Memil-muk
| Alternative names | Buckwheat jelly | 
|---|---|
| Type | Muk | 
| Place of origin | Korea | 
| Associated cuisine | Korean cuisine | 
| Main ingredients | Buckwheat starch | 
| Korean name | |
| Hangul | 메밀묵 | 
| RR | memilmuk | 
| MR | memilmuk | 
| IPA | [me.mil.muk̚] | 
Memil-muk (Korean: 메밀묵) or buckwheat jelly is a light gray-brown muk (jelly) made from buckwheat starch. It is commonly served as banchan (a side dish accompanying rice) as well as anju (food accompanying alcoholic drinks).
In post-war Korea, from the mid to late-20th century, memil-muk along with chapssal-tteok (glutinous rice cakes) was widely served as yasik (late-night snack) by street vendors. In modern times, it is popular as a diet food.
Along with other buckwheat dishes, it is a local specialty of Gangwon Province, especially Bongpyeong-myeon in Pyeongchang County.