STEP 1/15
Use commercial red bean paste or soak half a cup (100g) of bean mugs for about 12 hours
*You can use red beans or there's white seaweed, so I chose that one
*If you put it in the refrigerator rather than at room temperature while it's soaked, it doesn't smell like beans
STEP 2/15
Put water to level 2 in the soaked beans and cook
STEP 3/15
Take out the beans and grind them. I roughly ground it because I wanted the grain feeling. If you want a soft sediment, grind it finely
STEP 4/15
Put the ground beans in a rice cooker, add 10T of sugar, 2T of water, and steam them for 10 minutes
STEP 5/15
Put 10g of butter and 1T of sugar in a rice cooker and melt it for 9 minutes
STEP 6/15
Take out the hot pot, pour 55g of melted butter and sugar-cold milk, lower the temperature, add 1t of dry yeast, 1t of baking powder, and wait a little bit.
*The yeast is fermented well when the temperature is warm and not hot
STEP 7/15
As the yeast blows and the baking powder unravels, small bubbles form
STEP 8/15
Add 100g of flour and 1/4t of salt and knead
STEP 9/15
Place kneaded dough in a rice cooker with remaining heat and let ripen for about an hour with the lid closed. *The rice cooker is turned off
STEP 10/15
Take it out, rub it, remove the gas from the batter, spread it out, put 2T of sediment in it, and close it
STEP 11/15
Place in a rice cooker, cover and ferment for 15 minutes
*The rice cooker is turned off
STEP 12/15
Put a steamer in the rice cooker and pour water so that it doesn't sink
STEP 13/15
Cut the paper foil and place it on the steamer, place the hoppang on top and cook for 15 minutes
*Put the steamed bread on the paper foil to make the bottom less moist
STEP 14/15
a ready appearance
STEP 15/15
Take it out and enjoy it. It's enough for one person. You can add more ingredients and make steamed buns for 2 or 3 servings