Authentic Korean Bean Sprout Kimchi Side Dish (Sukjunamul-muchim: 숙주나물무침)
Authentic Korean Bean Sprout Kimchi Side Dish (Sukjunamul-muchim: 숙주나물무침)
Have you ever made a meal, but felt that you could use just one more side dish? Me too. Today, I will be providing you a great Asian recipe for an Authentic Korean Bean Sprout Kimchi Side Dish (Sukjunamul-muchim: 숙주나물무침). It's full of umami flavor and goes great with any Asian meal.
Authentic Korean Bean Sprout Kimchi Side Dish (Sukjunamul-muchim: 숙주나물무침)

Have you ever made a meal, but felt that you could use just one more side dish? Me too. Today, I will be providing you a great Asian recipe for an Authentic Korean Bean Sprout Kimchi Side Dish (Sukjunamul-muchim: 숙주나물무침). It's full of umami flavor and goes great with any Asian meal.

Mung bean sprouts are a culinary vegetable grown by sprouting mung beans. They can be grown by placing and watering the sprouted beans in the shade until the hypocotyls grow long. Mung bean sprouts are extensively cultivated and consumed in East and Southeast Asia.

Cultivation
A variety of techniques are used for sprouting mung beans. A common technique for home growers is sprouting the beans in a jar, with a fine mesh or muslin cloth tied over the top with a rubber band or string. Fresh water is then poured into the jar three to four times a day; the jars are then upturned and left to drain. The precise growing technique to use depends on the amount that one wants to collect. The main principles are: selecting good seed (new and uniform), ensuring that light reaches the seeds, and also ensuring they receive enough humidity while avoiding waterlogging.

In Korean cuisine, sukjunamul (숙주나물) refers to both the mung bean sprouts themselves and the namul (seasoned vegetable dish) made from mung bean sprouts. Mung bean sprouts are not as common an ingredient as soybean sprouts in Korean cuisine, but they are used in bibimbap, in the fillings of dumplings and in sundae (Korean sausage).

The name sukjunamul is a compound of Sukju and namul, of which the former derived from the name of Sin Sukju (1417–1475), one of the prominent Joseon scholars. Sin Sukju betrayed his colleagues and favoured the King's uncle as a claimant to the throne. People regarded Sin Sukju's move as unethical and immoral, and so gave his name to mung bean sprouts, which tend to go bad and spoil very easily.

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Happy Cooking,
UB

#Authentic #Korean #Beansprout #Kimchi #Sidedish #숙주나물무침

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