Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Korean Temple Food Culture Experience Center

Near Anguk Station (line 3) is the Korean Temple Food Culture Experience Center. On weekends special cooking classes are offered, but for those who don't have time to sign up or are unfortunate in signing up too late for the limited 20-person participation per event, then just popping into the center to see the spectacular food display is educational in itself!

The food is displayed by seasonal foods and festive event foods. However, it's important to say that Korean Buddhist food is (1) based on the whole and nature food concepts valued in current society (making it very popular), (2) it's based on vegetarianism and the concept of living in harmony with the animal world and not having a hierarchical food chain, and (3) it has limitations on five foods (onions, garlic, chives, green onions and leeks) that excite the senses and affect those in the early stages of cultivation.


Natural food ingredients:
  • Soy sauce, soybean paste, red pepper paste, and salt are often used to create the salty taste of temple food. 
  • Honey, brown sugar, white sugar, and starch syrup are used for sweetness. 
  • Spicy flavors are provided by ginger, red pepper powder, red peppers, green peppers, piperitum leaves or powders, and occasionally black pepper and mustard. 
  • Some of the condiments used include: vinegar for the sour taste; sesame seeds, perilla seeds, sesame oil, perilla oil, and soybean oil for savoriness. 
  • Kelp, shitake mushrooms, dried Cedrela sinensis branches, and white radish are flavor enhancers. 
  • Chinese pepper, bang-a (Korean mint), and perilla seeds improve and balance flavors.
Three Merits and Six Tastes:

Traditionally temple food should have three merits and six tastes. The three merits are: purity (referring to cleanliness and freshness of ingredients), flexibility (from the tenderness of food); compliment tastes of all ingredients used.

The six tastes are: saltiness, sourness, sweetness, bitterness, spiciness, and astringency, all of which must be in harmony.


However, the tastes and aromas of temple food are unavoidably limited, as the usage of meat and the five pungent vegetables (onion and onion family) are prohibited. Buddhist monks and nuns have overcome this challenge by developing a variety of natural seasonings and spices. These natural seasonings and recipes created in each temple, and passed down orally, have resulted in the establishment of a unique culinary tradition.

NEW YEAR'S EVE:
braised shitake mushroom with white radish
yaksik
seasoned white radish
kimchi dumplings
japchae

On New Year's Eve, all-night prayer and practice, courageous waking meditative practice, or a Dharma assembly marking the New Year are commonly held at Buddhist temples --- though events vary by temple. On this special day, yaksik (literally "medicinal food") or sweet rice with nuts and jujubes, dumplings, assorted side dishes made of white radish, and japchae (stir-fried glass noodles and vegetables) are enjoyed.
SEOLAL (LUNAR NEW YEAR'S DAY):
Monastics at mountain hermitages prepare and exchange offerings to each other. Dumplings, rice cakes, and gangjeong (deep-fried rice puff) are commonly shared. Samja (deep-fried sweet rice cookies) and gangjeong are made by frying glutinous rice dough in boiling oil
SPRING:
deep-fried assorted mushrooms with sweet and spice sauce
stir-fried noodles and spring vegetables
temple-style vegetarian dumplings
cherry tomatoes pickled in Korean raspberry marmalade
gardenia fruit rice
shepherd's purse soybean paste stew
SPRING:
stir-fried glass noodles and bamboo shoots
seasoned Kalopanax sprouts
fried dried ???
braised banga (Korean mint) leaves
Fischers ragwort Kimchi
mugwort rice
shepherd's purse and bean sprout soup
BUDDHA'S BIRTHDAY:
water parsley ganghoe
glutinous rice cakes
parched beans
shredded white radish
water parsley bibimbap
spinach soybean paste soup

On Buddha's birthday, songpyeon (half-moon rice cakes), black beans, water parsley, and seasoned vegetables were often prepared to welcome temple visitors, as the eighth day of the fourth lunar month was a widely celebrated folk holiday even outside of Buddhist communities. Bibimbap, water parsley ganghoe, and roasted beans are also offered to visitors at Buddhist temples on Buddha's birthday.
SUMMER: 
Fresh ginseng and vegetables rolled with sliced zucchini
stir-fried sliced potatoes with perilla seeds
stuffed summer squash
sichuan pepper leaf and young summer radish kimchi
steamed butterbur with perilla seeds
green tea leaf rice
soybean paste sauce
SUMMER:
stir-fried dried acorn jelly
potato porridge
chilled ginger and eggplant salad
seasoned Korean melon
pickled radish
seasoned thistle with rice
butterbur perilla seed soup
SAMBOK (the hottest period of summer):
watermelon dipped in soybean paste
lettuce kimchi
zucchini pancakes
lotus flower tea
piperitum jangajji
noodles in cold soybean and pine nut soup

Temple monastics endure hot weather by eating cold noodles in thick soybean soup, which not only helps beat the heat, but also provides sufficient water and nutrition. Possible stomachaches arising from watermelon, another temple thirst-quencher, are avoided by slightly dipping the watermelon in soybean paste.
AUTUMN:
deep-fried ginseng
deep-fried mushroom with sweet and spicy sauce
steamed burdock
oyster mushroom and radish salad
perilla leaf chili paste pancakes
rice
mushroom and sichuan pepper leaf soup with perilla seeds
AUTUMN:
grilled burdock
lotus root and green laver pancakes
mushroom and radish dumplings
diced radish kimchi
salted seaweed
deodeok rice
taro soup
CHUSEOK (KOREAN THANKSGIVING):
three-colored songpyeon
three-color dasik (tea cookies)
sweet rice punch

Oryeo sonpyeon (half-moon rice cakes made of early-ripening rice), sweet rice punch made of newly harvested rice, and newly harvested fruits are used in Chuseok ancestral rites. At Buddhist temples, rice cakes, fruit, cinnamon punch, sweet rice punch, and tea (like the 6 offerings to the Buddha) are offered to the Buddhist altar for prayers. Mungbean pancakes and songpyeon are especially significant offerings during the Harvest Moon Festival.
WINTER:
deep-fried lotus root stuffed with tofu
whole pear stuffed with white kimchi
jujube and tofu dumplings
seasoned dried persimmon
watery seaweed salad
gulfweed and hijikia rice
dried zucchini stew
WINTER:
stir-fried mushroom and assorted vegetables with soybean paste
deep-fried neungi mushroom with sweet and spicy sauce
braised dried radish greens with soybean paste
seasoned walnut and sinchuan pepper leaf with spicy sauce
pickled radish fermented with gardenia fruit
steamed sticky rice wrapped in lotus leaves
pine mushroom soup

Foods developed by various temples:

Baekyang Temple:
Cedrela pancakes
steamed tofu topped with water parsley
sedum water kimchi
stir-fried lotus root and walnuts
seasoned dried radish
shitake mushroom and tofu rice
battered aralia sprouts and bean soup
Yeongseon Temple:
stir-fried noodles and chili pepper
seasoned sliced potato
grilled perilla leaves
pickled radish
sauteed beans seasoned with sauce
rye rice
butterbur stem soybean paste stew
Unmun Temple:
seasoned radish leaves
deep-fried shepherd's purse
mugwort pancakes
seasoned day lily
seasoned whiteman's foot
peanut glutinous rice
mugwort soup
Koun Temple:
seasoned buckwheat
radish leaves seasoned with rich soybean paste
braised burdock leaves
acorn jelly
braised peanuts
rice with assorted nutritious ingredients
taro soup
Jinkweon Temple:
grilled deodeok seasoned with soy sauce
kimchi
braised tofu
pickled cedrela
prickly ash pepper soy sauce
millet rice
neungi mushroom soup
Baekheung Hermitage:
braised tofu and chestnuts
kimchi with chili pepper seeds
grilled burdock coated with sticky rice porridge
kohlrabi salad
pickled ogapi
radish rice
Chinese cabbage and bean powder soup
OTHER FOOD CULTURES:

Mugwort Gathering Day:
mandarin oranges
gimbap (seasoned rice rolls)

When traveling to nearby mountains for gathering mugwort, gimbap (seasoned rice rolls), mandarin oranges, and cucumbers (all regularly found in temple kitchens) are packed.
TONSURE DAY FOOD:
laver
tofu pancakes
cooked glutinous rice
seaweed soup

Buddhist monks and nuns take the tonsure twice each month of the lunar calendar -- on the 14th day and the second to last day of the month. They regain energy lost due to tonsure by eating cooked glutinous rice, laver, tofu pancakes, and seaweed soup.
A monk's breakfast table:
steamed tofu roots
pine nut porridge
steamed sweet potatoes

simple meals, such as porridge or steamed vegetables, are often served on a monastic's breakfast table, as a heavy breakfast could hinder spiritual studies.
Raw food:
Eminent Buddhist monks traditionally ate a variety of raw foods when engaged in intensive meditation or during waking meditative practice. Non-glutinous rice and glutinous rice are soaked in water a day prior to serving so that they may be easily chewed. Iron is received from pine needle powder, heat from honey and jujubes, energy from Chinese matrimony vines, protein from black beans, and carbohydrates and fiber from chestnuts ... thus all essential nutrients are provided.
Good foods for fighting colds:
bonnet bellflower root jangajji
white radish jangajji
stir-fried radish greens
kimchi and bean sprouts porridge
neungi mushroom soup

Neungi mushroom soup, and kimchi and bean sprout porridge are good for preventing or fighting colds as they help raise body temperature.