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Sujeonggwa (Korean: 수정과) is a Korean traditional cinnamon punch. Dark reddish brown in color, it is made from mainly cinnamon, sugar, water and ginger. It is often served with gotgam (dried persimmon) and garnished with pine nuts. [1] The punch is made by brewing first the cinnamon sticks and ginger at a slow boil.
Jeonggwa (Korean: 정과; Hanja: 正果) is a crispy, chewy hangwa (traditional Korean confection) with vivid colors and a translucent look. [1] [2] It can be made by boiling sliced fruits, roots, or seeds in honey, mullyeot (rice syrup), or sugar water, then drying the slices, and optionally shaping them into flowers or other decorative forms.
[1] [2] [3] Eumcheongnyu can be divided into the categories of cha (차 tea), tang (탕 boiled water), jang (장 fermented grain juice with sour taste), suksu (숙수), galsu (갈수 thirst water), hwachae (화채 fruit punch), sikhye (식혜 sweet rice drink), sujeonggwa (수정과 persimmon drink), milsu or kkulmul (밀수, 꿀물 honeyed ...
Speaking of daiquiris, if you want even more inspiration, check out our Mardi Gras roundups of cocktails, apps, and desserts for even more New Orleans-inspired ideas. Pimento Cheese-Stuffed Mini ...
A sweet rice punch. Being an iconic Korean traditional drink, several varieties of canned sikhye are now widely available. Sujeonggwa: A sweet drink flavored with ginger and cinnamon. Softened dried persimmons and pine nuts are added at serving time. Fruit Hwachae: fruit punch made by mixing several fruits together, or only one fruit used. The ...
Together with sujeonggwa (persimmon punch), baesuk is considered a representative Korean beverage. Due to the similar recipes of the two beverages, baesuk is sometimes called "baesujeonggwa" (배수정과). [2] Baesuk is usually served as dessert and also considered a good remedy for the common cold. [10]
Yakgwa (약과; 藥菓), consisting of two syllables, yak (약; 藥; "medicine") and gwa (과; 菓; "confection"), means "medicinal confection". [7] This name comes from the large amount of honey that is used to prepare it, [4] [8] because pre-modern Koreans considered honey to be medicinal and so named many honey-based foods yak ("medicine").
Yumil-gwa (Korean: 유밀과; Hanja: 油蜜菓) is a variety of hangwa, a traditional Korean confection. Different varieties of yumil-gwa can be made by combining a wheat flour dough with various ingredients such as: honey, cooking oil, cinnamon powder, nuts, ginger juice, jujube, and cheongju (rice wine).