Red bean paste
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Alternative names | Red bean jam, adzuki bean paste, anko |
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Type | Sweet paste |
Region or state | East Asia |
Main ingredients | Red beans, sugar or honey |
Red bean paste (
Etymology
Regional names | |
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Chinese name | |
Hanyu Pinyin | dòushā / hóngdòushā |
Wade–Giles | tou4sha1 / hung2tou4sha1 |
Yue: Cantonese | |
Yale Romanization | huhng dauh sā |
Jyutping | hung4 dau6 saa1 |
Transcriptions | |
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Revised Romanization | patso |
McCune–Reischauer | p'atso |
Transcriptions | |
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Revised Hepburn | an / azukian |
In Japanese, a number of names are used to refer to red bean paste; these include an (餡), anko (餡子) and ogura (小倉). Strictly speaking, the term an can refer to almost any sweet, edible, mashed paste, although without qualifiers red beans are assumed, while azukian (小豆餡) refers specifically to the paste made with red beans. Other common forms of an include shiroan (白餡, "white bean paste"), made from navy or other white beans, green beans and kurian (栗餡), made from chestnuts.
Similarly, the Chinese term dòushā (豆沙), applies to red bean paste when used without qualifiers, although hóngdòushā (紅豆沙) explicitly means "red bean paste."
In
Types
Red bean paste is graded according to its consistency, sweetness, and color.
Chinese
In Chinese cuisine, the most common types are:[6]
- Mashed
- Adzuki beans are boiled with sugar and mashed. The paste is smooth with bits of broken beans and bean husk. Depending on the intended texture, the beans can be vigorously or lightly mashed. Some unmashed beans can also be added back into the bean paste for additional texture. This is the most common and popular type of red bean paste eaten in Chinese confections. It can also be eaten on its own or in sweet soups.
- Smooth
- Adzuki beans are boiled without sugar, mashed, and diluted into a slurry. The slurry is then strained through a sieve to remove the husk, filtered, and squeezed dry using cheesecloth. Although the dry paste can be directly sweetened and used, oil, either vegetable oil or lard, is usually used to cook the dry paste and improve its texture and mouth feel. Smooth bean paste is mainly used as a filling for Chinese pastries.
Japanese
In Japanese cuisine and confectionery, the most common types are:
- Tsubuan (粒餡): Whole red beans are boiled with sugar but otherwise untreated.
- Tsubushian (潰し餡): The beans are mashed after boiling.
- Koshian (漉し餡): The beans are passed through a sieve to remove bean skins. This is the most common type.
- Sarashian (晒し餡): The beans are dried and reconstituted with water.
- Ogura-an (小倉餡): Named after Mt Ogura in western Kyoto, this is a mix of koshian and tsubuan.
Korean
In Korean cuisine and confectionery, the most common types are:
- Patso (팥소), dark-red paste made by boiling and then mashing or grinding red beans. The bean skins may or may not be removed by sifting the paste through a sieve to make the paste smoother.
- Danpat (단팥) or danpat-so (단팥소), sweetened red bean paste, made by adding honey or sugar when making patso. The bean skins are often removed to make the paste smoother.
- Geopipat-so (거피팥소), white paste made by boiling dehulled red beans, and then mashing or grinding them.
Uses
Chinese
Red bean paste is used in many Chinese dishes, such as:
- Red bean soup (紅豆湯/紅豆沙; pinyin: hóng dòu tāng / hóng dòu shā): In some recipes, red bean paste with more water added to form a tong sui, or thick, sweet soup. It is often cooked and eaten with tangyuan and lotus seeds. This is almost always a dessert.
- Tangyuan (湯圓, pinyin: tāng yúan): Glutinous rice balls filled with sweet fillings such as red bean paste and boiled in plain or sweetened water.
- Sweet zongzi (粽子; pinyin: zòng zi): Glutinous rice and red bean paste wrapped with bamboo leaves and steamed or boiled. The glutinous rice used to make zongzi is usually specially prepared and appears yellow.
- Mooncakes (月餅; yùe bĭng): A baked pastry consisting of thin dough surrounding a filling. The filling is traditionally made from various ingredients, including mashed lotus seeds, red bean paste, or other fillings. The texture of this filling is quite similar to straight red bean paste. It is most commonly eaten during the Mid-Autumn Festival.
- Bāozi (豆沙包; pinyin: dòu shā bāo): Steamed leavened bread filled with a variety of savoury or sweet fillings.
- Jiān dui(煎堆): Fried pastry made from glutinous rice flour, sometimes filled with red bean paste.
- Red bean cake (Chinese: 红豆糕; pinyin: hóng dòu gāo): It is a type of Asian cake with a sweet red bean paste filling. It is made primarily with adzuki beans.
- Red bean pancake
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Chinese mooncake
Japanese
Red bean paste is used in many Japanese sweets.
- Anmitsu, a dessert consisting of red bean paste, small cubes of agar jelly, and pieces of fruit served with syrup.
- Anpan, a sweet bun filled with red bean paste.
- Daifuku, a confection consisting of a small round rice cake stuffed with red bean paste.
- Anko dango, a dumpling made from rice flour that is sometimes topped or filled with red bean paste.
- Dorayaki, a confection consisting of two small pancake-like patties made from castella wrapped around a filling of red bean paste.
- Imagawayaki, a dessert filled with the paste. Also known as Ōban-yaki.
- Manjū, a steamed cake filled with red bean paste.
- Oshirukoor Zenzai, adzuki bean soup, commonly served with rice cake.
- sakura) leaf.
- Taiyaki, a fish-shaped cake stuffed with red bean paste.
- Yōkan, a thick jellied dessert made of red bean paste, agar, and sugar.
Korean
Red bean paste is used in various Korean snack foods and desserts, including:
- Baram-tteok, a type of tteokfilled with white geopipat-so.
- Bungeo-ppang, a fish-shaped pastry filled with sweet danpat-so.
- Chalbori-ppang, two small and sweet pancakes wrapping around sweet danpat-so.
- Chapssal doughnut, a glutinous rice doughnut filled with sweet danpat-so.
- Gyeongdan, a rice ball cake filled with sweet danpat-so.
- Hodu-gwaja, a walnut-shaped cookie filled with sweet danpat-so.
- Hoppang, a warm fluffy pastry filled with sweet danpat-so or sweet nokdu-so (mung bean paste).
- Hwangnam-ppang, a pastry with a chrysanthemum imprinted on the top, filled with sweet danpat-so.
- Jjinppang, a warm fluffy pastry filled with unsweetened patso, usually with the skins of the red beans.
- Kkulppang, a sweet pastry covered with sweet danpat-so and covered with corn syrup.
- Patbingsu, a type of shaved ice.
- Songpyeon, a type of tteok filled with various fillings including unsweetened patso, sweetened (danpat-so), or white (geopipat-so).
- Ttongppang, a poo-shaped pastry filled with sweet danpat-so.
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Danpat-doneot filled with danpat-so
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Hodu-gwaja filled with danpat-so
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Baram-tteokfilled with geopipat-so
See also
References
- ISBN 978-1928914556.
- ^ Mishan, Ligaya (2013-10-17). "Hungry City: Shalom Japan in Williamsburg, Brooklyn". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-02-27.
- ^ .
- ^ a b (in Korean) "거피-팥 (去皮-)". Standard Korean Language Dictionary. National Institute of Korean Language. Archived from the original on 2017-02-25. Retrieved 2017-02-25.
- ^ (in Korean) "거피01 (去皮)". Standard Korean Language Dictionary. National Institute of Korean Language. Archived from the original on 2017-02-26. Retrieved 2017-02-25.
- ^ "Homemade Sweet Red (Azuki) Bean Paste, Chunky and Smooth". tastehongkong.com. 2012-04-11. Retrieved 2013-12-11.[permanent dead link]