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  2. 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.

  3. Tteokbokki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tteokbokki

    The royal court version was made from white tteok (rice cakes), sirloin, sesame oil, soy sauce, scallions, rock tripe, pine nuts, and toasted and ground sesame seeds, while the savory, soy sauce-based tteokbokki was made in the head house of the Papyeong Yun clan, where high-quality soy sauce was brewed. [5]

  4. Chapssal-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapssal-tteok

    Chapssal-tteok can be coated with gomul (powdered sesame or beans) and steamed, or it may be boiled and then coated. Chapssal-tteok can also be made round and filled with various so (fillings) such as red bean paste. [9] [10] Chapssal-tteok ice cream is popular in modern South Korea. [11] Chapssal-tteok is featured in some fusion Korean dishes.

  5. List of tteok varieties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tteok_varieties

    Sirutteok (시루떡), steamed tteok; Duteop tteok (두텁떡) - a variety of royal court tteok (궁중떡), is covered 3 layers - duteop powder [outside, made of black-line white bean (흰팥)], sweet rice [middle], and variety nuts and fruits [inside, including chestnut, date (jujube), pinenut, yuja, duteop-so]

  6. Mochi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mochi

    Rice cake kirimochi or kakumochi Rice cake marumochi Fresh mochi being pounded. A mochi (/ m oʊ t ʃ iː / MOH-chee; [1] Japanese もち, 餅 ⓘ) is a Japanese rice cake made of mochigome (もち米), a short-grain japonica glutinous rice, and sometimes other ingredients such as water, sugar, and cornstarch. The steamed rice is pounded into ...

  7. How to Make Savory Mochi At Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/savory-mochi-home-224320300.html

    To replicate that moment of discovery, I decided to make a mochi using a pureed cooked-vegetable base seasoned with kombu and mochiko, the glutinous rice flour used to make mochi, as a binder.

  8. Talk:Tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Tteok

    Does anyone know if there is a difference between Japanese mochi and Korean tteok? Under the korean wiki article on 떡 tteok, it mentions that the Japanese have a "similar food like tteok called mochi," but i'm not sure if there's a difference -- if there isn't one then maybe a merge would be in order? Konamaiki 05:48, 11 September 2007 (UTC)

  9. Korean regional cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_regional_cuisine

    There are many tteok made with high-quality ingredients, that take a lot of work to produce, in Seoul cuisine such as danja. It is usually used as a decoration for other tteok and is shaped into a ball or a square after its dough is pounded and stuffed with a sweetened filling and covered with gomul (powder coating or sliced fruits). [56]