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Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) - Pre Mix Version

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) on the magazine

Have you seen these pancakes before? They are called Hoddeok, and you can easily spot them on the street, especially in winter in Korea. Hoddeok used to be my favourite street snack when I was a child, yeah I was that spoiled kid who cried for sweet snacks and embarrassed my mom. :)

The other day, my self proclaimed elves (my sisters) found a Hoddeok recipe and they were busy making them. They somehow miscalculated the amount of the ingredients, so it wasn’t quite as good as it could be, but it was still good for their first try.

So I thought I should compare our Hoddeok with something more professional before I present it to you, and since I haven’t found any Hoddeok carts on the street (I said this is quite a small city on other posts), I decided to compare with one from the factory.

This is the premix packet for Hoddeok and what is inside.

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) package Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) package inside

  • Product name - Q1 stuffed pancake mix
  • Made by - Samyang
  • Purchase price - 2500 won (US $2.60) from Homeplus
  • Weight - 550g (supposedly able to make 10 pancakes)
  • Contents - Premix 396g (left), filling jam mix 150g (right), Dry yeast 4g (centre)

There are instructions on the side of the box in Korean and here are the steps from the box with additional opinions of mine. The extra ingredients you will need are: water 260ml and some vegetable oil.

Step 1. Sieve the premix (the yellowish packet), then add the dry yeast (silver packet) and water, knead it with a wooden spatula.

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) prep1

Step 2. Cover the bowl with wrap, and ferment it for 2 hours at room temperature (20-25 ℃) The volume of the dough needs to increase by 2 times.

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) step2

Step 3. When the dough is ready, put some oil on your hands (anti stick purpose) and separate an adequate amount of the dough(to allow ten to be made), then put it on your hand.

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) step3

Step 4. Widen the dough with your hands and put a spoonful of jam mix (the green packet). Seal the dough. Repeat it for the rest of the dough. (You need to spread the dough more than in the picture. Otherwise it is hard to seal properly.)

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) prep2

Step 5. Pre heat the frying pan for 20 seconds and add some oil.

Step 6. Put 2-3 sealed dough balls onto the pan and turn them over when the bottom part is cooked. (Cook them on medium to low heat)

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) cooking

Step 7. Press the dough with a spatula and when the both sides are golden brown you can serve them on the plate.

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok)served

Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) in half

Recommendation from the packet : It is best if you consume all the fermented dough (dough without the jam mix) when you make it. However if you can’t finish it all, keep it in the fridge (if you are going to consume it within 24 hours), otherwise keep it in the freezer, and defrost it well before you use it.

Review of the product (5 is the highest)

  • Price compared to fully homemade version : 2/5 (I think it is expensive to buy this premix packet since I saw how easy it is to make the dough ourselves with easily available ingredients.
  • Convenience : 5/5 (Since it is made for convenience, it is a well made product)
  • Taste and Flavour : 3.5/5 (It was delicious though was too sweet for me. It has a vanila flavour and slight sense of cinnamon.)
  • Side affect - I got three pimples possibly more on my right cheek after having 3 Hoddeok yesterday. I think it is nothing to do with the product, I just had too much of it maybe (As you can guess, it is very sugary and oily). Also, importantly, people who have a peanut allergy shouldn’t have it. It contains powdered peanuts, though it didn’t say how much it has.

By the way, you will see a fully homemade version recipe very soon.

Related Posts

Korean Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) - Fully Home Made Version

Spring Rolls in Laver (Gimmari in Korean)

Enoki mushrooms Pancakes (Paeng-ee Beosut Jeon in Korean)

Frozen Cheese Cakes

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18 Responses to “Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) - Pre Mix Version”


  1. 1 beloved Jan 23rd, 2007 at 10:52 pm

    A fully homemade version? Soon? Those words are music to my ears! Being a huge fan of hoddeok, I am salivating over your pictures but I don’t have any of that mix (nor the possibility of acquiring any). Your pics are great!

  2. 2 Evil Jonny Jan 23rd, 2007 at 11:07 pm

    Oh that’s so delish. Hey don’t forget Korean character names. ;-) hehe

  3. 3 passionfruit Jan 24th, 2007 at 1:15 am

    oh my gosh! I am totally craving one now… lucky for me I can just go out and get one cauz I live in seoul…thanks for the step by step!

  4. 4 Kat Jan 24th, 2007 at 1:58 am

    these look really nice. are they really sweet?…okay, they must be, just read about your pimples…

  5. 5 Ellie Jan 24th, 2007 at 6:46 am

    Oh! I haven’t had these since I was a child and my mom used to make them for me in the winter-time! I’ll have to see if she can still remember her recipe for these wonderful treats!

  6. 6 sue Jan 24th, 2007 at 9:38 pm

    Beloved, Thanks. I made Hoddeok again, it is a fully homemade version :)
    I think I am going to write about it next week sometime. So check it out.

    Evil Jonny,
    Sorry, I read your past comment after I posted this. They are called yummy “호떡”

    passionfruit,
    You are the lucky one. :)

    Kat, It was super sweet, but artificial sweet I say.

    Ellie, It has been a while since you had them. Do you even remember the taste? I am sure with your baking talent you can make one fine Hoddeok.

  7. 7 Sally Tan Jan 25th, 2007 at 12:18 am

    WOww.. I can’t wait for the homemade version!!! I love all korean desserts…

  8. 8 Kevin Jan 26th, 2007 at 2:33 am

    Hey Sue,

    I just wanted to tell you great job on this site. I love it. I just found it a few days ago and I’m itching to try a lot of these recipes. I’m not Korean but I lived in Korea for a couple of years and loved eating these on those cold days while I was there. Do you know of a web site where I could buy these mixes? I looked on the sites you have linked and could not see them. I’ve been very tempted to drive to Chicago (hour and a half away) just to find a Korean market to buy this and other Korean foods I’m craving.

    Thanks a ton!

  9. 9 sue Jan 26th, 2007 at 12:14 pm

    Hi Kevin,

    I also tried to look for these packets in both Korean and English on the website I linked to, I couldn’t find them either. I think those three shops are the only online Korean grocery shops in the USA as far as I can search on google. I am sorry about that.
    However, if you are interested in making it on your own, I am going to do a post about the recipe on Monday, so you can try it from home. It is not that difficult to make, it takes similar time, and you will have most ingredients available at home.

  10. 10 Gil Jan 29th, 2007 at 6:19 am

    Oh, this brings back a lot of memories from my time in Korea. I loved eating these fresh cooked from the street carts. The women that ran the carts usually cooked hoddeok, a walnut shaped pastry, and a fish shaped pastry but I can’t remember what these were called.

  11. 11 Lochy Feb 1st, 2007 at 3:42 pm

    Hi,
    Do you know when you will post the homemade recipe? Dying to try it out. Thanks.

  12. 12 sue Feb 1st, 2007 at 9:40 pm
  13. 13 jeff Oct 19th, 2007 at 1:59 am

    Hi Sue,

    I know this is an old post but I just received a box of this mix from my parents when they came to visit me in college, and I found this really useful because I can’t read Korean (I’m Taiwanese), and there were no English cooking directions on the box. I also looked at your other recipes and I think I’ll try some of them out when I have the time (I’m a Korean food addict =] )! Keep up the great work!

    Jeff

  14. 14 jeff Oct 19th, 2007 at 2:03 am

    oh right, I forgot to write about the pancakes! Like you said, the pancakes were very sweet; if i ever got these again, I’d probably use a lot less of that jam mix (even though there was almost a quarter of a ziplock bag left over when i finished preparing them).

    thanks for the directions!

  15. 15 sue Oct 19th, 2007 at 5:43 am

    Hi Jeff,
    Glad to hear that you found this post useful.
    Cheers!

  16. 16 newman Jul 24th, 2008 at 8:56 am

    what is the “jam mix” that goes inside the dough ball??

  17. 17 Mel Jul 27th, 2008 at 3:33 pm

    Hello! Thanks for sharing all your recipes! Another recipe for lazy students or people unable to get the premade package, is getting buttermilk biscuit tube and brown sugar. You just pull each biscuit out and put brown sugar inside and fry them in the pan. ^___^ I’m going to try your way with making it totally homemade. Very awsome.

  18. 18 sarah Sep 12th, 2008 at 9:00 am

    Yummmmmmm, I found a package of 호떡 my mom left, and i’m currently waiting for the dough to rise. (:

    Newman- the ‘jam mix’ name confused me too, but it’s the sugar/cinammon combo that you use to fill the pancakes with.

    I found a blog which listed variations of fillings you could use if the packaged filling was too sweet for you:
    http://cafe-society.us/cook/archive/2008/07/filling-variations-for-hotteok.html

    I may try the Sesame Filling.
    Cheers!

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