• Title/Summary/Keyword: ancient wheat

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A Reserch on the Radish based on the Sasang Constitutional Medicine(SCM) (무에 대한 사상의학적 고찰)

  • Kim, Jong-Dug;Ahn, Sang-Woo;Song, Il-Byung
    • Korean Journal of Oriental Medicine
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.63-80
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    • 2004
  • The Sasang constitution food is classified by Sadang theory(四黨論), Aroma-Scent-Fluid-Taste(馨臭液味), Inhale-Exhale-Incomings-Outgoings(呼吸出納), Ascent-Descent-Open-Close(升降開闔), Healthy Energy(保命之主), which is different from the Oriental medicine herb classification of traditional oriental medicine. So, we obtained the result of the characteristic of radish, one of much used food materials by examining ancient documents as follows. First, today 'Rae(來)' is used as to come' but in ancient days, was used as 'wheat'. Radish(萊服) is the word made by meaning which removes and overcomes the poison of wheat Second, Ancient people realized the power of its Inhale Disperse Qi (呼散之氣) when the root of radish raises quickly from the soil, and recognized that radish has such a good dissolving function when seeing Bean-curd becomes soft if radish is added to Bean-curd dish. That’s why they classified that radish is lung medicine, and used it as Taeumin type medicine. So if someone is suffocated by the smoke and has indigestion, chronic asthmatic coughing, now we use radish by applying the Inhale Disperse Qi of radish.

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Rice Gruel in Chinese Food and Culture

  • Fan, Zhihong
    • Proceedings of the EASDL Conference
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    • 2003.04a
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    • pp.55-60
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    • 2003
  • Rice is one of the most important cereal in China. The seed of rice unearthed from ancient tombs proved that rice cultural has a history of more than 7,000 years in south China. The word "rice" was found engraved on turtle-bone scriptures of 1,500 BC. tn many ancient Chinese scriptures, rice is among the most important "Five Cereals", which includes millet, wheat, soy bean, rice and sorghum.(중략)

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An Analytic Study on the Processing Quality and Flavor Preference of Spelt Wheat Bread (스펠트 밀을 이용한 기능성 식빵의 관능특성 및 기호도 분석)

  • Lee, Seon-Gu
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.100-110
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    • 2017
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the sensory characteristics and preference of Spelt white bread and to examine its market potential. For this purpose, the sensory characteristics of Spelt flour dough was analyzed and a questionnaire survey was conducted on the general public to grasp the preference and repurchase intention of Spelt bread. As a result of this study, the sensory characteristics of Spelt wheat dough showed that the fermentation rate was slightly higher than that of general wheat flour and the Spelt flour dough was more slightly acidic than that of general wheat flour. The result of this survey showed that Spelt flour bread had a comparative advantage in terms of digestibility, flavor and overall favorability compared to general wheat flour. For the repurchase intentions for Spelt flour bread, it was found that the intentions to buy it for health and as gifts was high. Based on this research, I expect that the studies about marketing strategy with Spelt flour bread will be done along with the development of various products.

Literature Review on the Pharmaceutical Effect on Korean Traditional Foods in ${\ulcorner}$Eumsikdimibang${\lrcorner}$ ("음식디미방"에 수록된 전통음식의 향약성에 관한 고찰)

  • 신민자;이영순;최수근
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.11 no.5
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    • pp.325-335
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    • 2001
  • The pharmaceutical effects of Korean traditional foods made in ${\ulcorner$Eumsikdimibang${\lrcorner}$ were studied. Eumsikdimibangis a representative ancient book of cooking, which was published in 1653 by Mme. Jang. The type of food in Eumsikdimibang were Guksu(wheat vermicelli as like western noodles) Mandu(bun stuffed with seasoned meat and vegetables), Guk(soup), J'IM(steam meat or fish). Chae, Noorumi, Hyae(sliced raw fish), Jockpyun(jellied beef soup), Jockgall(salted seafood), Kimchi, Juk(skewer or broach) Jhee. Sun(steaming of stuffed vegetable), Bockuem, Jeon(pan fried fish), Gui(meat or fish grilled with seasoning), Dock(Korean rice cake), Jabgwa, Beverage and Junggwa. Each Korean foods has a phamarceutical action; enhancement of physical activity, thirst elimination, detoxication and treatment disease.

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The Historical Study of Korean Traditional Funtional Food (한국의 전통적 기능성 식품의 이용에 대한 역사적 고찰)

  • 한복진
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.235-255
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    • 1996
  • Natural substances, exploited in our daily life, have been applied to drugs to treat diseases and developed to functional foods by appropriate preparations, and these foods give beneficial effects on physical activities. In this paper, the utilization of traditional functional foods was studied with refer ring to old ancient writings published in the front-end of Chosun dynasty. The utilized vegetables were march mallow, turnip, radish, Chinese cabbage, lettuce, spinach, cucumber winter buds, flesh of a cabbage, eggplant, taro, burdock, Parsley, watershield plant, crown daisy, bamboo shoots, garlic, scallion, onion, acorn, bark of a tree, white goosefoot leaf, leaf of bean, pine mushroom, bracken. yam, mugwort, tea, ginseng, peppermint, fruit of the Maximowiczia chinensis, smartweed and pepper. The utilized fruits were chestnut, Chinese date, pine nuts, walnut, gingko nut, citrus. crab apple, pear, peach, grape, pomegranate, plum, Chinese quince, fig and watermelon. The utilized cereal were rice, barley, bean, buckweat and Job's-tears. The utilized sweetenings and seasonings were honey, wheat-gluten, sugar, oil, salt, soy sauce and vinegar. Our ancestors had a balanced diet using the various foods, and especially had a fundamental concept of "Foods have the efficacy of a remedy".edy".uot;.

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Studies on the Application of Food Ingredients to Danbang prescription of "Dong-uibogam(東醫寶鑑)" ("동의보감(東醫寶鑑)" 단방처방(單方處方) 중 식재료활용(食材料活用)에 관한 연구 - 양념류를 중심으로 -)

  • Ji, Myoung-Soon;Yoon, Chang-Yeol
    • Journal of Korean Medical classics
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.279-302
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    • 2010
  • Spices are used to enhance the taste of Korean food. The term "Yangnyeom" contains a wishful meaning that it would be as good for health as medicine when eaten. It is prescribed as a medicine to heal disease according to the ancient medical books. Fifteen spices in Korean food such as vinegar, liquor, honey, water, wheat-gluten, sesame, sesame oil, garlic, green onion, ginger, mustard, pepper, cinnamon, soy sauce, salt, cheoncho, and others are prescribed as medicine for internal and external uses for almost every disease. To examine these spices, the subjects were treated with either the spice-boiled water or spice-mixed water, or applied externally. It is suggested that spices that are produced through peculiar traditional cooking method, fermenting, and those that have long-growth period, grew in the natural environment, and the like have efficacy as medicine. Spices can be sufficiently applied as emergency medicine, disease-treatment, subsidiary supplement, and preventive medicine.

Cultivation of millet in Mahan-Baekje Villages: Archaeobotanical examination of Osan site, Jangheung, Korea (전남 마한백제계 취락의 서속(黍粟) 재배와 농경 체계: 장흥 봉림리 오산유적 자료를 중심으로)

  • RYU Ara;KIM Sebin;OH Byungwook;KIM Minkoo
    • Korean Journal of Heritage: History & Science
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    • v.56 no.2
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    • pp.48-60
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    • 2023
  • Although foxtail and broomcorn millet have been cultivated since the Neolithic Age on the Korean Peninsula, there have been few studies on how the importance of millet cultivation changed over time. The discovery of millet has been rare in the Mahan-Baekje villages in the Jeonnam region, and archaeological discussions on ancient farming have centered around rice farming. However, a large amount of millet was found at the Osan site in Bongrim-ri, Jangheung, showing that the tradition of millet cultivation continued during the AD 3-4 centuries. In contrast to rice farming, which requires low-lying wetlands, hot and humid summers, and a large labor force, millet cultivation has few restrictions in terms of growing environment and labor mobilization. Regarding harvesting seasons, the crops at the Osan site can be divided into fall harvesting (rice, legumes, millet) and summer harvesting (wheat). Regarding field locations, the crops are divided into wetland crops (rice) and dryland crops (wheat, legumes, millet). The operation of the dual agricultural system contributed to subsistence resilience and agricultural production, making it possible to effectively manage social and climatic crises.

Divergence of Genes Encoding Non-specific Lipid Transfer Proteins in the Poaceae Family

  • Jang, Cheol Seong;Jung, Jae Hyeong;Yim, Won Cheol;Lee, Byung-Moo;Seo, Yong Weon;Kim, Wook
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.215-223
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    • 2007
  • The genes encoding non-specific lipid transfer proteins (nsLTPs), members of a small multigene family, show a complex pattern of expressional regulation, suggesting that some diversification may have resulted from changes in their expression after duplication. In this study, the evolution of nsLTP genes within the Poaceae family was characterized via a survey of the pseudogenes and unigenes encoding the nsLTP in rice pseudomolecules and the NCBI unigene database. nsLTP-rich regions were detected in the distal portions of rice chromosomes 11 and 12; these may have resulted from the most recent large segmental duplication in the rice genome. Two independent tandem duplications were shown to occur within the nsLTP-rich regions of rice. The genomic distribution of the nsLTP genes in the rice genome differs from that in wheat. This may be attributed to gene migration, chromosomal rearrangement, and/or differential gene loss. The genomic distribution pattern of nsLTP genes in the Poaceae family points to the existence of some differences among cereal nsLTP genes, all of which diverged from an ancient gene. The unigenes encoding nsLTPs in each cereal species are clustered into five groups. The somewhat different distribution of nsLTP-encoding EST clones between the groups across cereal species imply that independent duplication(s) followed by subfunctionalization (and/or neofunctionalization) of the nsLTP gene family in each species occurred during speciation.

Development History of Pregnancy Test Technology (임신진단검사기술의 발전사)

  • Kwon, Young-Il
    • Korean Journal of Clinical Laboratory Science
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    • v.50 no.4
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    • pp.382-390
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    • 2018
  • The history of the pregnancy test started in ancient Egypt with a germination test using wheat and barley. Since then, unscientific methods have been used from the days of Hippocrates and Galen to the Middle Ages when uroscopy was used, even until the early 1800s. On the other hand, since the mid-1800s, scientific methods and evidence have begun to emerge, which led to scientific research on the physiological characteristics of pregnancy. The first attempt to utilize these scientific findings was initiated with the bioassay by Aschheim and Zondek using rats and mice in 1927, and then developed into experiments using rabbits and frogs. The immunoassay method, which started in the 1960s, contributed greatly to the generalization of the pregnancy tests while improving the problems of the bioassay. In 1976, a pregnancy test kit was introduced that can be used at home, contributing to the popularization of pregnancy tests. Since the 1980s, technological advances in diagnostic tests have also been applied to pregnancy tests to further improve the reliability of the diagnosis of pregnancy. In the 2000s, the accuracy and ease of use of the pregnancy test kits for home use have improved drastically. This study examined the history and scientific development of the pregnancy test.