Tteok


Tteok is a class of Korean rice cakes made with steamed flour made of various grains, including glutinous or 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. The pronunciation is between a "t" and a "d" sound, ending with "-ukk". It could also be written as ttukk, ddukk, dhukk, or ddeok.
Tteok is enjoyed not only as a dessert or seasonal delicacy, but also as a meal. It can range from elaborate versions made of various colors, fragrances, and shapes using nuts, fruits, flowers, and namul, to plain white rice tteok used in home cooking. Some common ingredients for many kinds of tteok are red bean, soybean, mung bean, mugwort, pumpkin, chestnut, pine nut, jujube, dried fruits, sesame seeds and oil, and honey.
Tteok is usually a food that is shared. Tteok offered to spirits is called boktteok and shared with neighbours and relatives. It is also one of the celebratory foods used in banquets, rites, and various festive events. Tteokguk is shared to celebrate Korean New Year and songpyeon is shared on Chuseok, a harvest festival.

Utensils for making ''tteok''

Below are cooking utensils used to make tteok in the traditional Korean way.
Tteok is largely divided into four categories: "steamed tteok", "pounded tteok", "boiled tteok" and "pan-fried tteok". The steamed tteok is made by steaming rice or glutinous rice flour in "siru", or a large earthenware steamer, so it is often called "sirutteok". It is regarded as the basic and oldest form of tteok. Pounded tteok is made by using a pounding board or mortar after steaming it first. In making pan-fried tteok, the rice dough is flattened like a pancake and pan-fried with vegetable oil. Shaped tteok are made by kneading dough with hot water, then shaping it into balls.

Steamed tteok

The main ingredients for steamed tteok or "sirutteok" are rice or glutinous rice, and sometimes they are mixed together. In some cases, other grains, beans, sesame seeds, wheat flour, or starch are 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, marinated vegetables or herbs can be used to flavor the tteok. Danggwi leaves, seogi mushroom, radish, artemisia, pepper, and cheongju are the most common flavorings, and honey and sugar are used as sweeteners.
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, which is shaped into a single large lump, and kyeotteok, which consists of multiple layers with adzuki bean powder or other bean powder. Seolgitteok is also called muritteok, which is regarded as the most basic form of sirutteok because it is made only of rice. When making kyeotteok, rice and glutinous rice are mixed. The name kyeotteok derives from the adverb kyeokeyo in Korean because this tteok is made in layers.
In traditional preparations, pounded tteok is made by pounding rice or glutinous rice with utensils called jeolgu and jeolgutgongi or tteokme and anban. Injeolmi, garaetteok, jeolpyeon and danja ” are the most commonly eaten pounded tteok.
Rice and glutinous rice are hulled to make grain particles or powder and then steamed in a siru and pounded with utensils. The pounded tteok is divided by rice type into glutinous pounded tteok and non-glutinous pounded tteok. Injeolmi, a representative of glutinous pounded tteok, varies in accordance with gomul types or subsidiary ingredients mixed into the steamed rice while pounding on the anban. Patinjeolmi, and kkaeinjeolmi are examples for the former, coated with red bean powder and sesame, respectively. In ssuk injeolmi and surichwi injeolmi, ssuk and surichwi are added.

Dishes made with ''tteok''