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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() Apologies for this one! Not sure what happened. It just got away before I was finished ! ![]() "Ophelia" wrote in message ... "Ophelia" wrote in message ... "dsi1" wrote in message ... On Wednesday, February 20, 2019 at 1:08:51 PM UTC-10, GM wrote: > dsi1 wrote: > > > On Wednesday, February 20, 2019 at 8:26:06 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > > > --- > > > > > > Pah you are just spoiled <g> > > > > Yes, wherever we may roam, it's tough to get food like we do on this > > rock. My niece from California says there's a Hawaiian place that serves > > chicken katsu in her town. She says there's also 3 places open that > > serve poke. Two of the places are good and one is so-so. That's > > encouraging. ![]() > > > > For breakfast, my wife had fried pork belly with kim chee. The kim chee > > was unusual, it was aged stuff. The cabbage gets almost gel-like and the > > flavor deepens. We wouldn't normally eat kim chee that old but with the > > pork belly it was pretty wonderful. Oddly enough, kim chee, bacon, bacon > > fat, and rice, is a Korean comfort food. > > > > https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared...5ynavWBupV7HOA > > > Another Korean comfort food is "Army Stew", it is fried Spam, kimchi, and > rice... > > Spam is very popular in South Korea, it arrived with the US soldiers > during the Korean War. Spam in fancy gift boxes is a popular present for > special occasions, a luxury box can cost hundreds of dollars: > > https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/ea...ift-in-s-korea > > > "Spam is no junk meat - it's fit for a gift in South Korea > > JINCHEON, SOUTH KOREA (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE) - From the front lines of war > to a staple of institutional catering, Spam is rarely seen as a gourmet > ingredient - but the canned pink meat holds a unique position in South > Korea as a top-selling holiday gift. > > Ahead of the Chuseok harvest festival which started yesterday - one of > Korea's biggest celebrations and an occasion for mass family gatherings - > presentation wooden boxes of the blue-and-yellow tins, nestled in packing > straw, line the shelves of both major retailers and local convenience > stores. > > An upmarket black-label pack with six cans of Spam and two bottles of > Andalusian olive oil costs over 90,000 won (S$110), but the most popular > version is a nine-tin set at 30,000 won. > > Office worker Lee Yoon-ho bought five to give acquaintances, calling it > "the most universal" present. "It's affordable and everyone likes it," he > said. "All South Koreans like Spam." > > Spam gift boxes worth a total of around 213 billion won were sold in South > Korea last year - six times as much as in 2008, when the figure was first > recorded. A spokesman for supermarket giant Homeplus said the tinned meat > hampers ranked second, third and fourth in its top-selling products last > Chuseok. > > "In Western countries, Spam is considered a cheap substitute to fresh meat > and people nowadays tend to view it fairly negatively as they associate it > with ration packs and poor quality meat," Ms Da-hae West, author of the > English-language cookbook Eat Korean, told AFP. "Because Spam is both > salty and high in fat, it complements the spicy, tangy elements of Korean > food very well - particularly kimchi, as the flavours balance each other > out," she said. > > Spam was introduced to the peninsula by the United States army in the > 1950s, when civilian food supplies were running low - with meat scarce - > during the Korean War. > > South Korea is the second-biggest consumer of Spam after the US, according > to US conglomerate Hormel Foods..." > > https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-24140705 == Love the wee dog ![]() ![]() > > "Why is Spam a luxury food in South Korea? > > Asia is celebrating the annual lunar thanksgiving holiday this week. In > South Korea, where it's known as Chuseok, the holiday is celebrated by > visiting family, paying respects to ancestors... and the giving and > receiving of packaged cans of Spam. > > The pre-cooked tins of pork meat are the stuff of jokes, lunch boxes, > wartime memories and, here in South Korea, a low-key, national love > affair. > > Spam has become a staple of South Korean life, and the country is now the > biggest consumer of it outside the US. > > Since Spam was first launched in the US before World War II, more than > seven billion of these chunky little cans have rolled off production > lines - like the ones at Spam's South Korean factory in Chuncheong > Province. > > Here you can find Classic Spam, Mild Spam, Bacon Spam, Garlic Spam€¦. "If > you've got Spam" the slogan on the can proclaims, "you've got it all!" > > So, not for South Korean cans, a dusty shelf at the back of the > supermarket. > > Humble origins > Spam, and its home-grown competitors, are prime gifts for the lunar > thanksgiving holiday, and they are displayed with verve, in lavish > gift-boxes, sometimes topped with ribbon. > > Spam is considered a luxury item, although its origins are humble > The premium Black Label hamper will set you back around $75 (£50). > > "It has Andalucia Olive Oil, and nine tins of Spam," the company's brand > manager, Shin Hyo Eun, explains. > > The only way to get meat in those days was to smuggle it from the army > base > Ho Gi-suk, Restaurant owner > "Spam has a premium image in Korea. It's probably the most desirable gift > one could receive, and to help create the high-class image, we use famous > actors in our commercials. > > "Anyone who gets a Spam gift-set also gets a warm feeling in their heart." > > Spam does have a different image here, compared with the West. Where else > would television commercials show a young couple ditching their romantic > dinner to head home for a plate of Spam? > > But its origins here are much more humble. > > Smuggled spam > > Spam was introduced to Korea by the US army during the Korean War, when > food was scarce - and meat even scarcer. Back then, people used whatever > they could find to make a meal. > > But the appeal of Spam lasted through the years of plenty and it's now so > much a part of South Korean food culture, that it's the staple ingredient > in one of the country's favourite dishes: budae jigae or army stew. > > There are lots of restaurants specialising in it, but the most famous line > one particular street, just around the corner from a US military base. > > One of the restaurants there is run by Ho Gi-suk. > > She claims to have invented Army Stew back in 1954, when someone brought > her smuggled spam, sausages and bacon from the local army base. Mrs Ho > made them into a spicy soup, and the rest is history. > > "Back then," she tells me, "there wasn't a lot to eat. But I acquired some > ham and sausages€¦ the only way to get meat in those days was to smuggle it > from the army base. > > "We had to make do with whatever the soldiers had left over; sometimes it > was turkey, sometimes Spam. We'd make a stew with whatever came out, and > my recipe was copied and spread throughout Korea." > > Army Stew is now well-established as part of South Korea's culinary > landscape - as traditional here as Spam gift-sets for thanksgiving. > > "It's salty, and greasy, and goes very well with the spices," one customer > told me. "Korean soup and American ham - it's the perfect fusion food." > > </> The funny thing about that is that I've never seen Korean army stew served in Hawaii. It's easy enough to make so it might go over good at a party. My guess is that you'd be a popular guy if you made it at parties. I wouldn't do it myself but that's just the kind of crazy stuff that millennials like to do. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCogEWzGDQQ == That is one heckuva mix in that!!! |
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