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  2. Simple Chocolate Pops Recipe - AOL

    firefox-startpage.aol.com/food/recipes/simple...

    PREPARE AHEAD Chill the cake balls in the refrigerator for 1 hour. TO MAKE THE CAKE POPS Melt the candy melts, dip a stick into the melted candy, and push into a cake ball. Repeat with all the sticks and cake balls. Let set. Dip each cake pop into the melted candy and tap off the excess.

  3. Garae-tteok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garae-tteok

    Garae-tteok (가래떡) is a long, cylindrical tteok (rice cake) made with non-glutinous rice flour. [1] [2] Grilled garae-tteok is sometimes sold as street food. [3]Thinly (and usually diagonally) sliced garae-tteok is used for making tteokguk (rice cake soup), a traditional dish eaten during the celebration of the Korean New Year. [4]

  4. Cake pop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cake_pop

    Cake pops use many of the ingredients used in baking a traditional cake and can be made from cakes of any flavor. Many recipes found online use a cake mix instead of a cake batter from scratch. While more convenient, it does not necessarily deliver the same result. The homemade or "made from scratch" cake recipes tend to yield a cake with a ...

  5. Injeolmi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Injeolmi

    Injeolmi (Korean: 인절미, pronounced [in.dʑʌl.mi]) is a variety of tteok, or Korean rice cake, made by steaming and pounding glutinous rice flour, which is shaped into small pieces and usually covered with steamed powdered dried beans or other ingredients.

  6. Tteokbokki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tteokbokki

    Tteokbokki (Korean: 떡볶이), [pronunciation?] or simmered rice cake, is a popular Korean food made from small-sized garae-tteok (long, white, cylinder-shaped rice cakes) called tteokmyeon (떡면; lit. rice cake noodles) or commonly tteokbokki-tteok (떡볶이 떡; lit. tteokbokki rice cakes).

  7. Rice flour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_flour

    Usually, "rice flour" refers to dry-milled rice flour (Korean: 건식 쌀가루, romanized: geonsik ssal-garu), which can be stored on a shelf. In Korea, wet-milled rice flour (Korean: 습식 쌀가루, romanized: seupsik ssal-garu) is made from rice that was soaked in water, drained, ground using a stone-mill, and then optionally sifted. [4]

  8. This cake has a warning not to smash your face into it. Here ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/cake-warning-not-smash...

    “When the cake comes you make a wish, you blow the candle and then you take a bite of the cake and then somebody behind you whacks you in the head and puts your face inside of the cake.

  9. Rice cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_cake

    Burmese cuisine has a variety of snacks and desserts called mont made with various types of rice, rice flour and glutinous rice flour. Sweet Burmese mont are generally less sweet than counterparts in other parts of Southeast Asia, instead deriving their natural sweetness from constituent ingredients (e.g., grated coconut, coconut milk, glutinous rice, fruit, etc.).