Gopchang and beef tongue I tried in Seoul - So good!!


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Gopchang and beef tongue I tried in Seoul - So good!!
보글보글~~ 맛있어~~~ #officelunch #gopchang #곱창 #곱창전골 #foodie #instafood #foodporn #먹방 #먹스타그램 #CGSeats #음식 #요리 #식사 #조지아 #아틀란타 #둘루스 #점심 #lunch (at Duluth, Georgia) https://www.instagram.com/p/Co-jQBru0-t/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Regional Cuisines of Korea
Incheon: Jajangmyeon
Korean Jajang sauce is black, a color created by fermented beans and added caramel. The recipe is different compared to the Chinese original. The sweet sauce is very appealing to Korean taste buds, making it a very popular dish throughout Korea.
Chuncheon: Buckwheat Noodles.
Buckwheat is easier to grow compared to rice and wheat in barren areas, making them more common in the Northern areas of Korea. The workers who built Chuncheon’s Soyang River Dam in the past enjoyed the cheap and easy-to-digest buckwheat noodles in Chuncheon, which eventually became popular.
Jeonju: Bibimbap
Bibimbap is one of the most classic Korean dishes. Jeonju bibimbap is mentioned in the 19th century cookbook Siuijeonseo, which claims that Jeonju’s version of bibimbap is the most famour in Korea. Records tell us bibimbap appeared in Jeonju about 220 years ago.
Andong: Jjimdak
One theory of its origin is that in the Joseon Dynasty, the scholar-officials (Yangban) who lived wthin Andong’s city walls would make a kind of braised chicken dish on special days. Another theory is that it developed from a garlic chicken dish popular at Andong Market in the late 1970.
Daegu: Gopchang
The fame of Daegu Gopchang (beef, sometimes pork intestines) can be traced back to the 1970s and 80s. During the Korean financial crisis, many Koreans who lost their jobs opened up Gopchang stalls at Daegu’s Anjirang Market, gradually taking the shape it has today.
Naju: Gomtang
During the Japanese colonial period. Naju was an area with plenty of livestock including cattle. The cattle were used for food and leather products, with leftover meat and offal given to local workers so they could make a stew out of it.
Busan: Dwaeji Gukbap
The origin of Dwaeji dates back to the Korean War, when refugees who fled to Busan used ingredients discarded by the US military, such as pork bones, minced meat, etc, and made a soup of it.
Jeju: Black Pork
The name Black Pork comes from the black hair on the island’s pigs. They are smaller than other domestic pigs, and you can only find them on Jeju Island. It is often named as a must-eat delicacy on the island.
Gopchang
MAMAMOO for Daehan Gopchang
They have the same taste in food
MAMAMOO for Daehan Gopchang