Yugwa
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''Gangjeong'' () is a ''hangwa'' (, traditional Korean confection) made with glutinous rice flour. It is a deep-fried "rice puff" with hollow inside, coated with honey followed by nutty beans, nuts, seeds, pollen, or spice powders. ''Gangjeong'' is often served during important events such as weddings, Jesa, ancestral rites, and Korean New Year celebrations. Yugwa was widely distributed after the Goryeo Dynasty due to the influence of Buddhism, and was called "Goryeo dessert" in the Yuan Dynasty of China.


Preparation

Glutinous rice is soaked in water for four to five days, then pounded or ground into fine powder. Ten cups of glutinous rice flour is mixed with half cup cheongju (wine), ''cheongju'' (rice wine) and half cup honey, and steamed in ''siru'' (steamer) lined with wet ''bojagi'' (cloth). Steamed dough is kneaded, rolled into thick sheets, cut into long and wide rectangles, and dried in shade. Well-dried ''gangjeong'' is first soaked in room-temperature cooking oil, then let rise a little more in warm oil, and deep-fried at a high temperature. When all excess oil is drained, the rice puff is coated with honey followed by nutty grains or powders such as toasted sesame seeds, pine nut powder, soybean powder, pine pollen, Angelica leaf powder, and Cinnamomum cassia, cinnamon powder. Gangjeong 2.png, Pink ''gangjeong'' Gangjeong 3.png, Black sesame ''gangjeong'' Gangjeong 4.png, White sesame ''gangjeong'' Gangjeong.png, Gangjeong of many colors


See also

* ''Yugwa'' * ''Yeotgangjeong'' Hangaone(''Hangwa Culture Museum'')


References

Deep fried foods Glutinous rice dishes Hangwa {{Korea-dessert-stub