• Title/Summary/Keyword: historical Korean food

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Dietary Life Status of Korean Prisoners' and the Background during the Period of Japanese Ruling (일제하(日帝下)(1920년대) 조선인수형인(朝鮮人受刑人)의 식생활상황(食生活狀況)과 그 배경(背景))

  • Kim, Chon-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.56-68
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    • 2003
  • The objects of this study are to find out (1) real situation of the food supply in prison under Imperial Government of Japan more cleary (historical meaning) and (2) which might help in understanding wrong present food consumption patterns in Korea which causes environmental as well as health problems. It is generally known that the length of the Japanese occupation for Korea is 36 years. However, it is concluded in this study that it was longer (70 years ; from 1875 to 1945 from when Japanese Army attacked and occupied Yungjongdo and Kanghwado island to e time when they were defeated on World War II.) Korea was annexed by Japan in 1910 then the Imperial Government of Japan dismissed the Korea Army, controlled the Office of Justice and the management of prison by force. Since then about 50% of all land was fell into Japanese Government ownership and 80% of Korean farmers became as tenant. After this change, Korea farmers were forced to pay extremely high rent (up to 80% of its harvest). Forced immigration, low price procurement of grain by Japanese government up to more than 30%of their production, was practiced. Accordingly, the food situation of Korean farmers became miserable, which may caused more violations of Imperial Japanese Law. Malnutrition, epidemic diseases, mortality rate of infants soared and average life expectancy shortened to 20-30 years old. This was the period of World Economic Crises and Food Crises in Japan. It was said then that if one Japanese comes to Korea then 200 Koreans will starved to death. Meanwhile, Proconsul Bureau of Chosun requested to the Department of Medicine, the Imperial University of Kyungsung to survey food supply situation of Koreans in prison throughout Korea. Objectives of the survey then was not only to find out scientifically whether it is agreeable in maintaining prisoner's health and also find out the possibility to save food during food crisis. Survey was started from 1923 and ended in 1945, and it focussed on prisoners in the Seodaemoon Prison. This report is the outcome of the first survey. They concluded that the food supplied was nutritionally (had) no problem, in compare with those of workers in the factory, students in the dormitory in Japan and with those of prisoners in Taiwan, France and Germany. Amount of grain supplied were different according to their work lord and was divided into 9 different levels. Total grain was consisted of 50% millet, 30% soybean and 20% indica rice(variety). However, there were no difference in the amount of supply of side dishes between work groups. For the highest working group, 3280g of boiled grain per day was supplied to make stomach full but as a side dishes, salty fermented bean paste, fermented fish and salty soups, etc. was supplied. Deficiency of animal protein were observed, however, high intake of soybean may possibly caused animal protein deficiency problem. On the contrary, the intake of water soluble vitamins were insufficient but the level of calcium and iron intake seems to be sufficient, however, imbalance of intake of nutrition may caused low absorbtion rate which might caused malnutrition. High intake of dietary fiber and low intake of cholesterol may possibly prohibited them from so called modem disease but may caused the defect in disease resistancy againist epidemics and other traditional disease. Over intake of salt(20-30g per day) was observed. Surveyors who attended in this survey, mentioned that the amount of food intake may nutritionally be sufficient enough but the quality of food(and possibly, the taste of food) were like that of animal feed. For the officials who received this report might consider that considering the war situation and food crisis, the supply situation of food in the prison may considered to be good enough(because they are not starving). But as a Korean who studied this report, one feel extremely pity about those situation because (situation of) those period were very harsh under the Imperial Law and keeping the Law by Koreans were almost impossible, therefore, about one third adult violated the Law and were put into jail. And they were treated like animals.

Discuss on the Historical Development and Change of Chinese Piquancy Addiction (중국사람들의 매운 맛 기호의 역사적 추이에 대한 논술)

  • Zhao, Rong-Guang
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.293-300
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    • 2008
  • It determines Chinese addiction to piquancy that the Chinese traditional food production laid excessively particular stress on agriculture coming into being long before in the history and the state of Chinese food living was that the people were very difficult to live. The history of Chinese addiction to piquancy could be traced back to prehistory. And in Chinese “hot” is separated from “peppery” and it refers in particular to the piquancy more than general peppery. The character of “Hot” appeared after Han Dynasty in Chinese. Capsicum was brought to China from the sea in the middle of Ming Dynasty. Then it surpassed the formers soon and became the most popular and addictive piquancy food in China. Capsicum has many names in China, such as “$F{\bar{a}}nji{\bar{a}}o$”, “$H{\bar{a}}iji{\bar{a}}o$”, “$L{\grave{a}}ji{\check{a}}o$”, “$L{\grave{a}}h{\breve{u}}$”, “$L{\grave{a}}zi$”, etc., and they indicate the geographical and humanistic character of the distribution. (eight books on preserving one’s health) is the earliest history record about capsicum in existent Chinese history record that was finished in 1591. In this article the author puts new opinion forward on the record in this book. It is because the hottest piquancy of capsicum, capsicum’s better adaptability and low cost to plant combine with Chinese piquancy addiction at large that capsicum can replace the status of pepper and other traditional peppery flavorings soon and cause worldwide attention to the Chinese piquancy addiction finally. The human common characters of unchangeable inertia, depending to fully grow addiction and aggrieved delight are the most important reasons to cause piquancy addiction that has formed a custom through long-repeated practice and this custom do not change with condition change. The unbalanced spread process of capsicum in China shows that the region is poorer and the addictive degree is deeper.

Application of Zhishi(Poncirus fructus) as Examined in the Changes in Pi Pattern(痞證) Treatments (비증(痞證) 치법(治法)의 변천(變遷)으로 살펴본 지실(枳實)의 활용(活用))

  • Kang Ji-woo;Shin Sang-won
    • Journal of Korean Medical classics
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.27-54
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    • 2023
  • Objectives : To determine the background against which Zhishi has been applied to treat Pi pattern, through examination of changes in Pi pattern treatments in a historical context. Methods : The properties and nature of Zhishi as written in multiple bencao texts were analyzed. In addition, understanding of the Pi pattern, the changes in its treatment were examined diachronically based on opinions of Zhang Zhongjing, Zhugong, and Li Dongyuan. Examples of Zhishi application in Pi pattern treating formulas were collected and their mechanisms analyzed. Results : Zhishi is strongly effective in relieving accumulation and stagnation, due to its properties of dispersing and lowering. The early view of contrasting Pi with Jiexiong shifted to viewing the Pi pattern as an inner damage, from the perspective of rising and lowering of the Qi mechanism based on the Spleen and Stomach. As a result, Zhishi became a key ingredient in the treatment of the Pi pattern. Conclusions : As the perspective of seeing Pi as one end of the Yin-Yang coupling with Jiexiong from the Shanghanlun shifted to seeing it as a problem of Qi mechanism of the Spleen and Stomach, Zhishi became a key ingredient in the formulas to treat Pi pattern. The complexity of Zhishi's direction made it appropriate to treat the changed Pi pattern.

The Historical Study of Pheasant Cooking in Korea (우리나라 꿩고기 조리법(調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察))

  • Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.83-96
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    • 1996
  • The purpose of this paper is to examine the various kinds of recipes of pheasant through classical cookbooks written from 1670 to 1943 which are the basic materials to the meat cooking. The recipes of pheasant are found 39 times in the literature, which can be classified into eleven groups. Chronologically, the recipe of mandu (ravioli) was first appeared, and guk, tang (soup), kui (roasted), jang (salted meat), chim (steamed), po (dried meat), whe (raw meat), gijim (boiled in soy sauce), cho (sparkly heated in soy sauce and sugar), jolim (hard boiled in soy sauce), and jungol (meat with vegetable cooked in pan) followed in the records. Kui was the most popular one with the frequency of 43.6%, which proves that kui is the most suitable one for pheasant among all of recipes. Mandu and guk, tang were 10.2%, chim and po were found with the same rate of 7.7% and the next ones were jang, gijim, cho, and jungol with the rate of 2.6%. The recipes of pheasant were recorded much less than those of beef, chicken, pork, lamb, and dog meat. Particularly, in comparison with chicken belonging to fowls, the frequency of pheasant cooking did not reach even to one third of that. The Korean recipes of pheasant have been independently developed with originality, having nothing to do with the Chinese ones. The recipes of pheasant before the late 1800s have based on the strict recipe principles along with the spirit of art and sincerity, but they were deteriorated to simple and easy ones discarding principles. The main ingredient was the flesh of pheasant and the sub-ingredients such as flour, pinenut, buckwheat powder, and mushroom were included in common. In additon, oil, soy sauce, black pepper, and stone leek were frequently used as main seasonings.

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Historical Study of Beef Cooking -VI. ${\ulcorner}Roasted Beef{\lrcorner}$- (우육(牛肉) 조리법(調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察) -IV. "구이"-)

  • Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.291-300
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    • 1995
  • The purpose of this paper is to survey various recipes of the roasted beef with twenty three classical cookboods written before 1943. The roasted beefis found total 32 times in the literature which can be classified into seven groups such as the roasted rib, roasted foot, roasted tail, roasted heart, roasted gall, roasted kidney and roasted fresh meat. The most frequent one is the roasted rib appearing eight times and the next is the roasted sliced beef with seasoning appearing seven. This proves that the those recipes have been the most favorite ones to Korean people for a long time. The roasted rib has been found since the middle of the 17th century, but the process of roasting ribs again with seasoning after three successions of dipping shortly into cold water in the midst of roast wasz disappeared. The roasted sliced beef with seasoning originated since the late 18th century, and the roasted beef with salt since the early 19th century which has been inherited as the roasted raw upper part of roasted beef recipes have been continued until today in the similar manner. Generally the roasted meat with bones and the roasted internal organs started in 1766 earlier than the roasted fresh meat by a century. The main ingredients were rib, foot, tail, heart, gall, kidney, fresh meat and knee bone, and the seasonings were mixtures of scallion stalk, garlic, pepper, oil, soy sauce and sesame seed powder. And peculiarly salted shrimp, pear juice, ginger were added to seasonings and pine nut powder was used as decorating ingredient.

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An Analysis on Conservation Issues and Definition of Modern Agricultural Heritage in Korea (대한민국 근대농업유산의 개념 정의와 보전을 위한 논점 분석)

  • Jeong, Gi-Uk;Kang, Dong-Jin
    • Journal of Korean Society of Rural Planning
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.113-133
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    • 2017
  • The modern agriculture has been damaged through the rapid changes due to the policy of the plundering of food during the Japanese colonial era, the Korean War, the industrialization, etc. The purpose of this research is to define the scope and the concepts of the modern agricultural heritages and to establish utilization standards of the modern agricultural heritages. With such a purpose, this research proceeds with three phases. First, the definitions the systems of the organizations the modern age and the modern agricultural heritages. Second, the analyses of the patterns and the special characteristics through the general investigation. Third, the regeneration through the comparative examinations of the case examples of the conflicts between the modern agricultural heritages. And the new attempts through the drawing of the new discussion points and the advanced tendencies are proposed. It is judged that this research will provide the point of the aim when looking at the modern agricultural heritages as the historical and cultural assets, and that it will provide the several principles when formulating the plans for the invigoration of the farm villages and the plans for the developments of the agricultural regions and provide the bases for the practical formulations.

A Study on the Cooking Science of Guk(Korean Soup) from Old Cookbooks from the Chosun Dynasty($15{\sim}19C$) -Focused on Malgunguk - (고조리서에서 살펴본 조선시대($15{\sim}19C$) 국의 조리과학적 고찰 I -맑은 국을 중심으로-)

  • Kim, Gwi-Young;Lee, Choon-Ja
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.18 no.5
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    • pp.711-724
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    • 2008
  • Guk has been a very important part of the Korean table service for a long time. To study the historical transition of traditional Guk, an analysis of old cookbooks from the Chosun dynasty ($15{\sim}19C$) was conducted based on cooking science. The following is the results of 52 types of Malgunguk from representative old cookbooks such as Sangayorok (1450), Suunjabbang (early 1500s), Eumshikdimibang (1670), Jeungbosallimgyungje (1766), Gyuhabchongsu (1815), Juchan (mid 1800s), Sieuijunsu(late 1800s). The ingredients for Malgunguk contain 30, 35, and 12 types of animal foods, plant foods, and seasonings, respectively. Fish and two to three meats are combined for the main ingredients of Guk, to harmonize the taste. Notably, deer and birds such as pheasants along with parts of beef (short ribs, marrow, Holdaegi) were used. Moreover, it is interesting to note that meat such as pork and chicken were favored to beef, which is contrary to preferences of today. There are only a few Malgunguks that have been passed down before the 16th century those after the 17th century have mostly been reported, but the ingredients have been simplified.

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The Historical study of Beef Cooking - I. cookery of soup based on beef - (우육조리법(牛肉調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察) - I. 우육을 사용한 국류의 조리법을 중심으로 -)

  • Ryu, Kyung-Lim;Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.223-235
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    • 1992
  • 1. There were 21 kinds foods and preservation of beef and the number of dishes were 346 in the literatures written before 1943. 2.Soup(羹) was appeared first, and followed by dried beef(肉脯), steamed(蒸), sliced of boiled beef(熟肉과 片肉), preservation(貯臟), pan broiled beef(濕熱炒), salted beef(肉醬), raw beef(膾), shish kebab(算炙), roasted with seasoning(炙), beef with vegetables cooked in pan(煎鐵), calf`s-hoof jelly(gelatin)(足片), jaban(佐飯), hardboiled beef(boiled in soy sauce), ravioli (饅頭), beef juice(肉汁), thick broth(heavy soup, 助致), grilled beef (煎油魚), mix with the season(muchim), sun(膳) and gruel(粥). 3.The total of 14 different names of soup were found in the literatures which are Yang tang(stomach soup), Dunggol tang(marrow soup), Dogol tang(medulla soup), Sungi kuk(ox-blood soup), Sogogi kuk(beef soup), Gom kuk(bone attached beef and organs soup), Jap tang(bone attached beef, organs and tough beef soup), Yukgaejang(fresh beef, organs and green onion soup), Joujeo tang(foot starched soup), Jok tang(foot soup), Kori tang(ox-tail soup), Kalbi tang(rib soup), Malgun jangkuk(clear soup), Wan ja tang(beef ball soup). 4.The number of staple ingredient were Tripe and fresh meat among 26 kinds of major ingredient, radish, wheat flour, egg among 21 kinds of miner ingredient black pepper, soy sauce and seasame among 22 kinds of seasonings, and Thin layer-fried egg among 9 kinds of decorating ingredient were used commonly in cooking for soup.

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The historical study of Beef Cooking - II. cookery of dried beef based on beef - (우육조리법(牛肉調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察) - II. 우육을 사용한 포(脯)류의 조리법을 중심으로 -)

  • Ryu, Kyung-Lim;Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.237-244
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    • 1992
  • A total of 9 different names of dried beef were found in the literatures. They were classified in to 4 groups according to their processing method and shape: San pc(about 1cm thick beef salted and dried), Pyun po(ground beef with the seasoning, make small size or large size, dried), Yak po(thin beef or ground beef in the seasoning, dried), Jang po(thin beef in the seasoning, dried until half, again in the seasoning, dried). Most of the po was prepared with beef but phesant was also used for preparation Po in salt, seasame oil, black powder and soy sauce amomg the 19 kinds of seasoning, and chopped pinenut among 3 kinds of decorating were commonly used.

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A Historical Study of Beef Cooking - VII. Hoe(raw beef) - (우육(牛肉) 조리법(調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察) - 1945년 이전의 문헌을 중심으로 VII.(膾) -)

  • Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.385-393
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    • 1999
  • The purpose of this paper on Hoe (raw beef) is to investigate various kinds of its recipes, with equal focus on seasonings and sauces as well as its main and sub ingredients. The recipes of Hoe can be broadly classified into four large groups such as Salkogi Hoe(Red meat Hoe), Hankazi Naechang-yook Hoe(made from internal organs), Jap Hoe(1)(miscellaneous Meat Hoe) and Jap Hoe(II)(rolled with a whole pinenut) while the cook books written before 1945 indicate that the number of recipes reaches up to 21. The recipe of Salkogi Hoe comprises following three steps. Cut raw beef into thin strips and season them if necessary, then sprinkling sufficient pinenut powder on the strips. Its main sauce is hot pepper paste with vinegar. The recipe of Hankazi Naechang-yook Hoe uses kidney, manyplies, liver and tripes as main ingredients. Kidney should be thinly sliced with mixture of salt, seasame salt, seasame oil, and pepper as its seasonings. Regarding Manyplies, liver and tripes, there exists two possible ways to season them after cutting into strips. You can season with sesame oil and pepper or only with salt. Main ingredients of Jap Hoe(I) consist of beef, pork, kidney, manyplies, liver and tripes, among which minimum two ingredients are selected. Ingredients selected are sprinkled with pinenut powder after cutting into thin strips. And Hot pepper paste with vinegar is used as main sauce. The recipe of Jap Hoe(II) is to cut manyplies into pieces of 2Cm by 5 Cm without removing their black part and roll each piece with a whole peanut in such a manner that the peanut sticks from rolled piece.

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