Dubai chewy cookie frenzy in South Korea sends pistachio prices soaring threefold

A 1kg bag of unshelled pistachios has jumped from 20,000 won ($13.61) in early December to roughly 80,000 won ($54.32) as of Thursday.

Choi Jae-hee

Choi Jae-hee

The Korea Herald

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Screenshots of TikTok videos show recipes using Orion’s Choco Pie to create a dessert with a flavor similar to Dubai chewy cookies. SCREENSHOTS FROM TIKTOK/THE KOREA HERALD

January 16, 2026

SEOUL – The ongoing craze for Dubai chewy cookies, known in Korea as “dujjonku,” has driven up prices of the key ingredients, squeezing retailers and ordinary consumers alike.

“Dujjonku” is made by combining pistachio cream and kadaif, a threadlike Middle Eastern pastry made from flour, cornstarch and salt. The mixture is then shaped into rounds and wrapped in melted marshmallow blended with cocoa powder. Unlike typical cookies, it has a dense, chewy texture rather than a crisp or crumbly bite.

According to Fallcent, a mobile app that tracks price changes on South Korea’s largest e-commerce platform, Coupang, some pistachio products have seen their prices more than triple in recent months.

Dubai chewy cookie frenzy in South Korea sends pistachio prices soaring threefold

A Dubai chewy cookie priced at 12,000 won per piece. SCREENSHOT FROM X/THE KOREA HERALD

A bag of unshelled pistachios weighing 1 kilogram, which cost around 20,000 won ($13.61) in early December last year, had climbed to roughly 80,000 won as of Thursday. The price of 500 grams of kadaif likewise nearly doubled over the same period, rising to around 30,000 won.

This has prompted retailers and small business owners to raise their product prices as well.

The price of a single piece of dujjonku typically ranges from 4,000 won to 10,000 won, but has recently moved beyond that range. On one food delivery app, the dessert is currently listed at 12,000 won per piece.

“Importers keep raising kataifi prices. I’m selling each piece for 6,500 won right now, but I’ll probably have to charge more,” one user wrote on Apnikka Sajangida, one of Korea’s largest online communities for self-employed business owners.

Some dujjonku enthusiasts have turned to home baking using alternative ingredients amid soaring prices.

A YouTube video demonstrating how to make dujjonku using soybean noodles instead of kadaif has racked up more than 4 million views. The video says the noodles, when broken into small pieces and cooked in butter, deliver a similar texture and nutty flavor, while costing under 3,000 won for a 500 gram package.

Others have replaced the original ingredients with widely available snacks.

On TikTok, many users have been sharing posts featuring Orion’s iconic Choco Pie, a snack made of chocolate cake and marshmallow that many say delivers a flavor and texture similar to dujjonku. In the videos, the snack is sliced open, spread with pistachio cream, and frozen before being eaten.

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