Tteok-galbi () or grilled short rib patties is a Korean cuisine beef dish made with minced beef short ribs.
Originally a royal dish, tteok-galbi is now a local specialty of Gyeonggi Province in the central-west region and South Jeolla Province in the south-west region of the Korean Peninsula.
The word tteok-galbi has a relatively short history that starts in the late 1960s to early 1970s. Before that, the dish was called hyo-galbi (효갈비), meaning "filial piety ribs", or no-galbi (노갈비), meaning "elder ribs", as it was often a dish for older people whose teeth were too weak to bite off meat from the rib bones. The term may have been coined at the historic restaurant Sinsikdang. Both the terms hyo-galbi and no-galbi were used during the Joseon era (1392–1897).
In modern South Korea, tteok-galbi is also made with ingredients mixed with or other than beef, such as pork and duck. Tteok-galbi made with half beef and half pork was first created and sold by Choe Jeo-ja in the 1950s, in Songjeong, Gwangju, South Korea. Now there is a " tteok-galbi street" specializing in the half beef and half pork dish in the Songjeong area. Ori-tteok-galbi (오리떡갈비), made with duck meat, is a popular dish in Gwangju.
Songjeong tteok-galbi is made by shaping a mixture of beef and pork into rectangles and grilling. Pork is added to make it fattier since the beef is too dry by itself. The recipe of Choe Jeo-ja calls for hand-kneading the meat for a long time in a seasoning made from nearly 20 ingredients including dasima (kelp), Pyrus pyrifolia and honey. The sauce is intermittently brushed on the meat while it is slowly grilled over charcoal.
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