The glutinous rice balls come in a variety of flavors, including red bean, peanut, and taro. The outer skin is relatively lacking in elasticity, but the peanut filling has a moderate flavor and is not overly sweet.
It is mainly a place where tourists gather, and the store is filled with award signs and rating stickers, adding to the commercial atmosphere.
This place is Changzhou Sticky Rice Dumpling (Guan Ye Street). We passed by while strolling along Guan Ye Street and saw it was filled with award stickers and good reviews, so we thought we would try this popular sticky rice dumpling shop with tourists.
Actually, sticky rice dumplings are just a stuffed version of mochi. The shop boasts a variety of flavors, including red bean, peanut, taro, durian, and fruit flavors, among others. This time we bought:
The price is around 18-20 Macanese patacas per piece, which is acceptable for a tourist area, but you can tell it's a tourist product. The filling is fresh, but the skin doesn't have the bouncy texture of hand-kneaded dough.
Overall, it's more like "eating for the fame and atmosphere." It's not bad, but it won't wow you. If you pass by and feel peckish, you can buy one to try, but there's no need to specially queue or make a detour to buy it.