Hyunwoo Cho

Hyunwoo Cho

With over 10 years of experience in the Hallyu industry, Hyunwoo has dedicated his career to connecting Korean culture with the world. As the founder of Daebak, he works closely with Korean brands and stays ahead of the latest trends to deliver an authentic taste of Korea to fans globally.

A wooden Korean bowl piled with golden yakgwa honey pastries dusted with sesame, a traditional fall Korean snack

5 Fall-Themed Korean Snacks to Try This Autumn Season

Hyunwoo Cho

Table of Contents

When the air in Seoul turns crisp and the gingko trees along the streets glow yellow, Korean kitchens and convenience stores shift into harvest mode. Sweet potatoes, persimmons, chestnuts, and honey take over the snack aisle, and traditional treats that grandmothers once tucked into lunchboxes show up everywhere from boutique bakeries to airport gift shops. Here are five fall-themed Korean snacks that taste like autumn in Korea, from centuries-old hangwa cookies to modern grocery store favorites.

A wooden Korean bowl piled with golden yakgwa honey pastries dusted with sesame, a traditional fall Korean snack
Yakgwa, deep-fried honey pastries dusted with sesame, are a classic Korean autumn treat. | Source: Kimchimari

1. Yakgwa (약과), Korea's Honey-Soaked Autumn Cookie

Yakgwa is the headlining sweet of any Korean fall holiday. The flower-shaped pastry, made from wheat flour kneaded with sesame oil and rice wine, is fried low and slow, then soaked in a ginger-honey syrup called jipcheong until it turns sticky-glossy and chewy at the center. The name literally means "medicinal confection," because honey was once treated like medicine in pre-modern Korea, and yakgwa was reserved for jesa ancestral rites and Chuseok tables. After years of being seen as a snack for grandmothers, yakgwa has roared back as the trendiest dessert in Seoul, fueling "yaketing" lines at Gwangjang Market and cream-cheese-filled yakgwa cookies in every neighborhood cafe.

Colorful Korean songpyeon rice cakes in white, green, pink, and yellow arranged on a plate for Chuseok
Songpyeon, the half-moon rice cakes Koreans steam over pine needles for the Chuseok harvest festival. | Source: Korean Bapsang

2. Songpyeon (송편), the Half-Moon Rice Cake of Chuseok

If yakgwa is the celebrity of the season, songpyeon is the soul of it. These delicate half-moon tteok are made by kneading short-grain rice flour with hot water, tinting it with mugwort, kabocha pumpkin, beet juice, or blueberry, and folding each piece around a sweet filling of toasted sesame seeds, chestnuts, or sweetened mung beans. The cakes are then steamed on a bed of fresh pine needles, which perfume them with a subtle forest aroma. Songpyeon is the centerpiece of Chuseok, Korea's autumn harvest festival on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, and an old saying claims that whoever shapes the prettiest songpyeon will have a beautiful daughter.

A bag of Calbee Honey Butter Potato Chips on a white background, a Korean autumn snack favorite
Calbee Honey Butter Chips, the sweet-salty potato chip that lines convenience store shelves every fall. | Source: Bokksu Market

3. Honey Butter Chips and Goguma Snacks

No Korean fall is complete without honey-and-sweet-potato flavors invading the snack aisle. Honey Butter Chips, launched by Haitai in 2014 and sold today in U.S. Asian grocers and through partners like Bokksu Market and Calbee, set off a national craze with its sweet-and-salty glaze of butter and acacia honey. Around the same time of year, sweet potato (goguma) takes over: goguma-mat chips, baked goguma sticks, Pepero Crunchy with sweet potato cream, and roadside drum-can roasted gungoguma sold by street vendors when temperatures drop. Together they capture autumn's signature flavor profile, sweet, buttery, and just a little nutty.

Sliced gotgam dried persimmon walnut rolls on a plate, a traditional Korean autumn snack
Gotgam-hodu-mari, dried persimmon walnut rolls sliced into bite-sized pieces for tea. | Source: KOREA Magazine (KOCIS)

4. Gotgam (곶감), Sun-Dried Persimmons

Walk through any Korean countryside village in October and you will see strings of bright orange persimmons hanging under the eaves, slowly dehydrating in the cool autumn wind. After about a month they become gotgam, dried persimmons coated in a natural white frost of sugar that rises to the surface as the moisture evaporates. The taste is honeyed, chewy, and almost jelly-like, somewhere between a date and a fig. Koreans eat gotgam straight, stuff them with chestnut and walnut filling to make gotgam-danji, or roll flattened persimmons around walnuts to create gotgam-hodu-mari, a chewy-crunchy bite served alongside green tea. Gotgam is also a key ingredient in sujeonggwa, the chilled cinnamon-ginger punch that closes a traditional Korean meal.

Korean Gaeseong juak rice cakes topped with jujube, pumpkin seeds, and dried fruit, a traditional autumn snack
Gaeseong juak, glossy fried rice cakes topped with jujube, pumpkin seeds, and seasonal fruit. | Source: Korea Tourism Organization (VisitKorea)

5. Gaeseong Juak (개성주악), the Pumpkin-Seed-Topped Autumn Sweet

Originating from Gaeseong, the ancient Goryeo capital, Gaeseong juak is the rising star of the "halmae-nial" (granny chic) dessert wave that took over Seoul a few years ago. Sweet rice flour is mixed with makgeolli rice wine, shaped into small discs with a thumb dimple in the center, deep-fried until golden, then dunked in cinnamon malt syrup. The dimple is finished with autumn garnishes such as roasted pumpkin seeds, jujube, dried persimmon, or chestnut, giving it a persimmon-like silhouette and an instantly photogenic look. Younger cafes in Seoul now top juak with cream cheese, fresh apple compote, or even chocolate, but the classic version remains a perfect representation of Korean fall flavors in one bite.

How to Try Fall-Themed Korean Snacks at Home

You do not need to fly to Seoul to taste autumn the Korean way. H Mart, Bokksu Market, Weee, and Bokksu's curated subscription boxes all stock yakgwa, dried persimmon, sweet-potato snacks, and honey butter chips year-round. If you are feeling adventurous, songpyeon and gotgam-hodu-mari are surprisingly home-cook-friendly with recipes from Maangchi, Korean Bapsang, and Kimchimari. Pair them with a warm cup of sujeonggwa or barley tea on a chilly afternoon, and you will understand why Koreans say autumn is the most delicious season of the year.

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