b-e: 40mm x 30mm; c-d: 30mm x 40mm
Sheet Size: 186mm x 152mm
Sheet composition: 5 Postage Stamps
Circulation: 43,704 sheets
Paper: FSC White Gummed
Serration: 11½
Printing Process: Offset
Printing: Bpost Philately & Stamps Printing

Theme:
Belgium can be proud of a wealthy culinary heritage. We have many cheeses that deserve to be in an assortment cheesemaker. In this show, we will discuss the richness of Belgian cheeses.
 Postage stamps: 
a. Jersey Milk Cheese - Blue-Veined Cheese
b. Gouda - Beer Cheese
c. Soft-Paste Cheese - Brussels Cheese 
d. Herve Cheese - Goat Cheese 
e. Trappist Cheese - Abbey Cheese 
Sheet: 
The sheet shows the map of Belgium, divided into regions where the different types appear of cheeses, with stylized drawings of cheeses and a cheese knife. The sheet has a cut out special shaped cheese slice with holes.
About Regional Cheeses
The sheetlet shows the map of Belgium, divided into regoins where certain types of cheeses occur, with stylized drawings of cheeses and a cheese knife. The sheetlet was also given a special shape, in the form of a slice of cheese with holes.
With more than 300 official cheeses, Belgium is a real cheese country. According to the master cheesemaker Ann Keymeulen, there would even be more than 1,000. For this collection, Ann and bpost have selected ten delicious typical Belgian cheeses, real ambassadors of the region where they are made.
Proud of Our Cheeses
National treats, When bpost asked him to select some Belgian cheeses for a show of stamps, Ann Keymeulen immediately appeared very enthusiastic. It's already been many years that it has been promoting cheeses Belgians with passion. “Belgians do not surrender not enough account of the treats we have with us."
Either way, Ann knows what she's talking about. She's a master cheese maker, lectures on cheese and provides training for become a master cheesemaker. “During training as a master cheese maker, I give courses on European cheeses," she says. " But I don't hide my passion for cheese Belgians. People are often flabbergasted when I tell them that they live in the region of an exceptional cheese maker. As I find it very regrettable, my mission consists in putting these artisan cheesemakers to honor. Our little country has so many, and it's really unbelievable.
Ten Typical Cheeses
As it is impossible to fit a thousand cheeses on a sheet of stamps, Ann had the difficult task to select ten. Moreover, she had to take into account the creation of the graphic designer Leen Depooter. Leen: “Pretty quickly, we decided to use a map of the Belgium where I arranged the cheeses according to of their origin or the place where they are more common. This shows which cheese is the most typical of his region. » Armed with this information, Ann did not have great difficulty in making his selection. Ann: “For each region, we looked for visually recognizable cheeses and belonging to our cheese heritage. He it often happens that we are inspired by the cheeses of neighboring countries to manufacture it. However, some cheeses are inscribed in our genes, like Trappist or abbey cheeses.
Cheese With Holes
Leen photographed all the cheeses herself choose. “I especially wanted every detail to be clearly visible. This allows collectors to stamps to become absorbed in their contemplation and discover things. The cutting of a slice of cheese with holes gives a additional touch of originality to the sheet. The sheet is also perforated. You have to do very be careful to make a nice cut of these round holes.

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Netherlands 2020 - About Typically Dutch Food




Netherlands 2020 - About Typically Dutch Food:
- Rookworst (02 Jan 2020)
- Carrots (24 Feb 2020)
- Hagelslag (23 Mar 2020)
- Tompouce (06 Apr 2020)
- Bitterballen (15 Jun 2020)

Monday, May 3, 2021

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Slovenia 2020 - Slovenian Gastronomy


Technical Details:
Issue Date:17 November 2020
Designer: Edi Berk
Illustrator Photo: Tomo Jeseničnik
Printer: Agencija za komercijalnu djelatnost d.o.o., Zagreb, Croatia
Process: Offset
Colours: 4 Colours

About Slovenian Gastronomy

The brand concludes the series in which we presented selected culinary characteristics in all 24 gastronomic regions of Slovenia. Both dishes on the stamp characterize the Slovenian part of Istria. Fish in šavor is a way of marinating fish or (na) šavor. Smaller blue fish, such as sardines, anchovies, menolas, trills and others, are particularly suitable for this form of preparation. The dish belongs to the old Venetian dishes and was originally a naval fishing dish. Due to the longer stay at sea, the fish were fried and marinated in vinegar and onions, which extended their edibility. The dish is supposedly first mentioned around 1300. Some authors hypothetically consider it to be even older.

Istrian štruklji are just one of the local and regional versions of štruklji, which are known in all Slovenian gastronomic regions as in other Slovenian regions and gastronomic regions as sweet or savory dishes with different fillings. They were also a festive dish in Slovenian Istria. They were obligatory on sagras (celebration of the anniversary of the local church patron saint) and belts (celebration of the consecration of the church), they were also cooked at confirmations, communions and weddings. They mostly cooked štruklji from rolled dough and with fillings from cracklings, spinach, cheese, cottage cheese, apples, walnuts, prosciutto, potatoes and with the addition of herbs and spices. Among the developmentally elderly is also a filling for strudels made of melted butter, breadcrumbs, grated cheese, sugar (formerly honey), raisins and ground almonds or walnuts. Some housewives have further seasoned this filling with mint, sage, thyme and marjoram. They coated the dough with the filling, which had previously been smeared with butter and scrambled egg yolk.