Hotteok (Sweet Korean Stuffed Pancakes)

Hotteok is a Korean style sweet pancake that is stuffed with cinnamon sugar and walnuts! Made with a simple yeasted dough and can be stuffed with any flavor of your choosing!

Hotteok (Sweet Korean Stuffed Pancakes)

One variety of Korean ‘pancakes’ is Hotteok which is stuffed with a sweet, nutty filling. Another is called jeon a vegetable pancake we can explore later!

Hotteok (Sweet Korean Stuffed Pancakes) cooking

There are store bought dough mixes you can buy for hotteok if you want to use them, but it’s more likely that you’ll have instant yeast on hand than an Asian market near you that carries it.

The dough is really simple to make and requires little kneading. For those of you that have a stand mixer you can set them aside for the recipe! You’ll just need a large bowl and a wooden spoon!

Mix your flour, sugar, and salt together and add in the yeasted water and stir with the wooden spoon. It should look like this.

Dough, pre oil

Add the oil and mix properly. Roll the dough into a ball and place into greased bowl, cover with greased plastic wrap. Let set for an hour at room temperature while it rises. (it’s okay for the dough to be sticky)

Dough, post rise

Once the dough rises, it should look like this. Punch the air down and turn the dough out onto a floured work surface. (Add the 1/8 cup of flour I said to reserve in the recipe instructions)

Knead or fold that flour into the dough until the dough is smooth. Then cut the dough into four even pieces and roll those in to balls. Cover with the plastic wrap and set aside while you prepare the filling. Make sure you finely chop your walnuts and then measure out the required tablespoon.

Dough, with filling

Using your hands, flatten the balls to be a little larger than the size of your palm. Then press down the sides of the dough so the perimeter of the dough is thinner than the center. Then scoop the filling evenly between the four flattened dough balls.

To seal and roll the dough, bring four points of the dough together and pinch shut. Then bring the rest of the dough together and roll between your palms.

Place the hotteok balls aside and heat up some neutral oil on a pan. You just want a thin layer of oil on the pan. We are very shallow frying these. Make sure the oil is hot and shimmering before you place the hotteok in there. Place the hotteok in the pan (the oil should sizzle) depending on the size of the pan you may only be able to fit one or two in there. Be sure to leave space for when you flatten them.

Cook the hotteok for about a minute to a minute and a half, or until the dough is a crispy golden brown.

Hotteok, cooking

Once you flip the hotteok, grab a  flat spatula, a burger flipper, or something like that as well as a heavy handled spoon. Place the flat spatula on the dough and use the wooden handle to push on the spatula to flatten the dough. It should be flat like a disc.

Then cook for another minute to minute and half. Flip one more time and cook until the rest of the dough is golden brown. Place the finished hotteok on a bed of paper towels to absorb any grease.

Enjoy the hotteok warm! But be careful not to burn yourself, the filling can be very hot.

Hotteok (Sweet Korean Stuffed Pancakes)

If you enjoy these sweet Korean stuffed pancakes, you can enjoy Hotteok with any type of filling! A friend of mine suggested using pumpkin seeds or sunflower seeds! You can also do nutella or mozzarella cheese.

Hotteok (Sweet Korean Stuffed Pancakes)

Hotteok is a Korean style sweet pancake that is stuffed with cinnamon sugar and walnuts! Made with a simple yeasted dough and can be stuffed with any flavor of your choosing!
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time10 minutes
Rising Time1 hour
Course: Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
Cuisine: Asian, Korean
Servings: 4 Hotteok
Calories: 180kcal

Ingredients

Dough

  • ½ Cup Water Lukewarm (95°-110°F)
  • ½ tsp Instant Yeast
  • Cup All Purpose Flour plus ⅛ for flouring surface and kneading
  • ½ Tbsp Sugar
  • tsp Kosher Salt
  • ½ Tbsp Vegetable Oil

Filling

  • ¼ Cup Dark Brown Sugar
  • ½ tsp Cinnamon
  • 1 Tbsp Walnut, Finely Chopped
  • Vegetable Oil for cooking

Instructions

  • Mix together the water and yeast. Set aside while you prep the other ingredients.
  • In a large bowl, mix together the flour, white granulated sugar, and kosher salt.
  • Add the yeast water to the dry ingredients and mix with a wooden spoon.
  • Add the vegetable oil to the dough and mix properly. It will be sticky but keep mixing!
  • Roll the dough into a ball and place into a greased bowl and cover with cling wrap.
  • Place the dough aside in a warm/room temperature room for an hour as it rises.
  • Once the dough has risen for an hour, punch the gases out of it and roll onto a floured work surface (use the ⅛ cup of flour for this).
  • Knead the flour into the dough until fully incorporated and the dough feels smooth. It's okay for it to be sticky.
  • Cut the dough into four equal sized lumps and cover with the cling wrap you used earlier. Set aside while you mix the filling and chop the nuts.
  • Finely chop the walnuts and then measure out a tablespoon of them. Mix with the cinnamon and dark brown sugar.
  • Flatten each of the dough balls slightly in the palm of your hands and then evenly add the stuffing between the four dough pieces.
  • Refer to the photos above on how to seal the dough balls. Set them aside.
  • Depending on the size of your pans, use enough vegetable oil to thinly cover the bottom of whatever pan you're using. It can be cast iron, enameled cast iron, nonstick, etc. Let it heat up until shimmering.
  • Place one or two of your dough balls in the pan (the pan should sizzle). Make sure there's enough room in the pan for the balls to expand as you flatten them.
  • Let the balls cook for about a minute to a minute and a half or until the dough is golden, crispy brown.
  • Flip the dough and take a flat spatula, a burger flipper, or something like that as well as a heavy handled spoon. Place the flat spatula on the dough and use the wooden handle to push on the spatula to flatten the dough. It should be flat like a disc.
  • Cook the hotteok for another minute to minute and half, or until its golden crispy brown.
  • Flip the hotteok one more time and let the rest of it cook before removing from the pan and placing on some paper towels.
  • Enjoy warm! If you want to make ahead and reheat, you can heat them up on a pan or in a toaster oven!

Cinnamon Whipped Cream

This soft, silky, and not too sweet cinnamon whipped cream is perfect on top of pumpkin or banana bread, in coffee, or with berries!

Cin Whipped Cream

OK – hear me out. I know the idea of cinnamon whipped cream on fruits might seem weird to some of you. But it’s actually AMAZING. This cream isn’t super sweet and it perfectly compliments the flavor of berries. My favorite fruit to eat it with is strawberries.

This recipe is inspired by a cinnamon whipped cream my fiance ate at his cousins house many years ago. His aunt served it with pumpkin bread but my fiance’s mom serves it with fruits! It works with all kinds of foods.

whipped cream, cin

It’s honestly the simplest recipe but it is sure to be a hit with everyone.

It only needs 4 ingredients!

ingredients

A word of advice, just because it’s easy doesn’t mean there’s not a chance it can go wrong. I say that because it happened to me. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve made this recipe, hardly paying attention, and it’s gone perfectly.

However, the day I made this recipe for photos, it went horribly wrong. I somehow managed to curdle my whipped cream!

So here’s what NOT to do: Don’t turn your cream on the fastest speed and walk away, because you’ll overwhip it and your cream will look like this:

example of curdling

EW – pretty sure nobody wants that

So overall, your best best is to premeasure everything and put it in the bowl before you begin whipping.

You should begin on a low setting first before you speed it up. I wouldn’t recommend whipping at a speed higher than medium.

You shouldn’t push your cream past this point. I call it a ribbony texture.

ribbony texture

This cream is great on banana bread or pumpkin bread, or with an assortment of berries. But it’s also AMAZING scooped onto black coffee!

Cinnamon, sugar, cream, black coffee… SIGN ME UP

Share if you like this recipe of Cinnamon Whipped Cream!

final cin cream photo

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Cinnamon Whipped Cream

This soft, silky, and not too sweet cinnamon whipped cream is perfect on top of pumpkin or banana bread, in coffee, or with berries!
Prep Time5 minutes
Cook Time5 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 16 Servings
Calories: 65kcal

Equipment

  • Stand Mixer or hand mixer

Ingredients

  • 2 Cups Heavy Cream
  • 4 Tbsp White Sugar
  • 2 tsp Ground Cinnamon
  • ½ tsp Vanilla Extract

Instructions

  • In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer (with the whisk attachment) pour in the heavy cream, white sugar, ground cinnamon, and vanilla extract.
  • Mix/Whisk on lowest speed for about a minute.
  • Increase to medium speed and allow the whipped cream to begin to form.
  • Mix until the whipped cream begins to form a ribbony texture (refer to photos). Don't go past this stage or your cream will curdle!
  • Enjoy!

Cinnamon Whipped Cream

This soft, silky, and not too sweet cinnamon whipped cream is perfect on top of pumpkin or banana bread, in coffee, or with berries!

Best, Soft Banana Bread

A moist banana bread perfect as a morning meal or a late night snack. Enjoy with milk, tea, or coffee. Can even be topped with butter, honey, or maple!

Moist Pumpkin Spice Bread

A classic, generations old, old fashioned recipe for pumpkin bread! Super Moist Pumpkin Spice Bread is just as its name says: soft, sweet, and perfectly seasoned!

Soft Sugar Cookies

These chewy, soft sugar cookies are the best sweet treat for any cookie lover out there! Bake all at once or make ahead of time, they’re perfect for every occasion!