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Monday, July 2, 2018

Eating Dog Soup, Korea, Bosintang 보신탕 - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

Bosintang (boshintang) (???; ???) or gaejangguk (???), called dangogiguk (????) in North Korea, is a Korean soup that includes dog meat as its primary ingredient. The soup has been claimed to provide increased virility. The meat is boiled with vegetables such as green onions, perilla leaves, and dandelions, and spices such as Doenjang (??), Gochujang (???), and perilla seed powder. It is seasoned with Agastache rugosa before eating. The dish, one of the most common Korean foods made from dog meat, has a long history in Korean culture, but has in recent years been criticized both inside and outside Korea by people with a food taboo on dog meat.


Video Bosintang



History

The consumption of dog meat can be traced back to antiquity. Dog bones were excavated in a neolithic settlement in Changnyeong (??), South Gyeongsang Province. A wall painting in the Goguryeo tombs complex (??? ???; ??? ???) in South Hwanghae Province, a UNESCO World Heritage site which dates from 4th century AD, depicts a slaughtered dog in a storehouse (Ahn, 2000).

Approximately in 1816, Jeong Hak Yu (???; ???), the second son of Jeong Yak-yong (???; ???), a prominent politician and scholar of Choseon dynasty at the time, wrote a poem called Nongawollyeonga (?????; ?????). This poem, an important source of Korean folk history, describes what ordinary Korean farmer families did in each month of a year. In the description of August, the poem tells of a married woman visiting her birth parents with boiled dog meat, rice cake, and rice wine, thus showing the popularity of dog meat at the time (Ahn, 2000; Seo, 2002).

In Dongguk Seshigi (?????; ?????), a book written by a Korean scholar Hong Suk Mo (???; ???) in 1849, contains a recipe of Boshintang including a boiled dog and green onion.

A common misconception is that Boshintang (and dog meat in general) is outright illegal in South Korea, this is not quite true. It is not classified as a livestock (under the Livestock Sanitation Management Act - livestock covered are cattle, horse, donkey, sheep, goat, pig, chicken, duck, geese, turkey, quail, pheasant, rabbit and deer), which some have taken to indicate its illegality, but it simply means it is unregulated except by the more general Food Sanitation Law. As such, restaurants serving Boshintang are subject to regular inspection by city food hygiene inspections (including testing of the dog meat for contaminants), as are all other restaurants. The conditions of the raising and of the slaughtering of the animals are not subject to inspection, unlike the above regulated livestock. Dog meat (of which Boshintang is one of the most commonly served dishes) is still regularly consumed and can be found easily at many restaurants across South Korea. In 2006 it was, in fact, the 4th most commonly consumed meat in South Korea, after beef, chicken and pork (an industry value of 1.4 trillion won).


Maps Bosintang



Names

There are many different names for this dish in the Korean language, some of which may be considered euphemisms.


What Does Dog Taste Like? | Look At All The Poor People
src: lookatallthepoorpeople.com


Controversy


Bosintang - Wikidata
src: upload.wikimedia.org


See also

  • Asocena
  • Korean cuisine
  • List of soups
  • List of meat dishes
  • Nureongi

Boshingtang on FeedYeti.com
src: mfraiman.files.wordpress.com


Notes

^a Not to be confused with the homophone "??" (gejang; marinated crabs) or "???" (Yukgaejang; beef soup).


File:Bosintang.JPG - Wikimedia Commons
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References

Source of article : Wikipedia