Gomul Explained

kokot
Alternate Name:Dressing powder
Country:Korea
National Cuisine:Korean cuisine
Serving Size:100 g
Korean name
Hangul:Korean: 고물
Hanja:none
Rr:kokot
Mr:komul
Koreanipa:pronounced as /ko/

Gomul refers to a number of powdered coatings, toppings, fillings, or dips in Korean cuisine.

Uses

Gomul is used to improve the appearance and taste of tteok (rice cake), including injeolmi, danja, and gyeongdan, as well as between-layer fillings for siru-tteok (steamed rice cake).[1] [2] [3] It helps with even cooking of steamed rice cakes, being the less dense layer (compared to the rice flour layer, which tend to turn stickier as it steams) through which steam passes more easily.[4]

Gomul is also used for topping bingsu (shaved ice). Sometimes, soybean gomul is served with grilled samgyeopsal (pork belly), with meat dipped in the soybean powder when eaten.

Varieties and preparation

Red bean or mung bean gomul is used in winter, while soybean or sesame gomul, which don't spoil as fast, are preferred in summer.

Common varieties and their preparation are:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chun, Hui-jung. Korean Food Guide 800. The Korea Foundation. 2014. 978-89-89782-10-0. Yoon. Ho-mi. Seoul. 36–37. issuu.
  2. Book: History of Roasted Whole Soy Flour (Kinako), Soy Coffee, Coffee Alternatives, Problems with Coffee, and Soy Chocolate (1540-2012). Shurtleff. William. Aoyagi. Akiko. Soyinfo Center. 2012. 978-1-928914-52-5. 5.
  3. Web site: gomul. Doopedia. Doosan Corporation. ko. ko:고물.
  4. Web site: gomul. 신. 미경. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Academy of Korean Studies. ko. ko:고물. 21 May 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170730224521/http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/Index?contents_id=E0003579. 30 July 2017. dead.