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KMID : 0665420110260040374
Korean Journal of Food Culture
2011 Volume.26 No. 4 p.374 ~ p.382
Spicy Taste of Korean Traditional Food
Cho Woo-Kyoun

Abstract
The origin of Korean traditional food¡¯s spicy taste dates back to the first telling of the Dangun myth-a story of a tiger and
bear who tried to reincarnate themselves in human form by eating garlic and wormwood. For a long time, Koreans have
eaten spicy vegetables such as green onion, garlic, ginger, mustard, leeks, corni, cinnamon bark, and Chinese peppers
(Zanthoxylum schinfolium) and Zanthoxylum bungeanum. In prehistoric times, spicy vegetables were probably used to
eliminate the smell of meat. In the agricultural age, they were used to supplement meals with fresh taste. They were also used as a substitute for salt (salt was very precious and expensive) as well as side dishes for the poor. Spicy vegetables have also been used as a substitute for main dish like medicinal gruel and used to increase the spiciness of soup, and they are usually used as a side dish and with condiments in namul (cooked vegetable dishes), sangchae (salad), ssam (wrapped in greens and garnished with red-pepper paste or other condiments) and Kimchi. In addition, chili pepper was introduced to the Korean Peninsula in the middle of the Joseon Dynasty (mid-15th, 16th century). The soil and climate of the Korean Peninsula are suitable to growing chili pepper, and chili pepper has excellent adaptability and productivity. Accordingly, it is processed to red pepper powder and has become a major part of traditional Korean food along with Chinese pepper. Since the Joseon Dynasty, many kinds of Kimchi made with red pepper powder have been developed, and most Koreans enjoy them these days. The main characteristics of Korean food are spiciness and honest-to-goodness taste.
KEYWORD
Korean traditional hot taste, spicy vegetables, chili pepper, Kimchi
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