• Title/Summary/Keyword: traditional wedding foods.

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A Study on Cognition and Prospect of Wedding Food among Housewives in Busan and Kyungnam Area (부산.경남지역 주부들의 혼례음식에 대한 인식과 전망)

  • 김경묘;신애숙;김경자
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.12 no.6
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    • pp.517-527
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    • 2002
  • This study investigated the attitude toward and practices of the wedding foods among housewives. Data were collected from 525 housewives living in areas of Busan and Kyungnam and analyzed by bivariate analyses. Most of the respondents were from Busan metropolitan area (77.9%) and in the age of thirties and forties (66.3%). About the occupation, 43.5% of them were full-time housekeepers and 34.7% were workers. The highest proportion was found in those completed the high school (49.3%), those with a monthly family income of a million won (44.2%), and those from the nuclear family type (66.9%). For the attitude toward the continuity of wedding foods, most respondents (52.1%) had an opinion that the practice of serving the traditional wedding foods should be disappeared in a near future. The respondents had a general attitude that procedures of wedding ceremony including wedding foods should be changed to reflect the degree of modernization. Also, they showed an attitude that one of the wedding ceremonial procedure, Pebaek had to reflect the current custom. The kinds and the volume of wedding foods should be lessened so that the ceremonial procedure should be brief which included only the basic one. Most of the respondents preferred the basic one to the luxurious one. These attitudes toward and practices of wedding foods varied depending on sociodemographic characteristics.

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A Study of the Housewives' Perception Level on Wedding Food in Busan & Kyungnam Area (부산.경남 지역 주부들의 전통혼례음식 인식 정도에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Kyoung-Myo;Cho, Yong-Bum
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.136-152
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    • 2007
  • This study was carried out to survey the degree of the perception and necessity of wedding food prepared by housewives. The participants of the survey were 331 housewives lived in Busan and Kyungnam area. The findings could be summarized as follows: The housewives lived in Busan and Kyungnam area had evaluated the necessity of wedding foods, Paebaek foods or Yedan foods. The respondents of 36.6% answered that they will order wedding foods from specialists, whereas 28.7% said that they will prepare them by themselves. More than half of the respondents(56.2%) thought that current wedding foods were prodigal and have to be done in thrifty manner. Broadly 46.8% of the respondents considered that the ritual practices of wedding foods will decrease steadily. A conclusion was that lots of participants had a negative view of wedding foods and pointed out the necessity of developing them to reflect traditional wedding customs with economic costs.

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A Study on the Traditional Korean Rites Foods for the Construction of a Traditional Korean Food Data Integration System (한국 전통음식 통합검색 시스템 구축을 위한 통과의례음식 연구)

  • Shin, Seung-Mee; Sohn, Jung-Woo
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.344-354
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    • 2008
  • The traditional ritual foods of Korea have developed with for many years, and differ by locality, family customs and religious characteristics. In an efforts to establish the database on that addresses the difficult issue of a classification system for traditional Korean foods, we have conducted a survey of a traditional Korean ritual foods. In the database, typical 10 rites are represented, covering birth to death, these are birth, the hundredth day after birth, the first birthday, the commemoration of finishing books(graduation), the coming of age ceremony, marriage, the birthday feast for an old man, the 60th wedding anniversary, the funeral, and the memorial service. For each rite, the appropriate traditional Korean foods are classified into 6 categories-main dishes, side dishes, tteok lyou, hangwa lyou, eumchung lyou and the others. Some of these have varied considerably with the passage of time, and some have since disappeared. This database provides a basis for generational transmission, preservation and development of traditional Korean ritual foods as one of the components traditional Korean culture.

Cultural Characteristics of Korean Food in the Novel "Hon-bool" - Focused on 'rites of passage' Foods - (소설 "혼불" 속 전통음식의 문화적 이해 - 통과의례음식을 중심으로 -)

  • Chung, Hae-Kyung;Woo, Na-Ri-Ya;Kim, Mi-Hye
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.416-427
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    • 2010
  • In this study, we attempted to elucidate the cultural characteristics of Korean food based on a traditional understanding on the Korean novel. To achieve this, food characteristics related to 'rites of passage' were analyzed in the representative Korean literary work "Hon-bool", which describes the life of a first-son's wife every three generations in the going to ruin but historic 'Lee's family of Maean district' family and the life of the common 'Geomeong-gul' people who lived with farming on the Lee's land at Namwon of Junbook province in the 1930~1940s, during the Japanese Colonial rule. Every nation possesses rites of passage at important points in life, such as at birth, age of majority, wedding and death. Korean culture, in particular, has several memorial rites relating to birth, death and passage into the afterlife in which special foods are prepared. In this manner, ceremonial foods represent the Korean peoples' traditional vision of the universe and life. The book "Hon-bool" describes these traditions. Especially, the book describes the table-settings related to the main character's childbirth, first birthday, wedding and death. Therefore "Hon-bool" represents a living history of Korean traditional food and the work of storytelling through the traditional understanding is expected that perform an important role in making of cultural contents of Korean foods.

A Study on Korean Traditional Food Use Patterns in Households of Middle Aged Women living in Kyunggido and Incheon Area (중년주부 가정의 전통음식 이용에 관한 연구 - 경기.인천 지역을 중심으로 -)

  • Kang, Up-Soon;Chyun, Jong-Hee
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.13 no.5
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    • pp.461-474
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    • 1998
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the patterns of Korean traditional food use in the households of middle aged women living in Kyunggido and Incheon area Four hundred eighty seven housewives whose children were in middle school answered the questionnaire about Korean traditional food use patterns in ordinary days, national festive days and in private celebration or memorial days. Most households have used Korean traditional table setting called Bansang as daily meals(96.7%) and have used home-made Kimchi(97.3%). However, the use of home-made Jang such as soy sauce, soybean paste and red pepper soybean paste was not very high(64.3%). Most households have celebrated New Years day(99.6%) with Ddukguk and Manduguk, Chusuk(95.1%) with Songpyun, and fruits, Full-Moon day(95.1%) with Ogokbap, Namul and Brum. Dongji was celebrated with Patjug by 73.3% of households. However, Samjitnal and Danho were celebrated with Whajeon and Ssukjulpyun by only 18.9% and 43.8% of the households respectively. The households using Korean traditional food to celebrate the birthday, the 1st birthday of child, the wedding or to memorize the passing day of ancestors were 96.0%, 80.7%, 81.3% and 86.7% respectively. Compared to households of urban and nuclear family, households of rural and extended family tended to use significantly more Korean traditional foods in many occasions and showed significantly higher rate of using home-made Kimchi and Jang.

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A Study of University Students′ Perceptions and Willingness to Pass on Dietary Practices of Special Foods on Special Events to the Next Generation (남녀 대학생의 행사식에 대한 인식과 계승의지에 관한 조사연구)

  • 한재숙;김경아;김기선
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.11 no.6
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    • pp.417-429
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    • 2001
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate university students' eating habits during special occasions and the willingness to pass on traditions of cooking certain dishes on special occasions to the next generation. The procedure of this study included a questionnaire to collect data for this study. The results are summarized as fellows: there were 689 participants. 314 male and 375 female. Most participants were nuclear families(84.5%), Practicing cooking traditions during the special occasions at home on New year's day. Chusuk, Ceremony of a forefather's death, the 15th of the first month. and Winter solstice exceeded 70% of households. In every event, most persons who make the food during the special events at home are mothers. Furthermore, most persons who teach the cooking method are mothers. too. Most foods which were taken In the annual events generally were as fellows : rice cake soup on New Year's Day. boiled rice admixed with four other staple cereals on the 15th of the first month, half-moon-shaped rice cake on Chusuk. a rice-and-mugwort cake on Buddha's birthday, rice and adzuki-bean on the winter solstice and cake on Christmas and wedding anniversary. The results of the survey of perception of food traditions during the special events was as follows ; ‘annual events helped peoples to make relationships with family and relatives deeper’ showed the highest agreement. The willingness to pass on traditional foods for the special days showed the highest agreement on New Year's Day and Chusuk, followed by Ceremony of a forefather's death. the 15th of the first month, and finally the winter solstice.

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A Study on the Recognition and Prospect for Korean Traditional Pyebaeck Foods in Daegu Area(II) (한국 전통 폐백음식에 대한 인식과 전망 (II)-대구지역을 중심으로-)

  • 한재숙;이연정;이수영
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.13 no.5
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    • pp.353-361
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    • 2003
  • This study was performed by questionnaire to investigate the recognition and prospect for Korean traditional Pyebaeck Foods. The subjects of this study consisted of 621 housewives in Daegu area. The results were summarized as follows: The most people(94.2%) had ever seen Pyebaeck refreshments before, and most had seen them in wedding halls(62.5%). The reason they do prepare Paebaek refreshments was “it's tradition”(44.9%), and they considered this tradition as a public moral. The peoples who had prepared Pyebaeck refreshments at home consisted 51.0% and those who had purchased at caterer was 59.5%. The reason for preparing the refreshments at home was usually “it's true-hearted”(48.8%) and the reason for hiring specialists was “it's more convenient”(38.7%). Opinions about cooking method were mostly “complicated”(79.8%), and the knowledge score for cooking methods was low in 2.80. 31.3% of respondents reported inheriting their recipes from their mother. 43.3% of the respondents thought it would be “transmitted only a part” on prospects for Pyebaeck refreshments. 31.5% of the respondents said the improvement plan should be “focused on development of various Pyebaeck refreshments with modern senses” and 30.4% that the industralization should be effected through “publicity activities and education about its excellence”. People had to experience the Pyebaeck in the right way and to understand its real meaning better in order not to consider it as an evil custom, empty formality and vanity.

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The Knowledge of Korean Ceremony Foods and Table Setting of Korea]1 American Housewives in the New York/New Jersey area (한국의례음식과 상차림에 관한 인식과 실행(재미 한인 주부를 중심으로))

  • 심영자;김정선;전희정
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.146-157
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    • 1999
  • The knowledge on Korean traditional ceremony foods was evaluated from 271 Korean American housewives residing in the New York and New Jersey metropolitan area. A questionnaire was designed to collect information on demographic background of the subject and their knowledge on ceremonial foods and table settings. Over half of the respondents considered table settings for ceremonial foods are important and most of them knew and learned Korean ceremonial foods from either their own mothers or mother-in-laws. About three-quarters responded that traditional table settings need to be simplified and half of them stated that family education is the best way of proceeding knowledge on ceremonial foods. Most of them have knowledge of table settings for a child's birthday, a baby's first birthday, a baby's hundredth day after birth, New Year's and full moon days. However, few respondents were knowledgable about other ceremonial foods. Practically, they are more likely to simplify the table setting for Korean traditional ceremonies, such as child's birthday, 60th birthday, wedding, and memorial days. The results of this study could be used to plan traditional cultural education programs for Korean immigrants in the U.S. so that they can make informed decisions in building cultural identities in the new environment.

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A Study of Recognition of Housewives on Wedding Food in Seoul Area (서울지역 주부들의 혼례음식에 대한 인지도 조사)

  • Lee, Mi-Young;Yoon, Sook-Ja
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.17 no.5
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    • pp.569-577
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    • 2002
  • This study was carried out to survey the degree of the recognition and necessity of wedding food to include $Ph{\grave{a}}ebak$ and Ibaji foods prepared by bride's parents and sent to the bridgroom's. The participants of the survey were 293 housewives of 20 years old or more residing in Seoul area. The questionnaires used in this research consisted of 10 questions. The findings could be summarized as follows: 1. As to the degree of the recognition of $Ph{\grave{a}}ebak$ food, 55.2 percent of the participants perceive it as 'the food sent to the bridegroomvs house to be used when the newly-weds greet groom's relatives, whereas 35.8 percent regarded the practice as 'a traditional custom from the ancient times,' which is, in fact, correct and exact. As to its importance, 10.2 percent regarded $Ph{\grave{a}}ebak$ food very important, while 48.5 percent, 'important,' and 11.9 percent, 'not important.' 2. As for the items for $Ph{\grave{a}}ebak$ dishes, 77.5 percent answered their preferences for 'jujube prop-nut,' followed by 'ricecake,' 'liquor' and 'Korean cookies,' in descending order. 3. As for the meaning of Ibaji dishes, 48.2% understand them as 'a set of dishes prepared by the bride's parents to be sent to the bridegroom's'; and as for their willingness or necessity of sending the Ibaji dishes, 15.5 percent indicated that they might prepare them, whereas 78.7 percent said that they would prepare them if the situation required. On the other hand 5.8 percent did not feel the necessity. The overall result is that most females surveyed recognized the two types of food important and were inclined to prepare them when the occasion demanded.