• Title/Summary/Keyword: Temple Food(寺刹飮食)

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An Analysis of Factors Influencing on Temple Foods (사찰음식에 대한 수요영향요인 분석 - 템플스테이 참가자를 대상으로 -)

  • Kim, Yong-Moon;Park, Ki-Oh
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.240-253
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to predict factors influencing participant demand for the temple stays and to help find alternatives for temple stay marketing strategies. Specifically, the study sought to examine input variables on the visit frequency of temple visitors who partook in temple food. Research subjects were temple stay participants with experience with temple food. Through convenience sampling method, 300 self-administered questionnaires were distributed to participants at 4 temple stays in Seoul. Of the 278 questionnaires collected, 232 (83%) were used for research analysis. Given that the requirement that proper model for analysing the collected data be applied, the Truncated Negative Binomial(TNB) Poisson model, which is useful for analysing count data that are truncated at '0' and overcrowded with a certain value, was selected fort his study. Study results found that, for temple stay food revitalization, the most crucial item for temple food proponents to recognize is natural food ingredients. The degree of affection was higher among respondents over 40 years of groups and with incomes over 40 million won or more than others. In addition, unmarried and male were higher than married and female, and the Christian population in the temple food demand higher impact than Shamanism community. This match should be a priority to establish an in-depth public relations policy of targeted marketing of consumers according to various demographic characteristics. Active and aggressive efforts to expand food inspection are required to promote the healthy image of the temple food to the fragmentation of consumer marketing hierarchy.

Effect of the Characteristics of Temple Food on Satisfaction : Moderating Effect of Religion (사찰음식특성이 사찰음식만족에 미치는 영향; 종교의 조절효과)

  • Jeon, Hyo-Woon;Cho, Sung-Ho;Lee, Myung-Ho
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.40-55
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    • 2013
  • This study aims to suggest a way for temple food to take a differentiated position in the foodservice industry along with providing useful data for efficient management of temple food. To do this, it examines what influence the characteristics of temple food has on satisfaction with the food and verifies how the types of religion adjust the relationships between the characteristics and the satisfaction. The consumers who frequent temple food restaurants in Seoul and Gyeonggi areas were selected as the sample for this study, and a survey was conducted to those over the age of 20 via self-administered questionnaire from May 1st to June 30th, 2012. A total of 500 copies were distributed and 476 copies were selected as suitable from 488 copies collected for reliability and factor analyses using SPSS 18.0. The proposed research hypotheses were verified with a regression analysis and a multiple regression analysis. The results of this study are as follows. First, the characteristics of temple food have a positive influence on satisfaction with the food. Their subordinate factors such as situation, function, and consistency have positive(+) effects on the satisfaction. Next, it shows that religion does not play a regulatory role in the relationships between the characteristics of temple food and satisfaction with the food.

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An Effect on Experience Satisfaction of Temple Foods, Recommendation, and Revisit Intentions toward Temple Stay (사찰음식관여도가 템플스테이의 체험만족도와 추천, 그리고 재방문의도에 미치는 영향)

  • Shin, Kyung-Yi;Rha, Young-Ah;Hwang, Young-Jeong
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.210-224
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    • 2015
  • The purpose of this study is to identify the effects of involvement in temple food on overall satisfaction, recommendation, and revisit intention. From June 15 to August 30, 2014, for those who have participated in temple stay at four temples in South Korea, the self-administered survey was conducted. Of a total of 400 questionnaires, 289 were employed for the analyses, which accounted for 72% of response rate. Results shows that the involvement in temple food positively influenced experience driven by motivation in temple stay. Considering a particular research topic of temple stay, it implies that the involvement in temple food plays a key role in affecting emotional and social value relating to experience in temple stay. Entertaining, educational, aesthetic, deviated factors created by this experience will contribute to making special memories and feeling great enjoyment. In addition, emotional and social value by temple food have a positive effect on recommendation and revisit intention through experience satisfaction. Furthermore, experiential factor was significant to overall satisfaction, revisit and recommendation intention. Social and emotional value according to involvement in temple food, in terms of conclusions in this study, influenced a reduction of stress and improvement of enjoyment. These values relating to involvement in temple food, therefore, are assumed to be the causal relationship with experiential factor and satisfaction in temple stay and subsequently will be regarded as determinants in defining temple food as a heathy dish.

A Segmentation Study of Temple Food for the Global Convergence - Focusing on Recognition and Preference - (글로벌 융복합을 위한 사찰음식 세분화 연구 - 인식과 선호도를 중심으로 -)

  • Lee, Yong-Dae
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.22 no.5
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    • pp.134-150
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the recognition and preference for temple food between Korea and foreign national temple-stay participants. In order to achieve the research purpose, 220 research questionnaires were distributed to Korean and foreigners who have participated in a temple-stay. T-test and ANOVA analyses were performed for this study. The findings are summarized as follows. The highest recognition item for Korean temple food that the subjects perceived was 'I think Korean temple food is a medicinal food.'(4.31 points). In the value recognition score for Korean temple food, Asians(4.58 points) are relatively higher than Korean (4.23 points), North American (4.13 points) and European (3.94 points) participants. Participants in Asia appeared relatively higher than the others in the preference score on Korean temple food. The higher globalization strategy items of Korean temple food that the subjects perceived were 'Korean temple food needs a storytelling marketing'(3.94 points) and 'Korean temple food needs a modernization of cookware'(3.90 points).

Awareness analysis for popularization of temple food in monks (스님들을 대상으로 한 사찰음식의 대중화에 대한 인식도 조사 분석)

  • Hwang, Eun Gyeoung;Kim, Soo Jung;Kim, Byung Ki;Lee, Jea Young
    • Journal of the Korean Data and Information Science Society
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    • v.26 no.6
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    • pp.1217-1224
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    • 2015
  • The survey and analysis of preferences for temple food known to health promotion and prevention of adult diseases aimed at popularization of the monks living in Daegu Gyeongbuk and Busan Gyeongnam inspections are as follows. Monks have been recognized as healthy food (42.2%), and expected contribution of health promotion, such as prevention of adult diseases in the popularization of temple food (74.7%), it was better traditional cooking method, and recognize improvement of nutritional supplement (36.7%). Also, meat used (68.8%) and ohsinchae (57.8%) were not necessary for popularizing. In particular, difference was statistically significant in accordance with the number of monks that live with sex (nuns) (p <0.01). The results suggest that monks agree with popularization of temple food. However, monks stick to traditional cooking method and not in used meat and ohsinchae.

The Factor Analysis of Satisfaction with Temple Food, Motivation for Temple-stay and Revisit Intention to Temple-stay in Temple-stay Tourism (템플스테이 체험관광에 있어서 사찰음식만족도를 중심으로 한 행동요인 분석)

  • Shin, Kyung-Yi;Jeon, Hyo-Woon;Rha, Young-Ah
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.238-252
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    • 2014
  • This study aimed to provide a practical suggestion to temple stay tourism by identifying the value of Korean temple food among temple stay tourists. Interviewing method was adopted for the survey carried out from March to June, 2013. Out of 500 distributed survey sheets, 477 were responded, and among them, 5 were excluded due to severe tendency of bias or inconsistency for analysis. For remaining 472 responses, SPSS 18.0 program and AMOS 18.0 version were applied for factor analysis and reliability verification. Then, covariance analysis was carried out to verify the hypothesis of the study. Summary of the results are as follows; 1. Temple stay tourism has a positive effect on experience motivation. 2. Temple stay experience has a positive effect on satisfaction level, intention to recommend and revisit. 3. Satisfaction with temple food experience has a meaningful positive effect on intention to recommend and revisit. Intention to recommend also has a positive effect on intention to revisit.

The Reinvention of Traditional Cuisine as Counterculture (대항문화로서의 전통음식의 재탄생)

  • Kim, Jee Hee
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.14 no.11
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    • pp.944-954
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    • 2014
  • This paper discusses how the traditional cuisine of Korea capitalizes on "nostalgia" for the past. While examining the (re)invention of Buddhist cuisine and Andong food, this paper contends that traditional Korean cuisine is commodified through a process of de-contexualization. This paper first discusses the possibility that the idea of traditional cuisine is an invention in the first place. The history of temple food, for instance, suggests that it was created as a vehicle for circulating and implementing the ruling ideology in the ancient societies of China. This paper then turns to the issue of the growing influence of traditional cuisine in contemporary Korean culture, which is related to the public's demand for healthy food and also tied with the South Korean society's need for promoting a national cuisine in the age of globalization. The rise of traditional cuisine is a sign that people are seeking to reform their eating habits and form a counterculture. Yet, another side of the story is that consumers end up taking part in the self-expanding capitalist market with more consumer choices rather than forming a genuine counterculture. In this respect, the reinvention of temple food is closely related to what Jean and John L. Comaroff call the "emergence of consumption as a privileged site for the fabrication of self and society, of culture and identity".

Studies on Traditional Buddhist Temple Food 1. Kimchi in Buddhist Temple (한국 전통사찰 음식에 관한 고찰 - 제1보 사찰김치)

  • 류시승
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.516-520
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    • 1996
  • This research is based on the literature and field study of buddhist the kinds; of temple kimchi and of the way how it is made. It has been spread by word of mouth to be 50 kinds of kimchi. But, according to this study. 24 kinds of kimchi or so are found to be present. The kinds of buddhist temple kimchi differ according to each area, Its condition of climate and materials mainly produced in that area. The distinctive features of buddhist temple kimchi are to use kamcho, soysauce and soybean paste instead of sugar and salted fishes. At conclusion the further study is necessary to preserve and inherit the remaining kinds of kimchi.

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A Study on the Plants Used as Temple Food in Jeju Island (제주지역 사찰음식으로 이용되는 식물에 대한 연구)

  • Song, Jung-Min;Yang, Hyo-Sun;Sun, Byung-Yun;Kim, Chul-Hwan;Do, Seon-Gil;Kim, Young-Ju;Song, Gwan-Pil
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.25 no.4
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    • pp.465-472
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    • 2012
  • We examined plants that were used as temple food in Jeju from May 2011 to January 2012. Thirty-six temples participated in the study, and there were 58 questionnaire respondents. Fifty-seven taxa were used as temple food, which belonged to 27 families, 51 genera, 55 species, and two varieties. The most commonly used family-based taxa were eight species of Compositae, six species of Cruciferae, and four species of Umbelliferae. Ten species of woody plants and 25 species of Jeju native plants were also used as temple food. The most useful part was the leaf, followed by the root, leaflet, and fruit. A patent search showed that most of the surveyed plants were covered by intellectual property rights. Forty-eight species had food-related patents, 34 species had cosmetics-related patents, and 38 species had medicine-related patents. The purchase and procurement of Jeju temple food plants usually depended on the market or plant cultivation rather than the use of the plants. Gathering of wild herbs for temple food has been performed on a limited basis. Therefore, collecting traditional knowledge for the use of Jeju plant resources should be conducted under different conditions rather than through a temple-related study.

A Study on Recognition, Preference and Popularization of Temple Food - Among Local and Foreign Restaurant Visitors (사찰음식에 대한 인식, 기호도 및 대중화방안 연구 - 사찰음식전문점을 이용한 내·외국인대상으로)

  • Moon, Yang-Su;Lee, Sim-Yeol
    • Korean Journal of Community Nutrition
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.53-62
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    • 2017
  • Objectives: This study was conducted to identify factors that influence the consumption of temple food and to find systematic methods improving the popularization of temple food. Methods: A self-administered questionnaire was applied to 304 temple food restaurant visitors, including 232 local and 72 foreign individuals. The questionnaire was designed to investigate recognition, consumption, preference and popularization of temple food among restaurant visitors. Results: The study population consisted of 30.6% men, 69.4% women. 76.3% were Korean while 23.7% were foreigners. The responses on their impression on temple food contained the words, "vegetarian" (4.64), "plain and familiar" (4.19), and "good for dieting" (4.16). The most commont reason to favor temple food was its "mild taste" (63.0%) in the local group while foreigners preferred it because it is "good for health" (35.8%). The preferred kind of side dish of the local group was roasted dish (4.40), stir-fried dish (4.39), blanched vegetables (4.36), and food boiled with sauce (4.23); foreigner's high preference was for stir-fried (4.67), Jangachi (4.63), food boiled with sauce (4.56), and Buggak (4.55).. Most respondents thought that it is necessary to maintain the traditional form of temple food. While 43.5 percent of Koreans responded that "the five pungent vegetables" could be allowed, 62.8 percent of foreign respondents said it is permissible. Conclusions: A systematic approach to improve the temple food that reflects both foreign and local preference while maintaining its originality is necessary for its globalization. Furthermore, restaurants specialized in temple food should be expanded and promoted through effective marketing strategies that would make the cuisine easily accessible and spread throughout the world.