• Title/Summary/Keyword: Chinese and Western Cuisine

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The Comparative Analysis of Understanding the Conceptions of Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Western Cuisine by SD between the Japanese and the Korean (SD법에 의한 한국, 일본, 중국, 서양 각 요리에 대한 개념의 일본인과 한국인의 인식에 대한 비교 분석)

  • Kim, Jung-Eun
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.12 no.1 s.28
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    • pp.144-156
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    • 2006
  • In the survey of Korean and Japanese female students at the age of $20{\sim}22$, the conceptions of Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Western daily foods were recorded by SD and factor analysis and their perceptions about cuisine of their own countries and other countries in the diets of young people were figured out on the basis of their conceptions. The results are given below. The trends of perceptions about cuisine of their own countries and about Chinese and Western cuisine were coincided in both the Korean and the Japanese. The perceptions of their own countries‘ cuisine might seem to be traditional, familiar, cheap, and delicious. About Western cuisine, they felt that it seemed to be elegant and expensive but not familiar or delicious. Furthermore, the Korean had stronger perceptions about it than the Japanese had. For Chinese cuisine, the Korean felt the same as they did toward the Japanese foods just as the Japanese felt that the Korean cuisine was similar to the Chinese cuisine. The Japanese have thought that the Korean food-style was similar to that of their own country and Kimchi and Bulgogi have emerged in popular Japanese cooking. Also, they felt that the Korean cold noodle dish and Bibimbab were very familiar. On the other side, the Korean have become familiar with sushi, grilled meat, and Japanese noodles, but they were not familiar with other foods.

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The Analysis of Conceptions on Korean, Japanese, Chinese and Western Cuisine by SD (SD법에 의한 한국 요리, 일본 요리, 중국 요리 및 서양 요리에 대한 개념의 분석)

  • Kim, Jung-Eun
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.11 no.4 s.27
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    • pp.92-101
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    • 2005
  • According to conceptions of Korean, Japanese, Chinese, and Western cuisine, the results of study based on SD and the factor analysis are as follows. The factors, which were showed from the conception of Korean cuisine, were the tastes for simplicity, cheapness, and familiarity, such as a side dish. The factors, which were showed from the conception of Japanese cuisine, looked like unfamiliar, tasteless and citified except sushi and grilled meat. The factors, which were showed from the conception of Chinese cuisine, were familiarity with the exception of Chinese black noodles, sweet fried pork and fried rice and those looked delicious as well as good table setting. Young people were also trending to be fond of them. The factors, which were showed from the conception of Western cuisine, were luxurious, delicate and citified foods. People were familiar with pizza, spaghetti and stake in Western cuisine.

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A Survey on housewives' dining-out behaviour in Pusan (부산지역 주부의 외식행동에 관한 조사연구)

  • Moon, Jung-Won;Ahn, Jae-Doo
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.11 no.3
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    • pp.359-367
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    • 1996
  • To study the dining-out behaviour of housewives, the frequency, food preference, expense for dining-out in social meeting, family gathering, daily meal were surveyed with a total of 454 housewives in Pusan. (1) In the frequency of dining-out, once or twice a month shows highest percentage, 59.7% and 45.8% for social meeting and family gathering respectively. The occasion of dining-out for the daily meal is less than 1 or 2 time per 6 month (62.6%). The frequency of dining-out is highly dependent on demographic variables such as age, academic background, family income, car ownership. (2) The preference for Korean dishes is found to be top in all occasions for dining-out. And then for the social meeting, chinese food, western style food, japanese cuisine and fast food are prefered in order, while western style food and chinese cuisine are rather prefered than japanese cuisine and fast food in occasion for family gathering. When they dine out just for daily meal, korean food is prefered first and preference for chinese food, western style food, fast food is followed in order. Japanese cuisine is prefered the last. (3) Housewives answered highly that the expense they spend for dining-out for social meeting (45.8%) or family fathering (46.8%) is 5,000 to 10,000 won per person. For these occasions, the expense is different with family income. Namely, if their income is higher than 3,000,000 won, they usually spend 10,000 to 15,000 won for the occasion. And for the daily dining-out, 34.7% respondents answered that they spend 2,000 to 3,000 won.

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The Patterns and Changes of the Late 1940s Seoul Restaurant Industry in Newspaper Advertisements - Focused on Analysis of the Four Major Newspaper's Advertisements - (신문 광고에 나타난 1940년대 후반 서울 외식업의 양상과 변화 - 4대 신문의 음식점 광고 분석을 중심으로 -)

  • Kyou-Jin, Lee
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.15-25
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    • 2023
  • This study researches the restaurant industry in Seoul during the late 1940s. The research was based on the four major newspapers in Korea. The data included a total of 227 businesses with 164 non-fusion restaurants that served single-nation type food consisting of 101 Korean, 31 Western, 20 Japanese, and 12 Chinese. Some examples of South Korean dishes are Masan, Daegu, and Jeolla-do-style local foods. As for North Korean food, Pyongyang-style bulgogi, Naengmyeon, Hamheung-style janggukbap, and Gaejangguk were introduced frequently. Chinese restaurants that appeared were high-end places with Beijing-style cuisine. In the case of Japanese restaurants, they mostly had Sukiyaki with Joseon food served as well. Moreover, Western restaurants were fusioned with Japanese as in pork cutlet and curry rice. Others are comprised of "French Cuisine", "Indian curry rice", "Steak", and "Russian soup". This analysis indicates that foreign cuisines had actively entered the market.

A Survey on the Knowledge and Preferences for Korean Food Among Unmarried Foreigners Residing in Korea (국내 거주 독신 외국인의 한국음식 인식 및 선호도 조사)

  • Kwak, Yong-Wha;Nam, Yu-Sun;Jeong, Hee-Sun
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
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    • v.28 no.3
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    • pp.337-347
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    • 2012
  • This study was performed through one-to-one interviews or group sessions with single un-married foreigners living and working in Korea. A total of 150 questionnaires were distributed, and 109 were analyzed. This demographic becomes immersed in local cuisine searching for new food dishes and experiences. These foreigners were an excellent test group who came from a non-Korean domestic cuisine background and who were subsequently exposed to Korean cuisine over an extended period during which changes occurred in their diets and food preferences. We found that the longer the foreigners stayed in Korea, the more they ate Korean food and adapted to traditional dishes such as Korean stews and hot-pots. In general, Chinese, Japanese, and South-east Asians regarded Korean food as nutritious, whereas people from a western or European background considered it health conscious food. In contrast, South-east Asians, in particular, found Korean food aroma unpleasant. This study describes how diets and views of Korean food evolved in foreigners with time by providing objective opinions and data on the acceptance of Korean food by foreigners and hints the direction in which Korean cuisine should be developed to further its globalization.

The Historical Study of Chinese Food Culture (중국 식문화의 역사적 고찰)

  • 김지영;류무희
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.221-237
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    • 2003
  • China has not thousands years history and culture but more than 50 times huge territory compare to Korea. Moreover, China is a multiracial country which has 56 minority races including Han race. Today's food culture of China has been established based on historic, regional, and racial features. China is located adjacent to Korea and historically has had close relationship with Korea. Moreover, China and Korea have had interaction in politic, economic, and cultural respects. In this aspect, the food culture of China has had great influence to the food culture of Korea. Therefore, this study purposed to understand the food culture of China more deeply which has been passed over, through researching food culture based on Chinese foods in five thousands historic stream. As the result of researching Chinese food by times in terms of food culture, which has been well known by only cuisine, the food culture of China had been changed by rise and fall of several dynasties. In addition, food styles had divided the south and north by inflowing western food materials and deep relation to Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, and the principles of yin-yang.

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A Study on the Effects of Demographic Characteristics of Consumers on Types of Preferred Menu: Focusing on Daegu and Gyongbuk Region (소비자의 인구통계학적 특성에 따른 선호메뉴 유형에 관한 연구: 대구.경북을 중심으로)

  • Lee, Won-Gab;Kim, Gi-Jin
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.89-104
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    • 2014
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of demographic characteristics such as gender, marital status, age, educational level, job and monthly income on the preferred menu classified by type of food, food material, cooking method, taste and food temperature. A survey was performed from the 5th to 10th of January, 2013 among consumers in such places as coffee shops and subway stations located in Daegu and Gyeongbuk region, and finally 307 data sets were used for analysis. The results of analysis showed that the strongest effects of demographic characteristics were observed in preferred menu classified by type of food(i.e. Korean, Western, Chinese, Japanese, buffet, herbal and instant foods), and the differences by marital status, age, educational level, job were statistically significant. In particular, the married consumers tended to prefer Korean and herbal foods, while the unmarried ones preferred western, Chinese, buffet and instant food. Moreover, the younger ones tended to prefer western, Chinese, buffet and instant foods, while the older ones preferred to eat Korean food. The younger unmarried ones liked beef and pork dishes, while the married ones over their forties tended to prefer vegetable dishes. The consumers less than or equal to their thirties tended to prefer roasted and fried foods compared to ones over their thirties.

Foodways in Korea during the Japanese Occupation Period by Analysis of the articles in the Yeo-Sung Magazine;from 1936 to 1940 (음식 관련기사를 통해서 본 일제강점기 식생활 연구;${\boxDR}$여성(女性)${boxUL}$ 잡지를 중심으로(1936. 4${\sim$1940. 12))

  • Lee, Kyou-Jin;Cho, Mi-Sook
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.336-347
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this study is to analyze the articles of food and nutrition published in the Yeo-Sung magazines from 1936 to 1940 in Korea. Out of the 67 articles about the food and the nutrition from the Yeo-Sung magazines, 28 (41.8%) of them were about the brief information of food and nutrition news, 16 (23.8%) of them were about the recipes, 6 (9.0%) were about the nutrition information, and 17 (25.4%) of them were about others. As the number of recipes mentioned from the Yeo-Sung magazine was 103, 77 items, the majority, were about the Korean foods, 18 of the Western foods, 6 of Chinese foods, and only 2 of Japanese foods. This result showed that the Japanese colonization didn't seem to influence on Korean tastes and gastronomy. During this period, the modernization caused the numerous changes to our traditional cuisine with introduction of new western menu items and concept of nutrition. The nutrition articles highly recommended eating brown rice, vegetables, tofu, and the white meat. Shin-Young Bang, one of the main authors, insisted that "Cookery is not only the skill, but also the one of the very important academic sciences." showed budding modern cookery sciences in Korea.

Study on the Usage of Smartphone Food Delivery Apps among University Students in Chungbuk Area (충북 지역 일부 대학생에서 스마트폰 음식 배달앱 이용 실태)

  • Bae, Yun-Jung;Park, Heejin;Sung, Minhee;Jo, Hongbi
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.27-36
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    • 2020
  • In this study, a survey was conducted among university students (119 men and 134 women) in Chungbuk province using questionnaires to investigate the variables and eating patterns related to the use of food delivery apps. A survey was conducted from March 22, 2019 to April 3, 2019. Of the total respondents, 77.2% reported that they had ordered food at least once using food delivery apps on smartphones. Further, 63.3% of the total subjects had ordered food delivery through smartphone apps once or twice a month, and the most preferred cuisine for food delivery was fast food, followed by Bunsik (Korean street food/snack), western food, and Chinese food. The average satisfaction scorefor food delivery apps was 3.8 points, and the satisfaction score was the highest with the convenient ordering process (4.0), followed by good taste (3.9) and good portion (3.8). The subjects who used smartphone food delivery apps three times or more a month showed a significantly higher frequency of instant food intake (p=0.0132), dining out (p=0.0282), and late-night eating (p=0.0047) than the subjects who ordered food using delivery apps less than three times a month. In conclusion, these study results may be applied as baseline data for dietary education among university students.