Jump to content

Tteok

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 72.83.43.18 (talk) at 20:50, 21 September 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Tteok
A plate of garaetteok, a variety of tteok
Alternative namesDdeock, duk, dduck, dduk, ddeog, thuck
Place of originKorea
Region or stateKorean-influenced regions worldwide
Main ingredientsglutinous rice flour
VariationsSteamed, pounded, shaped, pan-fried
Tteok
Hangul
Hanja
None
Revised Romanizationtteok
McCune–Reischauerttŏk

Tteok (Korean) (Korean pronunciation: [t͈ʌk]; also spelled ddeock, duk, dduck, dduk, or thuck) is a class of Korean rice cakes made with glutinous rice flour (also known as sweet rice or chapssal), by steaming. Normal rice flour can be used for some kinds of tteok. There are hundreds of different kinds of tteok eaten year round. In Korea it is customary to eat tteok guk (tteok soup) on New Year's Day and sweet tteok at weddings and on birthdays. It is often considered a celebratory food and can range from rather elaborate versions with nuts and fruits down to the plain-flavored tteok used in home cooking. Some common ingredients for many kinds of tteok are mung bean, red bean, and sweet red bean paste, Korean mugwort, jujube and other dried fruits, sesame seeds and oil, sugar, and pine nuts.

Utensils for making tteok

Siru at the foremost front and other onggi (generic term for earthenware)
Pounding tteok

The below are cooking utensils to make tteok in the traditional Korean way.[1]

  • Ki (키), winnowing vessel
  • Inambak (이남박), rice-washing bowl
  • Bagaji (바가지), gourd-like dipper
  • Ongbaegi (옹배기) and jabaegi (자배기), large, round pottery bowls
  • Che (체) and chetdari (쳇다리), sieve and sieve-frame legs
  • Maetdol (맷돌), grinding stone
  • Jeolgu (절구) and jeolgutgongi (절굿공이), mortar and pestle
  • Anban (안반) and tteokme (떡메), wooden pounding board and malletvideo
  • Siru (시루) and sirumit (시루밑), earthenware steamer and mat placed in the bottom of the siru
  • Sot (솥) and geonggeure (겅그레), cauldron and steaming rack
  • Beoncheol (번철), thick frying pan
  • Chaeban (채반), wicker tray
  • Tteoksal (떡살), wooden tteok pattern stamp

Types

Tteok is largely divided into four categories, such as "steamed tteok" (찌는 떡), "pounded tteok" (치는 떡), "boiled tteok" (삶는 떡) and "pan-fried tteok" (지지는 떡). The steamed tteok is made by steaming rice or glutinous rice flour in "siru" (시루), or a large earthenware steamer, so it is often called "sirutteok" (시루떡). It is regarded as the basic and oldest form of tteok. The pounded tteok is made by using a pounding board or mortar after steamed first. In making pan-fried tteok, the rice dough is flattened like a pancake and pan-fried with vegetable oil. The shaped tteok are made by kneading a dough with hot water which is usually shaped into balls.[2]

Steamed tteok

Pat sirutteok, steamed tteok made with azuki beans and rice

The main ingredients for steamed tteok or "sirutteok" are rice (맵쌀, maepssal in Korean) or glutinous rice (찹쌀 chapssal) and sometimes they are mixed together. In some cases, other grains, beans (azuki beans or mung beans), sesame seeds, wheat flour, or starch can be mixed with the rice. Various fruits and nuts are used as subsidiary ingredients, such as persimmons, peaches or apricots, chestnuts, walnuts, and pine nuts. In addition, vegetables with flavors or herbs can be used to flavor the tteok. Danggwi leaves (Ostericum grosseserratum), seogi mushroom (manna lichen), daikon, artemisia, pepper, and cheongju are the most common flavorings, and honey and sugar are used as sweeteners.[2]

In order to make steamed tteok or sirutteok, rice or glutinous rice is soaked in water for a while, then ground. The prepared rice flour is put in a siru and steamed. According to steaming method, sirutteok is subdivided into two groups; seolgitteok (설기떡) is shaped into a single large lump whereas kyeotteok (켜떡) consists of multiple layers with azuki bean powder or other bean powder. Seolgitteok is also called muritteok (무리떡), regarded as the most basic form of sirutteok made only with rice. On the hand, in making kyeotteok, rice and glutinous rice are mixed. The name of kyeotteok derives from the adverb kyeokeyo (켜켜, literally "filed") in Korean because the tteok is made as such.[2]

  • Baekseolgi (백설기) - a variety of siru tteok. It literally means white snow tteok which is made of white rice.
  • Kongtteok (콩떡) - tteok made with various kinds of beans
  • Jeungpyeon - tteok made with makgeolli (unfiltered rice wine)
  • Mujigae tteok (무지개떡) [1] - literally "rainbow tteok"; this variety of tteok has colorful stripes. The tteok is used especially for janchi (잔치), Korean banquet, party, or feast like dol (celebrating a baby's first birthday), Hwangap (celebrating 60 years old people's birthday), or gyeonhon janchi (wedding party)

Pounded tteok

Injeolmi

In the traditional preparation, pounded tteok is made by pounding rice or glutinous rice with utensils called jeolgu and jeolgutgongi or tteokme and anban. Injeolmi (tteok coated with azuki / red bean powder or roasted soybean powder), garaetteok (가래떡 cylinder-shaped white tteok), jeolpyeon (절편 patterned tteok) and danja (단자 glutinous tteok ball coated with bean paste)” are commonly eaten pounded tteok.

Rice and glutinous rice are peeled off to make grain particles or powder, and steamed in a siru (earthenware steamer) and then pounded with the untensils. The pounded tteok is divided into glutinous pounded tteok (찹쌀도병 chapssal dobyeong) and non-glutinous pounded tteok (맵쌀도병 mapssal dobyeong) by rice type. Injeolmi that is a representative of the glutinous pounded tteok has varieties in accordance with gomul types (고물, coating made with bean powder, sesame seeds, or sliced jujubes) or subsidiary ingredients mixed into the steamed rice while pounding on the anban. Patinjeolmi (팥인절미), and kkaeinjeolmi (깨인절미) are the examples for the former, coated with red bean powder and sesame respectively. In ssuk injeolmi (쑥인절미) and surichwi injeolmi (수리취인절미) are ssuk (Artemisia princeps var. orientalis) and surichwi (Synurus deltoides (AIT.) NAKAI) added.[2]

  • Garaetteok (가래떡; also called huin tteok, 흰떡, literally "white tteok") – tteok formed into a long white cylinder. The thinly sliced garae tteok is used for making tteok guk.[3]
  • Omeki tteok (오메기떡) – traditional tteok of Jeju Island, the biggest island in Korea

Shaped tteok

Kkul tteok (꿀떡)
  • Ggul tteok (꿀떡) - literally means "tteok with honey" but the tteok is stuffed with Korean syrup. Ggul tteok is similar to songpyeon in shape, but smaller in size
  • Songpyeon (송편) - eaten during Chuseok holiday (추석), Korean thanksgiving day
  • Gochitteok (고치떡)
  • Ssamtteok (쌈떡) - tteok used for ssam (쌈, food wrapped in a leaf)
  • Dalgal tteok (닭알떡) [2] - named after dalgal (달걀 or 계란 egg)
  • Gyeongdan - Inside these rice balls are usually red bean or sesame paste. The balls are usually dipped and cover in black sesame or other powders.
  • Bupyeon, consisting of doughs of glutinous rice flour and a sweet filling and covered with gomul, kind of powdered beans.[4]

Pan-fried tteok

Jindallae hwajeon
  • Hwajeon [3] - small sweet pancakes made of flour of glutinous rice, and flower petals of Korean azalea, chrysanthemum, or rose.
  • Bukkumi (부꾸미), pan-fried sweet tteok with various fillings in a crescent shape[5]
  • Juak (주악), made of glutinous rice flour and stuffed with fillings such as mushrooms, jujubes, and chestnuts, and pan-fried. Juak are colored with natural coloring and covered with sugar or coated in honey.[6]

Other varieties

  • Ssuk tteok (쑥떡)
  • Gaksaek pyeon (각색편)[4]

Dishes made with tteok

See also

References

  1. ^ 떡조리기구 (in Korean). Sujeong Food. Archived from the original on 2005-01-14.
  2. ^ a b c d "Ttuk, Hangwa : Kinds of Rice Cakes". Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corporation. Archived from the original on 2010-07-04. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  3. ^ "가래떡 Garaetteok Cylinder-shaped Rice Cake". Encyclopedia of Korean Seasonal Customs. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  4. ^ http://www.idomin.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=250335
  5. ^ "Bukkumi (부꾸미)" (in Korean). Doosan Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  6. ^ "주악 (juak)". Click Korea Oline Dictionary. Retrieved 2008-05-18.