K FOOD: Secrets of Korean Flavors Part 2
Bland. Wrapping. Mixing

AUTHOR : A House Full of Happiness Editorial Department
ISBN : 9781635190335
PUBLISHER : 공앤박
PUBLICATION DATE : September 30 ,2021,
SPINE SIZE : 0 inches
PAGES : 215
SIZE : 7.5 * 9.7 inches
WEIGHT : 0 pounds
CATON QTY : 30
PRICE : $39.9
〈 K FOOD: Secrets of Korean Flavors: Part 2, Bland, Wrapping, Mixing 〉
The basic composition of Korean food is rice, to the extent that all food except rice is considered a side dish to accompany rice. The bland and mild rice differentiates the taste of all kinds of side dishes and fuses them simultaneously. We explored the secrets of fusion culture, such as 'ssambap' and 'gimbap,' where you put together all kinds of ingredients and put them in your mouth, and 'bibimbap,' which is eaten by mixing various ingredients. It also includes recipes of everyday dishes that are eaten wrapped and mixed.


A House Full of Happiness Editorial Department

Founded in 1987, the monthly magazine features lifestyle and cultural topics that convey the importance of the ‘house’, which is a vessel for life, and the ‘family’ living in it. Focusing on interiors and architecture, it spreads new information and suggestions on cuisine, fashion, culture, and art to design and enrich everyday life. In addition to the publication of monthly magazines, it has published books that spread the joy of seeing and reading, such as “Monk Seonjae's Temple Food”, “Designing My Small House”, “Hanok, View”, “Slow Farmers,” and “Korean Food Master.”

〈 K FOOD: Secrets of Korean Flavors: Part 2, Bland, Wrapping, Mixing 〉
Prologue
Bland Wrapping and Mixing
The Fusion Culture Created by Rice
Bland
The Korean Way of Dining
Why Have Koreans Made Rice Their Staple Food?
Future of the 0.001%: Korea’s Native Rice
An Introduction to Korea’s Most Prominent Native Rice Cultivars
Comparing the Tastes of Korean Rice Cultivars
The Infinite Transformations of Ssal and Bap in the Korean Language
Tools to Make Rice: From Cast-Iron Cauldrons to Pressure Cookers
Secrets of Instant Rice
Why Did Koreans Drink Sungnyung After Meals?
Juk: A Food That Came Before Cooked Rice
Wrapping Everything
Korean Ssambap: Fortune and Health in a Wrap
How Quick Meals in the Fields Became Ssambap
Common Wrapping Leaves in Korea
Gujeolpan: Ssam, Elevated
What’s in a Royal Lettuce Ssam?
When Did Koreans Start Eating Gimbap?
Korea’s Mandu vs. China’s Dumplings
The Secrets of Frozen Mandu
Mixing Cooked Rice
Bibimbap: A Commonwealth of Flavors
Haeju Bibimbap
Jinju Bibimbap
Tongyeong Bibimbap
Andong Bibimbap
Jeonju Bibimbap
Sesame Oil and Perilla Oil: The Finishing Touches of Korean Dishes
Korea’s Top Bibimbap Restaurants
Everyday Korean Dishes Made by Mixing and Wrapping