
تويجيم
튀김
Batter-fried Korean snacks from squid to sweet potato — the essential companion to tteokbokki at Korean street food stalls.
카테고리
간식
📖 상세 정보
Twigim (튀김) is the Korean term for deep-fried foods — a broad category of street snacks made by coating various ingredients in a thick wheat flour batter and frying them in hot oil until golden, puffy, and crisp. Unlike Japanese tempura, from which it partially derives, Korean twigim tends to have a thicker, more substantial batter coating and a slightly chewier texture. The result is a heartier, more filling snack with a pronounced crunch. The range of ingredients used for twigim is wide: sweet potato (고구마튀김, goguma twigim) produces a sweet, fluffy interior; squid (오징어튀김, ojingeo twigim) offers a chewy seafood core; and kimari (김말이튀김), perhaps the most distinctly Korean of all twigim varieties, is a roll of glass noodles (dangmyeon) wrapped in dried seaweed (gim) and fried — the noodles inside become sticky and translucent while the seaweed wrapper crisps up around them. All twigim is best eaten immediately from the fryer. The batter softens rapidly as it cools and absorbs the steam from the hot interior, making timing critical. The vendors at market stalls are typically expert at pacing production to ensure maximum freshness.
💡 여행자 팁
Always eat twigim immediately — ask the vendor to fry fresh if items look like they have been sitting for a while.
Dip in the accompanying soy-based sauce for a savory contrast, or eat plain to appreciate the batter's own seasoning.
Goguma (sweet potato) twigim is the best starting point for anyone unfamiliar with Korean fried snacks — the sweetness is approachable and the texture is reliably good.
한국 여행에서 직접 맛보기
튀김 — 어디서 먹을 수 있는지 알아보세요
هل وجدت معلومات غير صحيحة أو مفقودة؟