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A pot of samgyetang (Korean chicken ginseng soup) Egg drop soup is a light Chinese soup. Ginseng soup is very popular in China and Korea; samgyetang (ginseng-stuffed chicken in broth) is considered a Korean national dish. Steamboat is a communal soup of meat, seafood, and vegetables dipped and cooked in hot broth on the tabletop.
Gukbap (Korean: 국밥; lit. soup rice) is a Korean dish made by putting cooked rice into hot soup or boiling rice in soup. [1] [2] It is commonly served in a ttukbaegi. Whereas soup and rice is generally eaten separately in Korea, in gukbap, rice is expected to be mixed into the soup.
Guk is a native Korean word, while tang is a Sino-Korean word that originally meant "boiling water" or "soup". Tang has been used as an honorific term in place of guk , when it denotes the same meaning as guk as in yeonpo-tang (연포탕, octopus soup), daegu-tang (대구탕, codfish soup), or jogae-tang (조개탕, clam soup).
Bosintang (보신탕) : a soup made primarily with dog meat, boiled with vegetables and spices such as doenjang and gochujang. Doenjang jjigae (된장찌개): or soybean paste soup, is typically served as the main course or served alongside a meat course. It contains a variety of vegetables, shellfish, tofu, and occasionally small mussels ...
Nakji bokkeum is commonly served atop a bed of steamed rice and/or bean sprouts and topped with sesame seeds. Jogaetang (clam stew) or some other more mild and rich soup is almost always served alongside nakji bokkeum. Other side dishes like mildly pickled daikon or cucumber are commonly served as well.
Naengguk [1] (Korean: 냉국) or chilled soup [1] refers to all kinds of cold guk (국, soups) in Korean cuisine, mainly eaten in summer.It is also called chan'guk (찬국), which literally means "cold soup" in pure Korean, while the term naengguk is a combination of a hanja word (冷, "cold") and a pure Korean word (국, "soup").
Norimaki, borrowed from the name of a similar Japanese dish, was part of the Japanese vocabulary that entered into the Korean language during Japanese occupation (1910–1945). The two words were used interchangeably until gimbap was made the universal term, as part of efforts to clear away remnants of Japanese colonialism and purify the Korean ...
Miyeok-guk [1] (미역국) (also rendered as miyuk guk) or seaweed soup [1] is a non-spicy Korean soup whose main ingredient is miyeok, or seaweed.It is traditionally eaten as a birthday breakfast in honor of one's mother and by women who have given birth for several months postpartum.