Muk is a Korean food made from grains, beans, or nut starch such as buckwheat, sesame, and acorns and has a jelly-like consistency. Muk has little flavor on its own, so muk dishes are seasoned with soy sauce, sesame oil, chopped scallions, crumbled gim, and chili pepper powder, and mixed with various vegetables.[1]

Muk
A plate of dotori-muk-muchim
Korean name
Hangul
Revised Romanizationmuk
McCune–Reischauermuk

Types

edit

There are several types of muk:[2]

Muk dishes

edit
 
Memil-muk-sabal
  • Muk-muchim (묵무침), muk dish seasoned with ganjang (Korean soy sauce), sesame or perilla oil, finely chopped green onions, sesame seeds, and red chili pepper powder. It can be mixed with sliced or shredded cucumber, and leaf vegetables, such as chopped lettuce, cabbage or napa cabbage. The dish can also be served with only crumbled gim (Korean nori) added as a garnish.[4]
  • Tangpyeong-chae (탕평채), made with thinly sliced nokdumuk, beef, vegetables, and seaweed.[5]
  • Muk-bokkeum (묵볶음), a stir-fried muk dish.[1]
  • Muk-jangajji (묵장아찌), marinated muk in ganjang[6]
  • Muk-jeonyueo (묵전유어) or mukjeon (묵전), made by pan-frying sliced muk that has been coated with mung bean starch.[7]
  • Muk-sabal (묵사발) or also called mukbap (묵밥), cold soup made with muk and sliced vegetables.[8]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b (in Korean) Muk Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine at Encyclopedia of Korean Culture
  2. ^ (in Korean) Muk at Britannica Korea
  3. ^ 황포묵(노랑청포묵) (in Korean). RDA. Archived from the original on 2013-06-19. Retrieved 2013-04-12.
  4. ^ (in Korean) Dotori mukmuchim at Doosan Encyclopedia
  5. ^ (in Korean) Tangpyeongchae Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine at Encyclopedia of Korean Culture
  6. ^ (in Korean) Mukjangajji at Doosan Encyclopedia
  7. ^ (in Korean) Muk jeon at Doosan Encyclopedia
  8. ^ (in Korean) Muksabal, The Academy of Korean Studies
edit