"2018 GGHS Team 10"의 두 판 사이의 차이
(→Snack) |
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34번째 줄: | 34번째 줄: | ||
===Main Dishes=== | ===Main Dishes=== | ||
===Snack=== | ===Snack=== | ||
+ | Goryeobyeong(고려병,高麗餠)<yumilgwa,(유밀과,油蜜菓)> | ||
+ | Goryeobyeong is a cake made with flour, honey and sesame oil. Since ancient times, the yumilgwa has been made into a fruit shape and put on the table for a memorial ceremony instead of the fruits that why it is called yumilgwa what means "fake fruit“ in Korean. <ref>http://www.saimdangfood.kr/html/hangwa_kind.html</ref> In the <<Goryeosa,>> Chungnyeorwang went to Wonnara to attend a wedding ceremony of his son and served the yumilgwa at the party. Records show that the taste was melting in the mouth and it had a great reputation. For this reason, yumilgwa were especially called Goryeobyeong in Mongolia. <ref>http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/Item/E0004602</ref> Since Goryeo as a Buddhist country banned killing it was not possible to hold fish for a memorial service. Instead, they put fish-shaped yumilgwa on the table. The consumption of yumilgwa was increasing so instead of yumilgwa people began to put fruits on the table. Old records also show that " yumilgwa production was prohibited" because at the time that Goryeo Dynasty was going through an era when rice was scarce, and since the ingredients of yumilgwa such as flour, oil, honey or grain syrup were rarer than rice at that time. yumilgwa became a high quality snack with a considerable cost of ingredients and consumption of sweeteners and oils in comparison to other snacks. <ref>http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/Item/E0004602</ref> | ||
+ | Recipe | ||
+ | 1. Mix salt, ground pepper, cinnamon powder and ginger powder; | ||
+ | 2. Add sesame oil; | ||
+ | 3. Mix ginger juice and honey; | ||
+ | 4. Make shapes | ||
+ | 5. Fry in cooking oil. | ||
+ | 6. Leave it to soak in grain syrup for 20 to 30 minutes. | ||
+ | |||
===Drink=== | ===Drink=== | ||
==Goryeo Dishes We Eat Nowadays== | ==Goryeo Dishes We Eat Nowadays== |
2018년 7월 26일 (목) 11:23 판
Team 10 Introduction
Team Position | Name (English) | Name (Korean) | Student ID | Wiki ID |
---|---|---|---|---|
Teacher | Abilova Flora | 아빌로바 플로라 | Arolf90 | |
Leader | Kim Ji Soo | 김지수 | 20705 | pocky |
Vice-Leader | Kim Han Young | 김한영 | 20706 | 김한영 |
Leader | Yoo ha eun | 유하은 | 20318 | Dbgkdms |
Vice-Leader | Song se young | 송세영 | 10213 | Team_10_se_young |
Teacher
Students:
- Kim Ji Soo - Team Leader(Goryeo Food)
- Kim Han Young
- Yoo Ha Eun - Team Leader(Goryeo Dance and Singing)
- Song Se Young
Brief History of Goryeo
Goryeo (고려; 高麗; [ko.ɾjʌ]; 918–1392), also spelled as Koryŏ, was a Korean kingdom established in 918 by King Taejo. This kingdom later gave name to the modern exonym "Korea".[1] It united the Later Three Kingdoms in 936 and ruled most of the Korean Peninsula until it was removed by the founder of the Joseon, Yi Seong-gye, in 1392. Goryeo expanded Korea's borders to present-day Wonsan in the northeast (936–943), the Yalu River (993) and finally almost the whole of the Korean Peninsula (1374). By the late 13th century, after nearly 30 years of warfare with the Mongols of the Yuan dynasty, Goryeo lost much of its power but retained nominal control. Although King Gongmin managed to free his kingdom from the Yuan overlordship in the mid-14th century, General Yi Seonggye revolted and overthrew King Gongyang in 1392, establishing himself as Taejo of Joseon. Gongyang was killed in 1394.
1 Goryeo Diet
1.1Goryeo's Food Habits
What they ate
Main Dishes
Snack
Goryeobyeong(고려병,高麗餠)<yumilgwa,(유밀과,油蜜菓)> Goryeobyeong is a cake made with flour, honey and sesame oil. Since ancient times, the yumilgwa has been made into a fruit shape and put on the table for a memorial ceremony instead of the fruits that why it is called yumilgwa what means "fake fruit“ in Korean. [2] In the <<Goryeosa,>> Chungnyeorwang went to Wonnara to attend a wedding ceremony of his son and served the yumilgwa at the party. Records show that the taste was melting in the mouth and it had a great reputation. For this reason, yumilgwa were especially called Goryeobyeong in Mongolia. [3] Since Goryeo as a Buddhist country banned killing it was not possible to hold fish for a memorial service. Instead, they put fish-shaped yumilgwa on the table. The consumption of yumilgwa was increasing so instead of yumilgwa people began to put fruits on the table. Old records also show that " yumilgwa production was prohibited" because at the time that Goryeo Dynasty was going through an era when rice was scarce, and since the ingredients of yumilgwa such as flour, oil, honey or grain syrup were rarer than rice at that time. yumilgwa became a high quality snack with a considerable cost of ingredients and consumption of sweeteners and oils in comparison to other snacks. [4] Recipe 1. Mix salt, ground pepper, cinnamon powder and ginger powder; 2. Add sesame oil; 3. Mix ginger juice and honey; 4. Make shapes 5. Fry in cooking oil. 6. Leave it to soak in grain syrup for 20 to 30 minutes.