• Title/Summary/Keyword: Red pepper paste with vinegar

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Processing and Characteristics of Canned Salt-fermented Anchovy Engraulis japonica Fillet using Red Pepper Paste with Vinegar (초고추장첨가 멸치(Engraulis japonica)육젓필레통조림의 제조 및 특성)

  • Kwon, Soon-Jae;Yoon, Moon-Joo;Lee, Jae-Dong;Kang, Kyung-Hun;Kong, Cheung-Sik;Je, Hae-Soo;Jung, Jae-Hun;Kim, Jeong-Gyun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.47 no.6
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    • pp.726-732
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    • 2014
  • A traditional Korean seafood (fermented anchovy) is made from the muscle and viscera of anchovies Engraulis japonica. This study was undertaken to investigate the effect of retorting condition on the quality of canned, salt-fermented anchovy fillet using red pepper paste with vinegar. Salt-fermented anchovy fillets were prepared by fermenting anchovies with salt (15%) at $5^{\circ}C$ for 15 days, and then cold air drying the fillets for 1 hour. Each batch of dried fermented anchovy fillets (60 g) was filled with 35 g of mixed red pepper paste with vinegar (red pepper paste 64%, vinegar 2%, starch syrup 13%, sugar 14%, coke 6%, soju 0.4%, crushed garlic 0.3%, ginger 0.3%), placed in a can (RR-90), seamed using a vacuum seamer, and sterilized for either Fo 9 or 11 min in a steam system retort at $121^{\circ}C$. After sterilization, we measured the pH, total volatile basic nitrogen (TVB-N), amino-N, color value (L, a, b), texture profile, thiobarbituric acid (TBA) value, sensory evaluation, and viable bacterial count of the canned fillets. We did not detect viable bacterial counts in cans subjected to either sterilization treatment, and there was no difference in physicochemical and sensory quality between the two. In fact, most sensory evaluators reported difficulty distinguishing the products. Thus, our results show that sterilization for Fo 9 min is preferable to that for Fo 11 min in the preparation of canned salt-fermented anchovy fillet using red pepper paste with vinegar.

Study on Korean Fermented Sauce applied to Western Cuisine - Focused on Red Pepper Paste, Soybean Paste, Soy Sauce and Vinegar - (한국 발효 소스의 서양요리 적용에 대한 연구 - 고추장, 된장, 간장, 식초를 중심으로 -)

  • Kim, Jihyung;Yoo, Eunyi
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.223-234
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    • 2017
  • The purpose of this study was to determine the possibilities of Korean fermented sauces including red pepper paste, soybean paste, soy sauce, and vinegar as ingredients for Western cuisine. Western cuisine professionals from US and Europe were interviewed for their experienced opinions. To classify the categories, the selected statements were given to other groups of foreign chefs, Korean cuisine professionals and students majoring culinary arts. The first category pointed out that Korean fermented sauces are healthy with 'umami' taste using only natural ingredients. They believe it has high possibilities of matching with many of other foods and also has unique tastes. Korean cuisine professionals were mostly occupied in this category. The second category had negative opinions matching with Western cuisines since Korean fermented sauces are rough and have a strong taste & smell. This category had many Western cuisine professionals. The last category was composed of mainly students majoring in culinary arts. They pointed out that Korean fermented sauces use natural ingredients and have a unique flavor with long-term shelf life. Use of Q methodology was significantly different from previous studies researched by quantitative methods especially for the Korea food service industry.

Processing and Characteristics of Canned Kwamaegi Cololabis saira using Red Pepper Paste with Vinegar (초고추장첨가 과메기통조림의 제조 및 특성)

  • Kwon, Soon-Jae;Park, Tae-Ho;Lee, Jae-Dong;Yoon, Moon-Joo;Kong, Cheung-Sik;Je, Hae-Soo;Jung, Jae-Hun;Kim, Jeong-Gyun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.47 no.5
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    • pp.537-544
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    • 2014
  • Kwamaegi is a traditional Korean seafood made from the flesh of Pacific saury Cololabis saira. It is recognized as a valuable, healthy food containing the ${\omega}$-3 fatty acids EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid). This study was conducted in order to obtain basic data for application to the canning process of Kwamaegi using red pepper paste with vinegar. Commercial Kwamaegi was cut into $2{\times}3cm$ lengths and 90 g was put into cans (301-3). Then, 60 g of water was added and precooked for 10 minutes at $100^{\circ}C$. The water was drained after precooking. The precooked Kwamaegi was packed into cans, and 60 g of red pepper paste with vinegar was added. The cans were seamed using a vacuum seamer, then sterilized for differing times (8-12 minutes) in a steam system retort at $121^{\circ}C$. Parameters such as: pH, TVB-N, amino-N, total amino acid content, free amino acid content, color value (L, a, b), texture profile, TBA value, mineral content, sensory evaluation and viable bacterial count of the product produced under varying sterilization times (8-12 minutes) were measured. There were no remarkable differences between sterilization conditions and textural characteristics. The results showed that product sterilized for 8 minutes proved to be the most desirable.

The Differences Between Korean and Japanese Ways of Seasonings (한국 음식과 일본 음식의 조미료 사용법 비교)

  • Suh, Hye-Kyung
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.19 no.2
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    • pp.223-238
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    • 2004
  • In this paper, the differences between Korean and Japanese ways of seasonings are studied. The main results are summarized as follows: (1) Shouyu and Miso which are Japanese equivalents of soy sauce and bean paste of Korean foods are used in variety of different seasonings with some other ingredients while Korean counter parts are used only to add salty tastes. (2) Shouyu and Miso lose their flavors after considerable time of heating, while Korean soy sauce and bean pastes increase their tastes after heating. (3) Mirin adds sweety taste and glaze and Sake makes food soft or hard according to the moment of being added during cooking. (4) In Korean foods soy sauce, bean paste and red pepper paste are on the basis of tastes, Dashi is used in almost every Japanese food. (5) Seasoned vegetables of Korean food are prepared only with spices of green onion, garlic and sesame oil while seasoned fishes or vegetables are mixed with Shoyu or salt and vinegar in Japanese food. (6) In making Zorim, Korean traditional sauces are added from the beginning of heating. But in making Nimono, sugar, salt, vinegar, Shoyu and artificial taste are added in order during heating. (7) In grilling, main food for grilling in Korea is meat, which is prepared with a variety of spices such as soy sauce or/and red pepper pastes, garlic, green onion, sesame oil, sesame powder, pepper and sugar while mainly fishes are grilled with salt, occasionally with Shoyu or Miso in Japanese food. (8) Pan frying fishes are taken with soy sauce with vinegar in Korea but Tepura are eaten with Tentsuyu in Japan.

A Historical Study of Korean Traditional Radish Kimchi (한국의 무김치에 관한 역사적 고찰)

  • Cho, Woo-Kyoun
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.428-455
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    • 2010
  • Radish kimchi is a typical side-dish in Korean traditional food and is a way of keeping vegetables for a extended period using fermentation. This study examined the classification, usage, eating history, variety, and recipes of Korean radish kimchi through ancient and modern era literature. The Korean radish kimchi were categorized into six groups: kkakttugi, seokbakji (or nabakkimchi), dongchimi, jjanji, jangachi, and jangkwa. According to the record, the eating history of radish kimchi comes from before the age of the Three Kingdom period. Radish was preserved in salt, vinegar, soybean paste or lees of fermented liquor in the early times. This pickled radish was not supposed to be watery. Radish kimchi was divided into watery kimchi (dongchimi) during the period of United Silla and the Koryo Dynasty. Kimchi was mixed with Chinese cabbage to make seokbakji or nabakkimchi. Up to the early Chosun Dynasty, the key ingredient of kimchi was radish. After the middle of the Chosun Dynasty, kimchi was mixed with red pepper powder, salted fish, soybean sauce, and various ingredients. There were many kinds of radish kimchi during the late Chosun Dynasty. In the 11 Korean recipe books published within the past 100 years, there are nine kinds of kkakttugi, three kinds of seokbakji, four kinds of dongchimi, three kinds of jjanji, nine kinds of jangachi, and five kinds of jangkwa. Kkakttugi (cubed, sliced or julienne radish) was pickled with salt, red pepper powder, garlic, green onion, oyster, sugar, salted fish, and more. Seokbakji and nabakkimchi were not as salty, so they could not be preserved as long. Dongchimi (watery radish kimchi without red pepper powder) was made of radish, water, salt, 18 side ingredients, 13 condiments, and seven garnishes. Jjanji was pickled to be very salty and was eaten during summer. Jangachi can be used as a regular side dish and is made of radish or dried radish slices pickled or seasoned with salt, soy sauce, vinegar, soybean paste, lees of fermented liquor, and spices. Jangkwa is used as a stir-fry method and has been segregated from jangachi relatively recently.

A Historical Study of Beef Cooking - VII. Hoe(raw beef) - (우육(牛肉) 조리법(調理法)의 역사적(歷史的) 고찰(考察) - 1945년 이전의 문헌을 중심으로 VII.(膾) -)

  • Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.385-393
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    • 1999
  • The purpose of this paper on Hoe (raw beef) is to investigate various kinds of its recipes, with equal focus on seasonings and sauces as well as its main and sub ingredients. The recipes of Hoe can be broadly classified into four large groups such as Salkogi Hoe(Red meat Hoe), Hankazi Naechang-yook Hoe(made from internal organs), Jap Hoe(1)(miscellaneous Meat Hoe) and Jap Hoe(II)(rolled with a whole pinenut) while the cook books written before 1945 indicate that the number of recipes reaches up to 21. The recipe of Salkogi Hoe comprises following three steps. Cut raw beef into thin strips and season them if necessary, then sprinkling sufficient pinenut powder on the strips. Its main sauce is hot pepper paste with vinegar. The recipe of Hankazi Naechang-yook Hoe uses kidney, manyplies, liver and tripes as main ingredients. Kidney should be thinly sliced with mixture of salt, seasame salt, seasame oil, and pepper as its seasonings. Regarding Manyplies, liver and tripes, there exists two possible ways to season them after cutting into strips. You can season with sesame oil and pepper or only with salt. Main ingredients of Jap Hoe(I) consist of beef, pork, kidney, manyplies, liver and tripes, among which minimum two ingredients are selected. Ingredients selected are sprinkled with pinenut powder after cutting into thin strips. And Hot pepper paste with vinegar is used as main sauce. The recipe of Jap Hoe(II) is to cut manyplies into pieces of 2Cm by 5 Cm without removing their black part and roll each piece with a whole peanut in such a manner that the peanut sticks from rolled piece.

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A Study on the Cooking in 'The Lee's UmsikBup' ("이씨(李氏)음식법"의 조리에 관한 분석적 고찰)

  • Kim, Sung-Mee;Lee, Sung-Woo
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.193-205
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    • 1990
  • It is not known that when and by whom 'The Lee's UmsikBup' was written. This cookbook is written purely in Korean and has not been published yet. There is another book named 'UmsikBup' in the cookbooks of the Chosun Dynasty and there are many books with similar names. So this book is tentatively named 'The Lee's UmsikBup'. This book comprises fifty three items, among which there are fifteen items of rice alcoholics, three items of Gook-Su (noodles), sixteen items of side dishes, seventeen items of Tuck (rice cakes) and Guaja(kookies), and two items of fruit punch and tea. Three items were illegible because the lines were erased or the letters were not clear. The cereals needed for making rice alcoholics were sixty four percent regular rice and thirty six percent sticky rice. As for the processes, the process using Jee-ae-bop took up fifty five percent. As for side dishes, pheasants, which are seldom used for food these days, were then popular for food. And the entrails of domestic animals were much used for food. Seeing that red pepper paste mixed with vinegar was used for steamed breams (Jim) and that red pepper was used for Yeolgooja Tang, we can estimate that this book was written after red pepper was introduced. Inferring that Chohong Chang (red pepper paste mixed with vinegar and honey) is found Jinchan Ye Que, we can estimate this book was written in the late 1800's. The cereals used for making rice cakes were ninety two percent sticky rice and eight percent regular rice. Sticky rice was much more used and pepper was used for making Tuck (rice cakes) as Hun Chal Byung, So Ham Byung and Dootum Tuck. The analysis of the terms used in this book revealed that 117 items were used for cooking processes. And it also showed us that there were six kinds of cutting and thirteen kinds of heating procedure. The shapes and sizes of foods were revealed on the basis of real things. The measuring units are hard to revive since the measurements were taken by the container then in use. Thirty four kinds of containers and cookers, twenty more of which are now in use, were used for preparing foods. The use of ‘twigs stretched for the east’ had no scientific base but said something of Korean folkways at that time.

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A Study on Korean Dog Meat Cooking(II) -Survey of Dog Meat Cooking Restaurants- (견육요리(犬肉料理)의 연구(硏究) (II) -실태조사(實態調査)-)

  • Kim, Tae-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.4 no.4
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    • pp.357-368
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    • 1989
  • In this study, the kinds of Dog Meat Cooking, side dishes, ingredients, seasonings and recipes were surveyed in 21 Dog Meat Cooking restaurants in Korea from July to August of 1989. 1. Actually, there were four Dog Meat Cooking recipe. Tang (soup:湯) has been served in 20 (95.2%) restaurants and Sukyuk(boiled in water:熟肉) in 19(90.5%) ones. Junkol(boiling vegetables and meat with seasoning:煎骨) and Muchim(sauteed with seasoning:무침) has been done in 16(76.2%) and 10(47.6%) restaurants, respectively. 2. According to the frequencies, the main seasonings when served were roasted perillar powder (95.2%), soybean paste (95.2%), vinegar(81.0%), Dadegi (mixed much red pepper powder, minced ginger, minced garlic, minced onion and black pepper powder, 66.7%), pepper(61.9%), salt(61.9%), salt(61.9%), minced ginger(57.1%), minced garlic(57.1%) and prepared mustard(38.1%). 3. The number of side dishes were 26. Among vegetables, green pepper(90.5%), sliced garlic(81.0%) were served. Chinese cabbage(61.9%) and Kagtuki(42.9%) out of Kimchi and leek salad(28.6%) were also served. 4. The total 17 ingredients were used in Dog Meat Cooking. The major one were white onion (100%), perillar leaf(72.2%), leek(66.6%) and parsley(47.2%).

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Microbiological Quality and Change in Vitamin C Contents of Vegetables Prepared at Industrial Foodservice Institutions in Kumi (구미지역의 사업체 급식소에서 조리된 채소류의 미생물 품질 및 비타민 C 함량 변화)

  • Jang, Myeong-Suk;Kim, Geum-Ran
    • Journal of the Korean Dietetic Association
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    • v.4 no.2
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    • pp.263-269
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    • 1998
  • This study was investigated to see the microbiological results(total plate counts, coliforms) and vitamin C contents in cooking five kinds of raw and cooked vegetables, contributing to a data base for making better environment for foodservice, dividing cooking methods into two ways which was generally used at industrial foodservice institutions. Namul and Saengchae, especially Radish Saengchae, seasoned with red pepper powder after seasoning showed higher level of total plate counts and coliforms than guide line. After holding, just before serving, most Namul and Saengchae, except Bean sprout Muchim, showed higher microbiological level than guide line, Saengchae seasoned with soybean, salt, and red pepper paste and Radish Saengchae seasoned with salt and vinegar showed high level of vitamin C remaining rate. By the result of this study, better sanitary treatment and scientific cooking method is demanded when Namuls of Saenchaes are prepared with served in industrial foodservice institutions.

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Rheological Study on Concentrated Kochujang (Korean Red Pepper Paste)-Water Suspensions (농후 고추장-물 현탁액의 리올로지 연구)

  • Kim, Kap-Soo;Lee, Beom-Soo;Lee, Sang-Gyou;Lee, Shin-Young
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.826-831
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    • 1989
  • The rheological properties of concentrated Kochujang (Korean red pepper paste)-water suspensions were investigated. The rheological behavior of Kochujang-water suspension was illustrated by Herschel-Bulkley equation. All Kochujang-water suspensions with 12.5-100% of water addition showed pseudoplasticity in yield stress at the shear rate range of $0.25-179.20sec^{-1}$., but at the shear rate above $5.16 sec^{-1}$, more shear thinning behavior was observed with increasing shear rate. Also, pseudoplasticity of the suspension became weak by increasing water addition and decreasing temperature, The temperature dependence of consistency index on Kochujang-suspension was very low and the values of consistency index was lowered by increasing solid contents, but as heating, the values of that was increased. It was suggested that the main components responsible for rheological behavior of the suspensions at high temperature might be undigested starch or protein in Kochujang. Also, the changes of rheological behavior with vinegar addtion was only due to dilution effect.

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