3/26/17
Pan-fried rice cakes with sweet red bean filling
Today I’m going to show you how to make bukkumi, pan fried rice cakes filled with sweet red beans, or with mung bean paste. These rice cakes are gooey, chewy, and sweet on the inside and crispy on the outside. The texture is just wonderful, both soft and crispy at the same time.
The best thing about these is that they are very quick to make. With a box of glutinous rice flour and a can of sweet red beans, you can make them in 10 minutes! If a Korean grocery store is far away from your home, you can buy these ingredients on Amazon, or you can make your own sweet red bean paste, or use the mung bean paste that I show you in this recipe.
Advertisement
When I lived in Korea, these were a lot harder to make because they didn’t sell glutinous rice flour in a box. You had to bring your soaked and strained chapssal (glutinous rice) to the local mill and have them grind it into flour for you. So it’s a real treat for me to be able to make them so easily these days.
If you like to make bukkumi and save some for later, you can freeze them up to one month. To serve them, reheat in the microwave or in a pan with a bit of oil.
I love the cute name of this dish! Let me know how yours turn out!
Ingredients (4 bukkumi)
For mung bean filling
- ½ cup dried skinned mung beans, rinsed and soaked for 2 hours
- a pinch of salt
- 2-3 tablespoons sugar or honey
Advertisement
For red bean filling
- A can of sweet red beans, or make your own from my patbingsu recipe
For the rice cake dough
- 1 cup glutinous rice flour (Mochiko)
- ⅓ cup plus 2 tablespoons hot boiling water
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- About 2-3 tablespoons extra rice flour for dusting
For garnish
- 1 jujube, the seed removed, rolled and cut into thin slices
- 8 pumpkin seeds
- 1 tablespoon honey
For pan frying
- Cooking oil (grape seed oil, corn oil, or vegetable oil)
- Sesame oil
Directions
Make sweet mung bean paste (if using)
- Strain the beans and put them into a heavy pot. Add ⅓ cup water and a pinch of salt. Cover and cook for 10 minutes over medium heat. Keep an eye on them to see if a lot of bubbles form. If so, open the lid and stir the beans with a wooden spoon. Cover and keep cooking.
- Turn down the the heat to very low and simmer for another 5 minutes.
- Remove from the heat and mash the beans with a wooden spoon until they form a smooth, soft, shapeable dough. Add the honey and mix well.
- You can make 8 to 10 bukkumi with this amount of mung bean paste. Take 2 to 3 tablespoons of the paste and and roll it between the palms of your hands to shape it into a little football. Roll all the paste into footballs and set aside.
Make the dough
- Combine the rice flour, salt, and hot water in a mixing bowl. Mix with a wooden spoon until it cools down, and knead the dough with your hand for 1 minute until it turns into a lump. Wrap it in plastic wrap and let it sit.
- 5 to 10 minutes later, knead it again on the cutting board until it turns smooth, for about 2 minutes. Use some extra rice flour to dust the cutting board so the dough doesn’t stick to it.
- Divide the dough into 4 equal pieces. Roll each piece between your hands, into a ball.
- Put each ball onto the cutting board one by one and roll them out to about 5½ inch disks.
Make bukkumi
- Heat up a non-stick pan over medium heat. Add about 1 tablespoon cooking oil and 1/2 teaspoon of sesame oil. Swirl the pan to mix the oil evenly.
- Put one of the dough disks on the pan and cook for 30 to 40 seconds until the edges start cooking and it looks a little translucent.
- Flip it over and add one of the mung bean paste balls to the center of it. If you’re using canned sweet red bean paste, scoop about 2 to 3 tablespoons worth into the center.
- Fold the disk over with your spatula to make a half moon. Press the edge slightly and let it cook for 1 minute. Turn it over and cook until both sides are a little crunchy, but not browned.
- Repeat with the rest of the disks and bean paste.
Serve
Garnish with jujube and pumpkin seeds, and serve as a dessert or snack with coffee or tea.