At the corner of every neighborhood in Seoul, especially in the winter when your nose and fingers are so cold, they feel numb…. you will always find a cart on the street that sells this piping hot Korean sweet dessert pancake called Hotteok/Hodduk (호떡). If Korean ice bingsoo is a must have cool-down food in hot summers in Korea, this warm and syrupy hotteok is a must have food for the freezing cold winters. The moment you bite into this pancake, the hot cinammony syrup will ooze into your mouth. Chewy dough with the fried crispness on the outside and the sweet sugar syrup with bits of nuttiness makes it one of my favorite Korean snack/dessert since childhood days.
My husband also LOVES hotteok. He will eat it hot or cold, for breakfast, as a snack, as a dessert and maybe even as lunch- if I let him. 🙂 He ate 3 hotteoks in one sitting as dessert just now and was mumbling to himself that his breakfast menu for tomorrow is now decided. It will be.. hotteok!! 😉
As much as I love hotteok, in recent years it has been hard for me to eat them often because I always had indigestion problems. I don’t have celiac disease but still gluten bothers me a lot of times. Certain types of gluten foods eaten a certain way (e.g. plain hard roll on an empty stomach) will create problms for me and definitely give me indigestion, gas and even diarrhea afterwards. Sorry, not the best topic for food blog but I have to be real~ 😉
Towards the end of my stay in Korea, I discovered a sweet flour hotteok mix from hansalim (한살림) which was much better for my digestion. There are popular big brands that claim it’s a sweet rice flour hotteok recipe but it actually only has about 3-4% sweet rice flour which is basically nothing. The hansalim hotteok mix that I like has more than 40% sweet rice flour and we actually like the dough better. It comes out more crunchy on the outside. So after several tries, I created this recipe that tastes just as good and also is just as easy on my stomach.
Before we get to the recipe, a short history lesson on Hotteok. The hotteok pancake has been around since the late 1920’s in Korea, originally made and sold by Chinese refugees who arrived on boats into Incheon. There are similar yeast dough pancakes in Chinese cuisine which are savory using ingredients like chives. But somehow this sweet variation with sugar filling gained the most popularity in Korea and have stuck around for almost 100 years. These days, there are hotteok with with pumpkin and sunflower seeds called ssiatt hotteok/hodduck (seed hotteok) and even some with cheese in them.
** Check out my Mint and Basil Hotteok post for my modern take on hotteok with various herbs! It’s so pretty and tasty!
Hotteok – Korean sweet dessert pancake
Makes: 10 4″ pancakes Cooking Time: Inactive (3 hrs + 10 min) + 20 min Difficulty: Medium
Ingredients for Hotteok (with adjustable amounts) are listed in Recipe Card below.
Step-by-step instructions for making Hotteok
- Add 1 tsp sugar to 3/4 cup warm/hot water, stir to dissolve. Water should be around 120~130 °F (48~54°C) which is a bit hotter than hot bath temperature. Add 1 tsp dry yeast to sugar water. Let stand for 10 min. (This is to proof yeast). Make sure you keep the yeast water in a warm place so it doesn’t cool down too much. Since it’s instant dry yeast, you can just use it as part of the dry ingredients but I found that it works much better if you mix it with warm water first.
- Measure and mix flour and salt (1:1 regular and sweet flours).
- When the little yeast guys have all come alive and are bubbly, mix 1 and 2.
proof yeast by adding yeast to sugar water - Mix yeast sugar water with the flour mix. Dough should be fully wet and sticky. Wetter than pasta dough. Depending on how dry your flour and/or weather is, you may need to add more water. It doesn’t have to be exact so it’s OK if you end up making it too wet. Error on the side of the dough being too wet than dry.
- Let dough sit for 3 hrs in room temperature or keep in the oven with light turned on if your room is too cold (below 20°C/68°F). Dough should double in size when ready.
- Prepare sugar stuffing by mixing sugar, cinnamon and chopped walnuts. Chop walnuts finely.
Cinnamon sugar filling for hotteok (Korean sweet dessert pancake) If the nuts are too coarse, it can create holes in the hotteok dough as you press it down during cooking. Peanuts are cheaper than walnut so that’s what most street vendors use in Korea. If you like peanuts or any other nuts better, go head and use that.
- When dough is ready, heat about 3 Tbs or more of oil in a pan over medium heat.
- Pour about 1 tsp of oil in your hand and rub both your hands so they become nice and slippery. Take about a golf size worth of dough in your hand and spread out with your hands until it’s a little bigger than your palm. Add 1-2 tsp of the sugar mix into the center of the dough and close up the hotteok – making it into a little round parcel.
1. spreading dough for hotteok 2. filling hotteok with sugar 3. wrapping dough for hotteok 4.closing up dough for hotteok - Add hotteok parcel into the pan by flipping the hand to drop the pancake onto the pan, with the smooth side (side that was stuck to your palm) facing upwards. Oil a wide spatula by dunking it in the pan. Press the hotteok and slowly flatten it until the diameter becomes about 4 in/10cm wide. If you press it too much, you will end up with a hole and the sugar content will leak and get messy. It’s OK if that happens, no biggie.
dropping hotteok into oiled pan - Fry the pancake in oil for 3-4 min until edges start to brown. Lower heat if it starts to brown faster than that. You don’t want the heat to be too high because you want sugar to melt inside to become all nice and syrupy.
Hotteok (Korean Sweet pancake) frying in oil - Serve warm with some nice green tea or cold milk for kids!
Korean Sweet Dessert Pancake – Hotteok/Hodduk (호떡) with cinnamon sugar syrup filling insde
BE CAREFUL when eating hotteok hot because the filling can be really hot and you may even burn yourself so let it cool for couple minutes before you eat it.
Leftovers
Leftovers can be kept at room temperature for 1-2 days. Refrigerate to store longer. Taste best when reheated in a pan or in microwave.
Hotteok Variations
- Make a more chewy hotteok by using 2 cups all purpose flour instead.
- Make a healthier hotteok by using whole wheat flour instead. Dough comes out less glutinous so knead it in your hand before making the hotteok to increase the gluten.
- Make a more modern, fusion hotteok by adding fresh herbs to them. Stay tuned for my next post to see how that’s done!
- Use different kinds of nuts or seeds for the filling.
Korean Dessert Pancake - Hotteok(호떡)
Ingredients
For dough
- 1 cup all purpose flour (130g/4.5 oz = 1 cup / 250 ml)
- 1 cup sweet rice flour (160g/5.6 oz = 1 cup / 250 ml)
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1 tsp instant dry yeast
- 6 Tbsp water (maybe 1-2 Tbsp more)
Yeast solution
- 3/4 cup water (180 ml/6 oz = 3/4 cup)
- 1 tsp sugar
For stuffing
- 1/2 cup unbleached sugar (brown sugar is also good)
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
- 1/4 cup chopped walnuts
Frying
- 7 Tbsp vegetable oil for frying (at least 6 Tbs or more)
Instructions
- Add 1 tsp sugar and 1 tsp dry yeast to 3/4 cup warm (120~130 °F (48~54°C)) to hot water.
- Measure and mix all dry ingredients (flours and salt).
- When yeast is bubbly, mix 1 and 2.
- Mix yeast sugar water + additional water with the flour mix. Dough should be fully wet and sticky.
- Let dough sit for 3 hrs in room temperature. Dough should double in size when ready.
- Prepare stuffing - mix sugar, cinnamon and chopped walnuts. Chop walnuts finely.
- When dough is ready, heat about 3 Tbs or more of oil in a pan over medium heat.
- Pour about 1 tsp of oil in your hand and rub both your hands so they become nice and slippery. Take about a golf size of dough in your hand and spread out with your hands until it’s a little bigger than your palm. Add 1-2 tsp of the sugar mix into the center of the dough and close up the hotteok – making it into a little round parcel.
- Add hotteok parcel into the pan by flipping the hand to drop the pancake onto the pan, with the smooth side (side that was stuck to your palm) facing upwards.
- Oil a wide spatula and press hotteok and slowly flatten it until the diameter becomes about 4 in/10cm wide. If you press it too much, you will end up with a hole and the sugar content will leak and get messy.
- Fry pancake in oil med heat for 3-4 min until edges start to brown. Lower heat if it starts to brown faster than that. You don’t want the heat to be too high because you want sugar to melt inside before the outside gets too dark.
Tips & Notes:
- For total 2 cups of flour (wheat + sweet rice), total water (including yeast solution) should be somewhere between 1 cup + 2 Tbs to 1 1/4 cup. It should feel quite wet and sticky.
- BE CAREFUL when eating hotteok - because the filling can be extremely hot and you can easily burn your mouth! So let it cool for couple minutes before you eat it.
- Make a more chewy hotteok by using 2 cups all purpose flour instead.
- Make a healthier hotteok by substituting whole wheat flour. Dough comes out less glutinous so knead it in your hand before making the hotteok to increase the gluten.
- Make a more modern, fusion hotteok by adding fresh herbs to them. You can use sage, mint, basil and whatever else!
- Use different kinds of nuts or seeds for the filling instead of just sugar.
Hi! I’d love to try these but to make in advance for a dinner party. Do you have any advice on making them early and reheating? Thank you!!
You can make them ahead and reheat on the frying pan. But for that I would recommend omitting rice flour in the batter and use flour only because that makes it hard to reheat.
This takes me right back to the streets of Korea! Those hot chewy cakes were the highlight of my shopping trips Ü Sweet rice flour is on the list! Thanks so much!
Wonderful! Yes, hot chewy hotteok and oden kkochi are a must during shopping trips! Enjoy~
I tried the recipes, but the dough wouldn’t stick. I followed the instructions to a T, but I cant/don’t use all-purpose flour. I have Coconut Flour and Brown Rice Flour. Should I have changed the recipe?
Hi Jeslyn, I am not sure how the recipe would work without using any flour and substituting it with coconut flour or brown rice flour. Because that’s where the stickiness will come from. You can maybe try using some gluten free flour? Good luck and let me know if you have any more questions!
I couldn’t find sweet rice flour just normal. Can I use this instead and add sugar?
Hi, the difference between sweet rice flour and regular rice flour is not the sweetness but the sticky consistency. Sweet rice flour makes the dough more chewy. If you can’t find sweet rice flour, you can just use all flour. You can try using regular rice flour too – probably OK. Good luck!
MRS. jinjoo can I substitute the rice flour with glutinous rice flour?
Yes, you can but the pancake may come out a little more chewy..
This was a wonderful recipe for a grandson with 2 safe foods:) Tommy (age 2) has a chronic disease called eosinophilic esophagitis. So far he tolerates rice and bananas. I have been experimenting with rice flours and made these today. I did replace the yeast with rice vinegar and baking soda and they came out very c!ose to my mother’s crepe recipe. The texture was a problem but before long he was dipping them in his rice syrup. Thank you again for sharing your recipe.
So happy to hear that your grandson tolerated the hotteok and so grateful to you for leaving me a comment. If rice is the only thing he can tolerate, you may also try my https://kimchimari.com/hwajeon/ (can omit flowers) since that has just rice flour, salt and water. And you then dip it in rice syrup or honey. I have also yaksik and tteok ppang but not sure if that has too many other ingredients. Yaksik, you can omit everything but just flavor it with soy sauce and sugar. Tteok ppang does have egg and butter in it so not sure.
Anyway, kudos to you for trying out new recipes for Tommy. He is very lucky to have such a great grandma. I wish your family and Tommy all the best! Take care,