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  2. Siru-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siru-tteok

    Sirutteok (Korean: 시루떡) is a type of Korean rice cake traditionally made by steaming rice or glutinous rice flour in a "siru" (시루).. The Siru is an earthenware steaming vessel that dates back to the late bronze age of the Korean northern peninsula and the use of the utensil spread to the entire peninsula by the time of the Three Kingdoms (57 B.C.E-676) in which the popularity of siru ...

  3. Mujigae-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mujigae-tteok

    Mujigae-tteok (Korean: 무지개떡) or rainbow rice cake is a layered tteok (rice cake) of different colors resembling a rainbow. [1] It is used for special occasions such as a banquet, party, or feast like doljanchi (first birthday), hwangapjanchi (60th birthday).

  4. List of tteok varieties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tteok_varieties

    Hwajeon (화전) – small sweet pancakes made of glutinous rice flour and flower petals of Korean azalea, chrysanthemum, or rose; Bukkumi (부꾸미), pan-fried sweet tteok with various fillings in a crescent shape [3] Juak (주악), made of glutinous rice flour and stuffed with fillings such as mushrooms, jujubes, and chestnuts, and pan-fried.

  5. Gaepi-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaepi-tteok

    In Gangwon Province, steamed rice flour is pounded with deltoid synurus, also resulting in a green dough. [4] To make a pink dough, the endodermis of Korean red pine is used. [3] Variants containing sweet mung bean paste instead of white adzuki bean paste are very common, particularly among the Korean communities in Los Angeles, California.

  6. Tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tteok

    Tteok (Korean: 떡) is a general term for Korean rice cakes. They are made with steamed flour of various grains, [1] especially glutinous and non-glutinous rice. Steamed flour can also be pounded, shaped, or pan-fried to make tteok. In some cases, tteok is pounded from cooked grains.

  7. List of Korean desserts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Korean_desserts

    Yeot is made from steamed rice, glutinous rice, glutinous sorghum, corn, sweet potatoes, or mixed grains. The steamed ingredients are lightly fermented and boiled in a large pot called a sot. Hangwa is a general term for Korean traditional confectionery. Common ingredients in hangwa are grain flour, honey, yeot, sugar, fruit or edible root ...

  8. Rice in Korean culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_in_Korean_culture

    Korean traditional confectionery products such as rice gangjeong, Yugwa, etc Nurungji Nurungji and Nurungji-type snacks Rice flour raw rice flour Dry-grained rice product Alpha rice flour Alpha rice flour, broad grain, extruder rice powder, fried rice, etc., which is a form of rich ingredients for rice wet rice flour

  9. Chapssal-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapssal-tteok

    Chal is derived from the Middle Korean chɑl ( ), and the word chɑlsdeok ( ) appears in Geumganggyeong Samga hae, a 1482 book on the Diamond Sūtra. [7] Accordingly, chaltteok can mean tteok made of glutinous grains other than rice, such as glutinous sorghum, but chapssal-tteok can only refer to tteok that is made of glutinous rice.