Korean Butter Balls

Servings: 10 Total Time: 50 mins Difficulty: Easy
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I keep Korean Butter Balls in my notes because it solves a very specific craving: familiar food that still tastes like I cooked it myself. The recipe is simple on paper, but the little choices matter — how firmly I mix, when I stop cooking, and whether I give it a minute to settle before serving.

The first time I made it, I treated the timing too casually and learned quickly that recipe reward attention. Now I set out every ingredient before I begin, keep the heat steady, and taste or check texture at the same points every time. That routine makes the recipe feel relaxed instead of rushed.

I cook it in a practical home-kitchen rhythm, with the small warnings I wish every recipe card included.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It gives me the comfort of recipe without a fussy list of steps.
  • Most of the work is measuring, mixing, and paying attention to texture.
  • The ingredients are easy to prep before heat is involved, which keeps the kitchen calmer.
  • It scales well for family meals, snacks, or leftovers when I do not want to cook twice.
  • The flavors are familiar enough for picky eaters but still worth serving to guests.
  • I can tell when it is ready by sight and smell, not only by the timer.

What I use and why it matters

  • 500 gram all-purpose flour/Bread flour.
  • 1 cup Brown sugar.
  • 500 ml water.
  • 8 tablespoon olive oil or vegetable oil.
  • 1 cup buttermilk or whole milk.
  • 2/3 tablespoon baking powder.
  • neutral high-heat cooking oil.
  • 2/3 tablespoon vanilla extract.
  • Salt.I treat it as the seasoning backbone, and I mix it evenly so one bite is not louder than the next.

How I make it

Step 1 — Gather the required ingredients and measure

I gather the required ingredients and measure them accordingly.

Step 2 — In bowl mix together the all-purpose

In a bowl, I mix together the all-purpose flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.

Step 3 — Create separate mixture with water vegetable

I create a separate mixture with water, vegetable oil, milk, and vanilla extract.

Step 4 — Pour the liquid ingredients into

I pour the liquid ingredients into the bowl with dry ones and combine until a soft dough forms.

Step 5 — Roll the dough into 1-inch balls

I roll the dough into 1-inch balls and place them on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet.

Step 6 — Heat oil in pan and gently

I heat oil in a pan and gently add the balls, frying over medium heat until golden brown.

Step 7 — Serve the Korean Butter Balls

I serve the Korean Butter Balls with powdered sugar and honey.

The texture and timing checks I trust

I pay close attention to how the dough feels in my hands. It should be workable, not stiff and not gluey. If I have to add a touch of flour or water, I do it slowly, because dough remembers every over-correction.

If something looks ready early, I check it. If it looks pale or watery at the listed time, I give it a few more minutes and stay nearby. That kind of small adjustment is normal home cooking, not a mistake.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Read the recipe once first.I do this with recipe because the quiet step is usually the one that decides the texture.
  • Prep before heat.Once the pan or oven is ready, I want the ingredients measured and close by.
  • Do not chase a dry center too far.Baked dough keeps setting after it leaves the oven, so I pull it when it looks just done.
  • Rest when the recipe says rest.Five minutes can be the difference between clean slices and a messy plate.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Garlic butter finish:I brush the hot pieces with butter, garlic, and parsley instead of leaving them plain.
  • Cheese tucked in:I add a small cube of mozzarella only when the dough is sturdy enough to seal well.
  • Sesame top:I swap part of the coarse salt for sesame seeds when I want a nuttier bite.
  • Sweet side:I dust a few pieces with cinnamon sugar for the people who always ask for dessert first.
  • Smaller pieces:I shape them half-size for parties and start checking a few minutes earlier.

How I store and reheat it

I cool the recipe completely before covering them. Room temperature works for a day or two for most baked batches; longer storage goes in the refrigerator or freezer. To refresh, I warm gently until the center is soft again and the edges smell toasty.

What I serve with it

I put Korean Butter Balls out while warm with one salty dip and one creamy dip. Mustard, marinara, honey butter, or a simple yogurt sauce all work depending on whether the batch leans savory or sweet.

Frequently asked questions

Can I make Korean Butter Balls ahead?

Yes. I usually make the components ahead and keep them covered, then finish or rewarm close to serving. For the best texture, I keep crisp toppings and fresh herbs separate until the end.

What should I do if it tastes flat?

I start with a small pinch of salt, then add acid if the recipe includes lemon, lime, or vinegar. I taste after each addition because it is easier to add more than to fix too much.

Can I double the recipe?

Usually yes, as long as I use a wider pan or work in batches. Crowding traps steam, so doubled savory recipes often brown better in two rounds.

How do I know when it is done?

I use the listed timing as my first guide, then check the visual signs: golden edges for baked items, a steady simmer for stews, and firm, opaque protein for meat or seafood.

Can I change the seasoning?

Yes, but I change one thing at a time. That way I can tell whether the salt, heat, herb, or acid is doing the work.

If you make Korean Butter Balls, leave a comment with the change you tried or the part that surprised you. I read those notes because they often become my next test batch.

Korean Butter Balls

Prep Time 30 mins Cook Time 20 mins Total Time 50 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 10 Calories: 84 kcal Dietary:
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Description

Korean Butter Balls is the way I make a reliable batch of recipe at home. I keep the measurements steady, add the texture checks I use in my own kitchen, and include 30 minutes prep, 20 minutes cook plus storage notes.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Gather the required ingredients and measure them accordingly.
  2. In a bowl, mix together the all-purpose flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
  3. Create a separate mixture with water, vegetable oil, milk, and vanilla extract.
  4. Pour the liquid ingredients into the bowl with dry ones and combine until a soft dough forms.
  5. Roll the dough into 1-inch balls and place them on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet.
  6. Heat oil in a pan and gently add the balls, frying over medium heat until golden brown.
  7. Serve the Korean Butter Balls with powdered sugar and honey.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 10


Amount Per Serving
Calories 84kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 111mg5%
Potassium 30mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 21g8%
Sugars 21g

Calcium 76 mg
Iron 0.3 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Read the recipe once first. I do this with recipe because the quiet step is usually the one that decides the texture.

Prep before heat. Once the pan or oven is ready, I want the ingredients measured and close by.

Do not chase a dry center too far. Baked dough keeps setting after it leaves the oven, so I pull it when it looks just done.

Rest when the recipe says rest. Five minutes can be the difference between clean slices and a messy plate.

Keywords: korean butter balls, recipe, homemade recipe, all-purpose flourbread flour, brown sugar, water, olive oil or vegetable oil, buttermilk or whole milk

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make Korean Butter Balls ahead?

Yes. I usually make the components ahead and keep them covered, then finish or rewarm close to serving. For the best texture, I keep crisp toppings and fresh herbs separate until the end.

What should I do if it tastes flat?

I start with a small pinch of salt, then add acid if the recipe includes lemon, lime, or vinegar. I taste after each addition because it is easier to add more than to fix too much.

Can I double the recipe?

Usually yes, as long as I use a wider pan or work in batches. Crowding traps steam, so doubled savory recipes often brown better in two rounds.

How do I know when it is done?

I use the listed timing as my first guide, then check the visual signs: golden edges for baked items, a steady simmer for stews, and firm, opaque protein for meat or seafood.

Can I change the seasoning?

Yes, but I change one thing at a time. That way I can tell whether the salt, heat, herb, or acid is doing the work.

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