Hodu-gwaja

Type of cookie from South Korea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hodu-gwaja (Korean: 호두과자; "walnut cookie"), commonly translated as walnut cookies, walnut cakes, and walnut pastries,[1][2] is a type of cookie originated from Cheonan, South Korea.[3] It is also known by the name hodo-gwaja (호도과자; which is not the Standard Korean spelling but the name used by Hakhwa walnut cookies, the company that first produced the confection) in and outside Korea.

Alternative namesHodo-gwaja, walnut cookies, walnut cakes, walnut pastries
TypeCookie
Place of originSouth Korea
Region or stateCheonan
Quick facts Alternative names, Type ...
Hodu-gwaja
Alternative namesHodo-gwaja, walnut cookies, walnut cakes, walnut pastries
TypeCookie
Place of originSouth Korea
Region or stateCheonan
Created byJo Gwigeum, Sim Boksun
Invented1934
Main ingredientsWalnuts, red bean paste
Ingredients generally usedWheat flour, eggs, milk, sugar
Korean name
Hangul
호두과자
Hanja
胡桃菓子
RRhodugwaja
MRhodugwaja
IPA[ho.du.ɡwa.dʑa]
  •   Media: Hodu-gwaja
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It is a walnut-shaped baked confection with red bean paste filling, whose outer dough is made of skinned and pounded walnuts and wheat flour. Ones that are made in Cheonan, South Chungcheong Province, are called "Cheonan hodu-gwaja" and are a local specialty.

History

Hodu-gwaja was first made in 1934 by Jo Gwigeum and Sim Boksun, who were a married couple living in Cheonan.[3] The method was developed based on those of traditional Korean confectioneries.[4]

Outside Cheonan, it was popularized in the 1970s, often sold in train stations and inside the train via catering trolleys.[4] Nowadays it is sold in most regions in South Korea including Seoul, and in the cities of other countries, such as Los Angeles and San Diego in the United States.[2]

More than 60 years ago, SUHIL Machinery Corp manufactured and delivered the first hodu-gwaja machine to Cheonan's Hakhwa Hodu Gwaja the original producer of hodu-gwaja.[citation needed]

See also

References

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