The word hwajeon (화전; 花煎) is a compound noun made of the hanja character hwa (화; 花), meaning "flower", and the character jeon (전; 煎), meaning "a pan-fry".[5] The synonyms kkot-bukkumi (꽃부꾸미) and kkot-jijimi (꽃지지미) are also compounds of the native Korean word kkot (꽃), meaning "flower", and bukkumi (부꾸미), meaning a "pan-fried rice cake"; or kkot (꽃) and jijimi (지지미), meaning "pancake".[6][7]
Glutinousrice is seasoned with salt, pounded into fine flour, and kneaded with boiling water.[3] The dough is made into a small, round, flat shape and pan-fried in sesame oil.[2][3] Flower petals are placed and lightly pressed on the dough while frying on the griddle.[3]
Fine glutinous rice flour is kneaded into thick dough and rolled into 5 mm (0.20 in) thick sheets.[3] Flower petals are then placed onto the dough, lightly pressed, and the sheets are cut with hwajeon-tong, a utensil similar to cookie cutter, with 5 cm (2.0 in) diameter.[3] The flower cakes are fried in sesame oil.[3] This method was used in Korean royal court cuisine.[3]
Fried flower cakes are soaked in honey to add sweetness and sprinkled with cinnamon powder.[3]
Hwajeon nori, which literally translates to "flower cake play", is a tradition of going on a picnic in the mountains to watch the seasonal flowers during spring and autumn.[7]
In spring, women used to go on a picnic, carrying a glutinous rice flour and griddle near a stream on Samjinnal which falls on every third day of the third lunar month in the Korean calendar. They picked edible spring blossoms and made hwajeon. The variety made with rhododendron is regarded as the most representative hwajeon.[3] It is traditionally eaten with rhododendron punch consisting of the same flower floating in honeyed or magnolia berry water.[1][3]
Similarly, people enjoyed hwajeon nori in autumn, with hwajeon which is made with chrysanthemum flowers and leaves.[3] It was consumed with chrysanthemum wineoryuja punch. The custom is closely related to the Junggu, the traditional holiday falls on every ninth day of the ninth lunar month in the Korean calendar.[8][9]
These customs date back to the Three Kingdoms era (57 BCE ‒ 668 AD) and originated in Silla.[7]
^ abc"Kinds of Rice Cakes". Food in Korea. Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corporation. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
^ abChoe, Sang-su (1960). "Third Day of the Third moon (Samjil)"(PDF). Annual Customs of Korea: Notes on the Rites and Ceremonies of the Year. Korean Folklore Studies Series. Vol. 3. Seoul: Korea Book Publishing Company. p. 54. Archived from the original(PDF) on 30 March 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2017.