Saturday, February 14, 2009

Rice Cake Soup on New Year's Day

떡국 [tteok-guk]

As I explained in the previous post, tteok-guk is also known as a new year's soup or an age-soup. This is because when we were young, we were told by our parents that we get older as many bowls of tteok-guk as we eat on the new year's day. Of course, the kids even back then were not that naive to believe such things, but it was certainly a playful thing to talk about as the family were having this soup altogether on new year's day. In Korean culture, we count our age from the new year's day, instead of from our birthday as in western culture. So, this notion of tteok-guk as an age soup must come from the tradition that the elderly asking young childeren how old they have become on the new year's day. By the way, this doesn't mean that you cannot have tteok-guk on other days.

About a week after the seol, the lunar new year's day, I invited a group of our tennis friends over for tteok-guk. In honesty, I didn't know how to make tteok-guk until then; I only had a vague idea. I looked up online and called mom, mother-in-law and aunt to ask about their recipes. It turned out every single one of them has a completely different recipe. My mother-in-law's recipe uses beef stock, my aunt uses anchovy, and my mom uses nothing, just plain water not even salt for the soup base. Well, I prepared ingredients for all of the recipes just in case. At the end though, I decided to go with my mom's simple recipe. The result was a definite success. Friends asked what were the secret ingredients, and I answered just water. See below how I did it. :)

For 4 servings


Main ingredients:
sliced rice cake for tteok-guk purpose (6 cups)
water (10 cups or more)


For garnish:
eggs (2)
oil for the pan
beef (1/4 cup, rib or with the least fat, chopped)
Korean soy sauce (1/4 cup)
tofu (1/2 block, medium firm, chopped)
garlic (2 tbl, minced)
pepper (2 tsp)
dry seaweed/laver (1/2 sheet, shredded)
salt (dash)




1.
Soak the rice cake in water for 30 minutes, if using the air-tight packaged rice cake.

2.
Separate an egg white and yolk.

3.
Pan fry egg white and yolk separately into a thin layer.

4.
Sliced them.

5.
Slice tofu into about 1/4" thick layer and pan fry with a dash of salt over the top.

6.
When they turn golden brown, cut into little cubes. Set aside.

7.
Chop the meat when it's slightly frozen. It is recommended that you chop the meat using a knife instead of using a blender or buying ground beef to preserve the chewing flavor of beef.

8.
Over low to medium heat, boil in Korean soy sauce minced garlic and chopped beef for 15+ minutes.

9.
Add the tofu cubes from Step 6 to the Korean soy sauce+beef mix, and boil over low to medium heat for 5 to 10 minutes.

10.
Spray the dry seaweed with little bit of oil and salt and toast quickly over medium heat. Or buy the pre oil+salted dry seaweed.

11.
Shred the seaweed for garnish.

12.
Bring the water to boil. Add the rice cake from Step 1. When the rice cake afloat on the surface, it's done.

13.
Add the garnishes on top and serve.

5 comments:

Renee said...

I love this soup, but your recipe sounds better than any I've had. I'll have to try it soon!

Min said...

Mmmm, it's so good when you eat it with some aged kimchi~ But then, what isn't good with aged kimchi? ^^

Mittens said...

Thanks for your recipe, bought a bag of rice cakes the other day for stir fry but only needed half of it, now I know what to do with the leftover.

Migi said...

I haven't tried stir-frying these rice cakes before. I have some left-overs and I must try. :) I hope you enjoy the soup, Mittens.

gaga said...

I love rice cakes in all forms, so I definitely love this dish. Looks great!