Sweet and savory tteokgalbi recipe photographed from above

Tteokgalbi: Authentic Korean Beef Patties (Juicy & Glazed)

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Tteokgalbi is the Korean hamburger steak. These savory, glossy beef patties were once served to Korean royalty and today, I’m showing you how to make restaurant-quality tteok galbi in your own kitchen in just 30 minutes.

If you’ve ever bitten into Korean beef patties at a Korean BBQ restaurant and wondered how it stays so unbelievably juicy inside while wearing that sweet-savory glaze outside, the secret is a single technique most recipes skip. I’ll share it below, along with why the traditional beef-and-pork blend makes all the difference.

Four pieces of tteokgalbi Korean beef patties arranged on an white plate
This is what restaurant-quality tteokgalbi looks like, made right in your kitchen.

What is Tteokgalbi?

Tteokgalbi (๋–ก๊ฐˆ๋น„) is a traditional Korean dish of seasoned minced meat shaped into patties and glazed in a sweet soy sauce. The name literally means “rice cake ribs”, “tteok” (rice cake) and “galbi” (ribs), because the process of kneading and shaping the meat resembles rice cake making, and the final texture is soft and chewy like tteok.

Korean hamburger patties originated as royal court cuisine in Damyang, in South Jeolla Province, where it was created so the king could enjoy the flavor of beef short ribs without the mess of eating meat off the bone. Today, home cooks across Korea have embraced a simpler version using a blend of ground beef and pork. Many Westerners call it “Korean hamburger steak,” and after one bite, you’ll understand why.

Korean beef patties brushed with glossy tteokgalbi sauce
Close-up of Korean beef patties with glossy soy glaze

Why you’ll love the Korean Beef Patties Recipe

  • โœ… Ready in 30 minutes: no overnight marinating needed
  • โœ… Juicy inside, caramelized outside: thanks to a secret steaming step
  • โœ… Authentic beef-pork blend: the traditional way, not the shortcut
  • โœ… Kid-friendly: sweet and savory, no spice
  • โœ… Better than restaurant tteokgalbi: seriously, taste-tested
Bite of tteokgalbi lifted with chopsticks revealing tender texture
Authentic Korean hamburger(tteok galbi) plated banchan-style for dinner

Tteok galbi vs Bulgogi: What’s the Difference?

Both tteok galbi and bulgogi are beloved Korean beef dishes, but they’re completely different:

  • Bulgogi = thinly sliced marinated beef, stir-fried or grilled
  • Tteokgalbi = minced beef (often with pork) formed into round patties

Think of it this way: bulgogi is the Korean stir-fry, tteokgalbi is the Korean hamburger. Both share a sweet soy-based marinade, but the textures and cooking methods are worlds apart.

ground beef bulgogi

Easy 15 Minutes Ground Beef Bulgogi Rice Bowl

Today, I will make a ground beef bulgogi rice bowl that can be prepared in 15 minutes. With this recipe, I hope people around the world, who have difficulty finding bulgogi cuts, can enjoy delicious Korean bulgogi.
CHECK OUT THIS RECIPE

๐Ÿ‘‰ Love Korean ground beef dishes? Try my Ground Beef Bulgogi: Easy 15-Minute Korean Rice Bowl Recipe for a quick weeknight meal.

Ingredients for Tteokgalbi

Serves 2

For the Korean Beef Patties

  • 300g ground meat (beef and pork blend) – see notes
  • 1/4 stalk green onion
  • 1/4 medium onion
  • 1 tbsp minced garlic
  • 1 tbsp glutinous rice flour
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp oyster sauce
  • 1.5 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp cooking wine (mirin)
  • 1 tbsp toasted sesame oil
  • 10 turns of freshly cracked black pepper
  • 4 tbsp cooking oil (for pan-frying)

For the Sweet Soy Glaze

  • 4 tbsp water
  • 1.5 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp corn syrup (or rice syrup)

๐Ÿ’กA Note on the Beef-Pork Blend

Most tteokgalbi recipes online use 100% beef, but authentic Korean beef patties are almost always made with a blend of beef and pork (typically 70/30 or 50/50). The pork fat keeps the patties unbelievably juicy, while the beef delivers that deep, meaty flavor. Skip the blend and you’ll end up with dry, crumbly patties. Trust me on this one.

Tteokgalbi: Authentic Korean Beef Patties (Juicy & Glazed)
Juicy on the inside, caramelized on the outside, tteok galbi perfection.

Ingredient Substitutions

  • Glutinous rice flour โ†’ potato starch works
  • Oyster sauce โ†’ substitute with extra soy sauce
  • Corn syrup โ†’ rice syrup or honey
  • Mirin โ†’ white wine

How to Make Tteokgalbi

Step 1: Season the Meat

In a large bowl, combine the ground meat with soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar, mirin, sesame oil, black pepper, and minced garlic. Mix thoroughly with your hands.

Ground beef and pork blend being seasoned with soy sauce and garlic for tteokgalbi
How to season Korean hamburger patties

Step 2: Mince the Vegetables

Place the green onion and onion in a food chopper and pulse until finely minced. If you don’t have a chopper, hand-chop them as finely as possible.

Step 3: Add the Binder

Add the glutinous rice flour to the seasoned meat and mix well. This is what gives tteokgalbi its signature chewy-tender texture.

Glutinous rice flour being added to seasoned tteokgalbi meat mixture
Glutinous rice flour being added to seasoned tteok galbi meat mixture

Step 4: Shape and Knead (The Most Important Step)

Divide the mixture into 4 equal portions. Here’s where the magic happens: firmly slap each portion back and forth between your palms for about 30 seconds before shaping into round patties.

Hands slapping and kneading tteokgalbi patties to build texture
How to shape Korean beef patties

This slapping releases the myosin proteins in the meat, which bind everything together and create that bouncy, juicy texture Korean hamburger is famous for. Skip this step and your patties will fall apart in the pan. Watch the video in this post to see exactly how it’s done.

Step 5: Prepare the Glaze

In a small bowl, whisk together the water, soy sauce, sugar, and corn syrup. Set aside, you’ll use it at the end.

Sweet soy glaze being poured over pan-fried tteokgalbi
Sweet and savory tteok galbi sauce

Step 6: Sear the Korean Beef Patties

Heat the cooking oil in a pan over medium heat. Add the patties and press down gently with a spatula. Cook for about 3โ€“4 minutes per side until deeply golden brown on both sides.

Four shaped tteokgalbi patties arranged before pan-frying
Korean beef patties searing in a hot pan

Step 7: Steam for Juiciness (The Secret Step)

Here’s the trick most tteok galbi recipes miss: once both sides are browned, add 4 tbsp of water to the pan, cover with a lid, and steam for 4โ€“5 minutes until the meat is fully cooked through.

This two-stage cooking method (sear โ†’ steam) is what keeps the inside unbelievably juicy. Without it, you’ll end up with dry patties no matter how fatty your meat is. This is the single biggest difference between home-cook tteokgalbi and restaurant-quality one.

Tteokgalbi patties steaming under a covered lid with water added
Steam the patties to make them juicy

Step 8: Glaze and Finish

Remove the lid, pour in the prepared glaze, and reduce over medium heat. Keep spooning the sauce over the patties as it thickens into a glossy, caramelized coating.

Sweet soy glaze being poured over pan-fried tteokgalbi
How. to make the glossy tteok galbi sauce

โš ๏ธ Important Tip: Don’t reduce the glaze too far! As the sauce concentrates, it can quickly become too salty. Taste as you go and stop reducing as soon as the glaze is syrupy enough to coat the back of a spoon. If you accidentally over-reduce it and it tastes too salty, just add a splash of water to rescue it.

Tteokgalbi: Authentic Korean Beef Patties (Juicy & Glazed)
Sweet soy glaze being poured over pan-fried Korean beef patties

Pro Tips for the Juiciest Tteok galbi

Use the beef-pork blend.

Don’t skip the slapping.

Medium heat only. High heat burns the sugar in the marinade before the inside is cooked.

Taste your glaze as it reduces. Over-reduced glaze turns unpleasantly salty fast.

Tteokgalbi Korean beef patties with signature sticky soy glaze finish
The secret to this shine is knowing exactly when to stop reducing the sauce.

What to Serve with Tteok galbi

Traditionally, tteok galbi is served as a main side dish (banchan) alongside steamed rice.

  • Steamed short-grain rice
  • Kimchi
  • Fresh lettuce leaves for wrapping (ssam-style)
Korean beef patties brushed with glossy tteokgalbi sauce
One bite and you’ll understand why Korean royalty loved this dish.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Cooked beef patties keep for up to 2 days in an airtight container. To reheat, add a splash of water to a covered pan and warm over low heat for 4 minutes.
  • Freezer (cooked): Wrap individually and freeze up to 1 month. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
  • Freezer (raw): Shape raw patties, place on a parchment-lined tray, freeze until solid (about 2 hours), then transfer to a freezer bag. Cook from frozen, just add 2โ€“3 extra minutes to the steaming step.
Pan-fried tteokgalbi topped with chopped scallions and sesame seeds
How to store the left Korean beef patties

FAQ about Dak Gomtang

Traditional tteokgalbi is made from minced beef short ribs, but modern home recipes use ground beef, ground pork, or a blend of both. The meat is seasoned with soy sauce, garlic, sesame oil, sugar, and mirin, then shaped into patties and glazed.

No, despite the name, there’s no rice cake in tteokgalbi. It’s called “rice cake ribs” because the kneading and shaping process mimics rice cake making, and the final texture is soft and chewy like tteok. Some regional variations do add a small amount of rice cake for extra chewiness, but it’s not part of the traditional recipe. But you can add tteok if you want.

Yes, but choose ground beef with at least 20% fat content. Without pork, you need the extra fat to keep the patties juicy. That said, I strongly recommend the traditional beef-pork blend for the most authentic flavor.

Tteokgalbi tastes sweet, savory, and deeply umami, with a glossy soy-based glaze. The texture is tender and slightly chewy. Imagine a Korean hamburger steak crossed with caramelized sweet soy sauce.

No. Bulgogi is thinly sliced marinated beef, while tteokgalbi is minced meat shaped into patties. They share similar seasonings but have completely different textures and cooking methods.

Absolutely! Tteokgalbi was traditionally grilled over charcoal. Preheat your grill to medium, oil the grates, and cook for 3โ€“4 minutes per side, basting with the glaze during the final minute.

Two likely reasons: you skipped the slapping step in Step 4, or you didn’t add the glutinous rice flour binder. Both are essential for holding the patties together.

Authentic tteokgalbi Korean beef patties with glossy sweet soy glaze
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Tteokgalbi (Korean Beef Patties)

By Blonde Kimchi
Authentic tteokgalbi: Juicy Korean beef patties made with a traditional beef-pork blend and glazed in a sweet soy sauce. These tender Korean hamburger steak patties are ready in just 30 minutes, with a secret steaming step that keeps them unbelievably moist inside.
Prep Time:10 minutes
Cook Time:20 minutes
Total Time:30 minutes
Servings: 2 people
Calories: 860kcal

Ingredients

  • 300 g ground meat beef 60% and pork 40% mix
  • 1/4 stalk green onion
  • 1/4 onion
  • 1 tbsp minced garlic
  • 1 tbsp glutinous rice flour can be substituted with potato starch
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce Korean jin ganjang
  • 1 tbsp oyster sauce
  • 1.5 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp cooking wine mirin
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 10 turns black pepper
  • 4 tbsp cooking oil

Sauce

  • 4 tbsp water
  • 1.5 tbsp soy sauce Korean jin ganjang
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp corn syrup or rice syrup or honey

Instructions

  1. Season the ground meat with soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar, cooking wine, sesame oil, pepper, and minced garlic.
    300 g ground meat, 1 tbsp minced garlic, 2 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp oyster sauce, 1.5 tbsp sugar, 1 tbsp sesame oil, 10 turns black pepper, 1 tbsp cooking wine
    Ground beef and pork blend being seasoned with soy sauce and garlic for tteokgalbi
  2. Put the green onion and onion in a chopper and grind until finely minced. You can also chop them by hand with a knife.
    Add them to the meat.
    ๐Ÿ‘‰ [Check Ninja chopper that I love]
    1/4 stalk green onion, 1/4 onion
    Minced daepa green onion and onion in a food chopper for Korean beef patties
  3. Add the glutinous rice flour to the seasoned ground meat and mix well.
    1 tbsp glutinous rice flour
    Glutinous rice flour being added to seasoned tteokgalbi meat mixture
  4. Divide the meat into 4 equal portions and shape each into a round patty. Be sure to knead and slap the meat firmly between both hands.
    ๐Ÿ’ก This is the key to a truly delicious tteokgalbi. Check out the cooking video in this blog post to see exactly how it's done.
    Hands slapping and kneading tteokgalbi patties to build texture
  5. In a small bowl, combine the soy sauce, sugar, corn syrup, and water to prepare the glaze for later.
    1.5 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp sugar, 1 tbsp corn syrup, 4 tbsp water
    Sweet soy glaze being poured over pan-fried tteokgalbi
  6. Heat oil in a pan and place the tteokgalbi in.
    Cook over medium heat, pressing down gently, and brown both sides.
    4 tbsp cooking oil
    Four shaped tteokgalbi patties arranged before pan-frying
  7. Once both sides are golden brown, add 4 tbsp of water, cover with a lid, and steam until the meat is fully cooked through. This step is what makes the inside juicy and tender.
    ๐Ÿ‘‰ [Check the wok pan to make meat juicy]
    Tteokgalbi patties steaming under a covered lid with water added
  8. Once the meat is fully cooked, pour in the prepared sauce and reduce over medium heat. Keep spooning the sauce over the tteokgalbi as it thickens and glazes the pattiesย  and it's done!
    Be careful not to reduce the sauce too much, as it can become too salty, so taste as you go.
    Tteokgalbi: Authentic Korean Beef Patties (Juicy & Glazed)
  9. Enjoy Ttoekglabi with rice!
    Authentic tteokgalbi Korean beef patties with glossy sweet soy glaze

Notes

Be careful not to reduce the sauce too much, as it can become too salty, so taste as you go.

Nutrition

Calories: 860kcal | Carbohydrates: 39g | Protein: 30g | Fat: 66g | Saturated Fat: 15g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 12g | Monounsaturated Fat: 34g | Trans Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 107mg | Sodium: 2212mg | Potassium: 588mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 27g | Vitamin A: 43IU | Vitamin C: 3mg | Calcium: 73mg | Iron: 4mg
Nutrition info is an estimate provided by an online calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.
๐Ÿ“ธ Tried this recipe? Tag @blondekimchi_ on Instagram or leave a comment below, it means so much to me!

Final Thoughts

If you follow these steps, the beef-pork blend, the slapping, and especially the steaming trick, you’ll have restaurant-quality tteokgalbi at home. It’s the kind of dish that makes people say “wait, YOU made this?”

Made this tteokgalbi recipe? Leave a comment below and let me know how it turned out. If you loved it, don’t forget to pin it for later!

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