![]() It can also be used as a component of soup broth, as in the popular stew doenjang jjigae, which usually includes tofu, various vegetables such as chile peppers, zucchini, and scallion, and (optionally) mushrooms, red meat, or scallops.ĭoenjang is rich in flavonoids and beneficial vitamins, minerals, and plant hormones (phytoestrogens) which are sometimes claimed to possess anti carcinogenic properties. This combination of leaf vegetable and doenjang (or ssamjang) often complements popular Korean meat dishes such as samgyeopsal, bulgogi, bibimbap and bossam. However, it is more commonly mixed with garlic, sesame oil, and sometimes gochujang to produce ssamjang, which is then traditionally eaten with or without rice wrapped in leaf vegetables such as red leaf lettuce. Seasoned doenjang ( Korean: 조미된장) – product that contains more than 90% of doenjang or hansik-doenjang.ĭoenjang can be eaten as a condiment in raw-paste form with vegetables, as flavored seasoning or even as a dipping condiment.Doenjang ( Korean: 된장, "fermented soybean paste") – doenjang made with non-traditional meju (which can be made of soybean, rice, barley, wheat or degreased soybean, and ripened using traditional method or Aspergillus) and saline solution.Hansik-doenjang ( Korean: 한식된장, "Korean-style fermented soybean paste") – doenjang made with traditional style meju and brine.Korean Ministry of Food and Drug Safety's Food Code classifies doenjang into three categories by their ingredients. Some current makers also add fermented, dried, and ground anchovies to accentuate doenjang's savory flavor. While traditional doenjang is made with soybeans and brine only, many factory-made variants of doenjang contain a fair amount of wheat flour just like most factory-made soy sauce does. No soy sauce is produced in the process, and the meju aged with the smaller amount of brine becomes jangjae, another type of doenjang. Jangjae ( Korean: 장재) – Smaller amount of brine is used from the beginning.Tojang ( Korean: 토장) – When the aged brine is boiled to become ganjang, the rest (aged meju chunks) are mashed to become tojang.Though doenjang and ganjang are usually made together, doenjang can also be made without producing any filtrate. When fermented well, the aged meju chunks are mashed to become doenjang, and the filtrate is boiled to become ganjang. Charcoal and chillies are added for their absorbent and antibacterial properties, as well as folk-religious beliefs that they drive evil spirits away. In Jeongwol, the first month of the lunar year, well-fermented meju bricks are washed and sun-dried.Īfter drying, the meju bricks are aged in onggi crocks ( jangdok) with brine. When the bricks harden, they are tied with rice straws to the eaves of the house, or put in the warm ondol room with rice straws, for fermentation. The meju bricks are then dried in a cool, shaded area for a week to several weeks until firm. About a doe (≈1.8 litres) or two does of pounded soybean is chunked, compressed, and shaped into a cube or a sphere called meju. ![]() Soybeans are soaked overnight, boiled in salt water, and then pounded in a mortar ( jeolgu) or coarsely ground in a millstone. Meju, Korean soybean brick, is made around ipdong in early November. Soup soy sauce is also made during the doenjang production. Production ĭoenjang is made entirely of fermented soybean and brine. Gyuhap chongseo explains how to pick a date for brewing, what to forbear, and how to keep and preserve doenjang and ganjang. Joseon texts such as Guhwangchwaryo and Jeungbo sallim gyeongje contain detailed procedures on how to brew good-quality doenjang and ganjang. Sikhwaji, a section from Goryeosa (History of Goryeo), recorded that doenjang and ganjang were included in the relief supplies in 1018, after a Khitan invasion, and in 1052, when a famine occurred. ![]() In Samguk Sagi, a historical record of the Three Kingdoms era, it is written that doenjang and ganjang along with meju and jeotgal were prepared for the wedding ceremony of the King Sinmun in February 683. Jangdoks used for doenjang production are found in the mural paintings of Anak Tomb No.3 from the 4th century Goguryeo. ![]() The Records of the Three Kingdoms, a Chinese historical text written and published in the third century AD, mentions that " Goguryeo people are good at brewing fermented soybeans" in the section named Dongyi (Eastern foreigners), in the Book of Wei. The earliest soybean fermentations in Korea seem to have begun prior to the era of the Three Kingdoms. It is also a byproduct of soup soy sauce production. Doenjang ( 된장 "thick sauce") or soybean paste is a type of fermented bean paste made entirely of soybean and brine. ![]()
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