“K-Food” has been taking the world by storm with its superb taste and benefits to health. The World Health Organization (WHO) described hansik as a superb culinary model with nutritional balance, with many researchers reporting that hansik prevents obesity and cancer.
Doenjang, Ganjang, and Gochujang
Doenjang (soybean paste), ganjang (soy sauce), and gochujang (red chili paste) are three of the most basic condiments and the most widely enjoyed fermented foods in Korea. Doenjang and ganjang are made from meju, which refers to soybeans boiled, pounded into paste, and formed into brick-shaped lumps. These lumps are dried and fermented, and then kept in large clay pots with salt water for around two to three months. The resulting solids are made into doenjang, and the liquid is used as ganjang. These sauces offer a uniquely savory and rich salty taste.
Gochujang is a traditional Korean food made by fermenting a mixture of soybean malt, starch (powdered rice, barley, etc.), and adding chili pepper powder and meju powder. Being lovers of spicy foods, Koreans use gochujang in a wide variety of dishes.
Kimchi
Kimchi is a staple side dish that a majority of Koreans can’t go without. To them, no meal is complete without kimchi. Kimchi is commonly made by fermenting a mixture of salted kimchi cabbage, radish, and paste made of red chili powder, garlic, spring onion, salted fish sauce, and other ingredients. Different regions (and different houses, for that matter) use different ingredients and recipes, resulting in more than a hundred major variations. In recent years, more and more Koreans have started eating store-bought kimchi rather than making their own.
Made with more than 15 ingredients, kimchi is a great source of nutrients such as vitamins A and C, and the fermentation process creates large amounts of lactic acid bacteria. These nutritional benefits have boosted kimchi’s popularity as an antioxidation and weight-control option across the world, and a large body of research supports its effectiveness in preventing cancers, hypertension, diabetes, atopic dermatitis, and other diseases.
Traditionally, Korean families or villages would get together once a year for “kimjang,” which means a gathering held in late autumn specifically for making a vast amount of kimchi. The kimchi made during these gatherings, called “kimjang kimchi,” would sustain the family or the village throughout the coming winter. The “Kimjang, making and sharing kimch” was inscribed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2013.
Bibimbap
Bibimbap is a Korean rice dish topped with an assortment of fresh and seasonal vegetables, fried eggs, minced beef, and other ingredients. Along with kimchi and bulgogi, it is one of the three most popular Korean foods outside of Korea. There are countless variations of bibimbap depending on what ingredients are added to the mix. People outside of Korea have created localized versions of bibimbap by adding their own flavors. Every October, a bibimbap-themed festival is held in Jeonju, a UNESCO-designated Creative City of Gastronomy.
Bulgogi
Bulgogi, which literally means “fire meat,” refers to a traditional Korean dish made by grilling thin meat slices marinated with various condiments such as soy sauce and pear juice. Its rich and pleasantly salty flavor has made it one of the most popular Korean foods among foreigners. Bulgogi has been wildly featured in cross-over foods as well, such as bulgogi hamburgers and pizzas.
Japchae
Japchae is made by stir-frying boiled glass noodles mixed with spinach, onions, beef, and soybean sauce. It is characterized by the harmony of the chewy texture of glass noodles and the flavor of various ingredients, and constitutes an essential part of holiday dinners or banquets in Korea.
Rice Cake
Korean rice cake, or tteok, refers to sticky cakes made by kneading powdered sweet rice or glutinous rice and steaming the dough with other ingredients such as beans or red beans. Both chewy and sweet, tteok is one of the most popular treats in Korea.
Korean people serve different varieties of traditional rice cakes on special occasions. For example, they celebrate the Lunar New Year’s Day with tteokguk (sliced rice cake soup) made of broth and slices of white rice cake called garaetteok. Eating a bowl of tteokguk symbolizes gaining a year’s age. Chuseok is celebrated with songpyeon, bite-sized half-moon-shaped rice cakes stuffed with honey, chestnut, soybean, or sesame mixture, and baekseolgi (snow white rice cake) is served on the first birthday of a baby as a symbol of longevity.
Liquor
A wide variety of liquors have been developed across different parts and families of Korea. Currently, some 300 traditional liquors have survived, including Munbaeju (pear-flavored liquor) and Songjeolju (pine knot liquor) in Seoul; Sanseong Soju (distilled liquor) in Gwangju, Gyeonggi-do; Hongju (red liquor) and Leegangju (distilled liquor) in Jeolla-do; Sogokju (rice wine) and Insamju (ginseng liquor) in Chungcheongdo; Kyodong Beopju (rice liquor) and Andong Soju (distilled liquor) in Gyeongsang-do; and Okseonju (distilled liquor) in Gangwon-do.
Makgeolli (unrefined rice wine) is one of the most popular and affordable traditional alcoholic beverages in Korea. It is made by fermenting a mixture of rice and malt along with various other ingredients. It used to be considered a beverage mainly enjoyed by older generations. However, the beverage has been all the rage among Koreans in their 20s and 30s, with makgeolli ice cream, coffee, and other flavors spreading across convenience stores around the country. It is also highly popular among international tourists visiting Korea.
Soju is a distilled liquor made by boiling alcoholic beverages made with grains or sweet potatoes. This colorless liquor has a significantly higher alcohol content than makgeolli. Soju was traditionally considered a luxury. However, in the mid-20th century, a soju made with diluted ethanol emerged as a cheap, people-friendly alternative.