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Sujuk or sucuk (/suːˈd͡ʒʊk/) is a dry, spicy and fermented sausage which is consumed in several Turkish, Balkan, Middle Eastern and Central Asian cuisines.Sujuk mainly consists of ground meat and animal fat usually obtained from beef or lamb, but beef is mainly used in Turkey, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, Armenia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.
Pyeonyuk (Korean: 편육; Hanja: 片肉) is a traditional Korean dish, which consists of thinly sliced meat that has been boiled and pressed. [2] Either beef or pork may be used to make the dish. It is eaten as anju (an accompaniment to alcoholic drinks ), or used as a topping for other dishes such as naengmyeon (cold noodles) and seolleongtang ...
Similarly to other Korean deep fried dishes, battered tangsuyuk meat is double-fried. [7] [8] Tangsuyuk is served with sweet and sour sauce, which is typically made by boiling vinegar, sugar and water, with variety of fruits and vegetables like carrot, cucumber, onion, water chestnut, wood ear mushroom and pineapple. Starch slurry is used to ...
Gae Suyuk (개 수육; 개水肉) – Boiled dog meat [54] Gaegogi Muchim (개고기 무침) – Steamed dog meat, Korean leeks (부추), and vegetables mixed with spices [ 54 ] Gaesoju (개소주; 개燒酒) – Mixed drink containing dog meat and other Chinese medicine ingredients such as ginger , chestnut , and jujube to invigorate one's health.
Various South Korean dishes and foods. South Korea is a country in East Asia constituting the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. It is bordered to the north by North Korea, and the two countries are separated by the Korean Demilitarized Zone. Some dishes are shared by the two Koreas.
Typical hangwa or Korean confectioneries are yakgwa, mandugwa, maejakgwa, and various types of yeotgangjeong and dasik. Both yakgwa and maejakgwa are fried pastries made with wheat flour and honey each having a distinctive shape and texture; the former with a flower pattern shape and a soft texture; the latter in a ribbon shape with a crispy ...
Haejang-guk [1] (Korean: 해장국; Hanja: 解酲국) or hangover soup [1] refers to every kind of guk or soup eaten as a hangover cure in Korean cuisine. It means "soup to chase a hangover" [2] and is also called sulguk (술국). [3] [4] It usually consists of dried napa cabbage, vegetables and meat in a hearty beef broth.
Korean blood sausage that is used as the meat product in sundae-gukbap Sundae-gukbap (순대국밥) – sundae (Korean sausage) and rice soup. [13] Kongnamul-gukbap Kongnamul-gukbap (콩나물국밥) – kongnamul (soybean sprouts) and rice soup. [14] Kongnamul-gukbap is a food that adds kongnamul, garlic, and salt in an iron pot.