Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (2024)

This Korean mugwort greens snack recipe is delicious and healthy. These greens are known as ssuk (쑥, pronounced “sook”), or “mugwort” in English. It is a great dessert or snack recipe and you only need to have five total ingredients to make this.

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Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (1)

These wild greens grow all over South Korea in the Spring. Many years ago it was solely a wild green, but now it is farmed in gardens and has a wider availability. This green has a strong smell, herbal fragrance, and is slightly bitter to the taste when eaten raw. However, adding the sugar and cooking the mugwort (ssuk) greens in this recipe helps to cut down and balance out the bitterness.

Most Koreans know about this dish. In saying this, this particular dish is mostly found in household kitchens. You probably won’t see this dish in many, if any, restaurants. If you do find this in a restaurant, let us know where you found it in the comments.

Ingredients Needed For This Recipe

You only need a total of five ingredients to make this recipe. Easy and simple!

  • ½ lb mugwort greens (ssuk)
  • 2 Tbsp white flour
  • 1 Tbsp rice flour
    Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (2)
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 Tbsp sugar (*if Vegan/Vegetarian, use your choice of compliant sugar)

Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (3)

Freshly picked wild mugwort greens (ssuk)

How to Make Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk)

This recipe is so easy. Once you have all the ingredients, it takes approximately 15 minutes from start to finish to have a yummy Korean snack or dessert ready to eat.

  1. First, you will want to clean the greens really well. It’s recommended to rinse/drain the greens about 5-6 times until the water runs clear. Drain well. Set aside.
  2. Mix the white flour, rice flour, salt, and sugar together well in a clean medium-sized bowl.
  3. Gently add the greens into the bowl with the flour mixture. Carefully coat the greens with the flour mixture.
  4. Prepare a steaming pan on medium-high heat. Put a cloth in the steamer basket – such as a clean flour sack towel.
  5. After the steamer is ready and has started steaming, turn the heat to medium. Place the greens in the covered steamer basket and spread it out evenly. Steam for about 5-6 minutes.
  6. Remove the greens from the steamer to a plate to allow it to cool. Wait until the greens have cooled down and then serve. Enjoy!

We hope you enjoy our Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) recipe!

Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (4)

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Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (5)

Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort (Ssuk)

Yield: 4

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 6 minutes

Total Time: 11 minutes

This Korean mugwort greens snack recipe is delicious and healthy. It is a great dessert or snack recipe and you only need to have five total ingredients to make this.

Ingredients

  • ½ lb mugwort greens (ssuk)
  • 2 Tbsp white flour
  • 1 Tbsp rice flour
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 Tbsp sugar (*if Vegan/Vegetarian, use your choice of compliant sugar)

Instructions

  1. First, you will want to clean the greens really well. It’s recommended to rinse/drain the greens about 5-6 times until the water runs clear. Drain well. Set aside.
  2. Mix the white flour, rice flour, salt, and sugar together well in a clean medium-sized bowl.
  3. Gently add the greens into the bowl with the flour mixture. Carefully coat the greens with the flour mixture.
  4. Prepare a steaming pan on medium-high heat. Put a cloth in the steamer basket - such as a clean flour sack towel.
  5. After the steamer is ready and has started steaming, turn the heat to medium. Place the greens in the covered steamer basket and spread it out evenly. Steam for about 5-6 minutes.
  6. Remove the greens from the steamer to a plate to allow it to cool. Wait until the greens have cooled down and then serve. Enjoy!

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Korean Snack Steamed Mugwort Greens (Ssuk) – Asian Recipes At Home (2024)

FAQs

What do Koreans use mugwort for? ›

Medicinal use

Korean mugwort is rich in vitamin A, vitamin C, and minerals. In the past, mugwort tea was believed to help prevent and treat the common cold, reducing fever and inflammation, relieving pain, and lowering blood pressure.

What is the Korean word for mugwort? ›

Mugwort, referred to as ssuk (쑥) in Korean, is widely used in Korean cuisine as well as in traditional medicine (hanyak).

Who should not use mugwort? ›

Risks of mugwort can be mild to severe. People who are pregnant, have diabetes, or are allergic to compounds in the plant should not use it. While there are some studies on mugwort, the overall research on the plant's long-term benefits and risks is limited.

What does mugwort do to your hormones? ›

Mugwort is also associated with menstruation. It increases circulation to warm up the uterus and pelvic region, move the blood, remove stagnant blood (the source of cramps, stiffness and pain) and regulate hormone levels.

Do Koreans eat mugwort? ›

Ssuk is one of the most widely-used wild vegetables in Korean cuisine, and it has many medicinal uses as well. Young, tender mugwort leaves picked in the early spring are perfect time for mugwort soup!

What is the English name for mugwort? ›

It is one of several species in the genus Artemisia commonly known as mugwort, although Artemisia vulgaris is the species most often called mugwort. It is also occasionally known as riverside wormwood, felon herb, chrysanthemum weed, wild wormwood, old Uncle Henry, sailor's tobacco, naughty man, old man, or St.

Can you eat mugwort? ›

Food. In addition to its potential medicinal properties, people also use mugwort as a culinary herb in Asian cooking. The root is sweet and pungent, and the herb is aromatic and bitter in nature. Known as “ssuk,” mugwort suits fatty fish, meat, and poultry, and some people say that it helps with their digestion.

What is mugwort used for in skincare? ›

It has been used in conventional skincare to calm irritated skin, lessen redness, and treat disorders like eczema, psoriasis, and bug bites. To treat these problems, mugwort-infused medicines or poultices were frequently applied topically. Wound Healing: In the past, mugwort was used to treat wounds.

What are the culinary uses of mugwort? ›

As a culinary herb, Mugwort has an aroma not dissimilar to sage or rosemary, and is used as a flavouring herb for meat and fish. It's leaves can also be cooked to add fragrant notes to to other dishes.

What cultures use mugwort? ›

In contemporary culture mugwort is commonly found in foods and drinks, and remains a common ingredient in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean traditional medicine, where the leaves are used directly as a food, or to obtain oil extracts, tinctures, or burned in what is called moxibustion.

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