Thursday, March 26, 2009

Holy Gochujang!!!!

Temptation of Hot Pepper Paste


`Gochujang,'' or hot pepper paste, along with soy sauce and soybean are representative slow foods that can take as
long as several years before they can be eaten.

By Shim Hyun-chul
Staff Reporter

The temptation of red: not lipstick, but a well-matured ``gochujang,''
or sauteed hot pepper paste.

First, the deep red color strikes the eyes, and memories
of its spicy taste teases the mouth to water. You try to
resist, but succumb every time to that red gojchujang.



To make gochujang, rice, made with barley, is grounded
and then mixed with ground fermented beans and hot
peppers. Sweet rice taffy oil, water and salt is added to complete
the paste, which can take months or years to
ferment before people can get their hands on it.

Along with soy sauce and soybean paste, gochujang is
one of the three main sauces used in Korean cooking.
Different from the Western idea of hot, its taste runs
from spicy hot to sweet, and Koreans add gochujang to
just about every dish-gochujang bulgogi,
``tteokbokki,'' red-hot fish soup
and ``bibimbap.'' Koreans religiously
believe that the paste determines the palatability of any
Korean cuisine.



The paste is also nutritious, with protein, fat and
vitamins. It also has capsaicin, which has anti-carcinogenic
and dieting effects.

Recently, the Korea Food Research Institute and Academy
of Korean Studies have come forth with documents dating
back several hundred years,
all the way to the Imjin Wars (1592-1598) with Japan,
to refute the claim that hot peppers entered Korea via
other foreign countries. Their feat has provided the
platform for hot pepper paste-based Korean dishes to
be recognized globally as genuine native Korean cuisine.

Shim@koreatimes.co.kr









Obviously, I cut and pasted this from The Korea Times
website...
Check out more interesting stuff at
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/index.asp

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