16
Aug

More Than One Hui

   Posted by: ZenKimchi   in Korean Food Concept

Can you believe that this video gets more controversy on YouTube than the live octopus video?

Yes, there is some live octopus in there, but that’s not the controversy. There seems to be a string of Japanese folks or Nipponphiles who are slamming the restaurant for trying to copy Japanese food.

Hold on right there!

This is not Japanese food in this restaurant. The only reason the video’s title is “Sashimi!” is that I didn’t know the Korean word for it at the time.

No, this is Hui 회(pronounced “whay”).

I adore Japanese food and culture, but eating raw fish is not uniquely Japanese. Sushi actually originates in Southeast Asia, where raw fish was packed with rice and fermented for preservation. This method moved through China and eventually to Japan.

Did it go through Korea along the way? Did Japan really get sushi from Korea? I’m still researching that and would appreciate any enlightenment in that department. There may be traces of this in the southwestern Korean stinky, stinky fermented fish dish, Hong-eo Hui 홍어회, which is similar to the Thai nampla and the Japanese proto-sushi, nare-zushi. I’m sure the Japanese culture warriors would attack a notion like this as blasphemy. Yet even The Cambridge World History of Food vaguely mentions this connection.

Nonetheless, this fish packed with rice turned into Edo-style sushi. Then the fermentation was replaced by just adding vinegar to rice, creating modern sushi (sushi means “vinegar rice,” and the Korean word chobap 초밥 means the same thing). More great sushi history is here.

Korea is a fishing nation. Fishermen naturally ate their catch on the boat without starting a dangerous fire to cook it. I’d even venture to say that the Korean fishermen were a bit more adventurous. Live octopus isn’t on many Japanese menus.

Korean Hui, like its Japanese counterpart, is sliced raw fish. The similarities end there. The Hui is served on top of vegetables or cellophane noodles and a dipping sauce of gochujang and vinegar, called chojang 초장. More vegetables, seaweed, grilled fish, and side dishes accompany the Hui. Soy sauce and wasabi is usually on the table as a courtesy, but the Korean way is to dip the fish in chojang and eat it with some of the fresh vegetables, or put the fish in a lettuce wrap.

At the end of a good Hui meal, the bones and remains of the fish are made into a spicy soup, Mae-unTang 매운탕, usually cooked at the table.

imgp1717.JPG

And that, good friends, is how Hui is not Sashimi. It is a distinctly Korean dish.

Now, the food porn:

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This entry was posted on Thursday, August 16th, 2007 at 11:43 am and is filed under Korean Food Concept. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

7 comments so far

 1 

Thanks! I’ll definately be checking it out. Did you happen to go to the Itaewon food festival this weekend? I went with a group of guys and we were all so underwhelmed that we went to Smokey’s for the famous burgers (which, in contrast, were very impressive). To be fair we got there around 1:30 and most of it didn’t open up until 3ish.

October 7th, 2007 at 9:41 pm
 2 

I always miss out on the festivals. Really, the weekend was booked (sound like I have a social life, huh).

Smokey’s burgers are good. A bit pricey. I have recently grown fond of the Wolfhound’s burgers for taste and value.

Tell me more about the food fair.

October 8th, 2007 at 10:53 am
 3 

I just found this place recently too! Good sausages. All the food in that place, and
Wolfhound, I crave on cold wet days. Comfort food.

I went to the food festival in Itaewon on Friday. My review: It was pretty decent. There
were a lot more Korean stalls along the street than there were at the last one. There
was a Russian hut that had smoked fish, the Aussie shop had a stall with meat pies and
fish and chips, and I found South African sausage with a bit of chutney in the middle on
a back street near Three Alleys Pub, BUTt the hot spot of the festival was definitely the
shwarma guy (who is usually set up next to the Coffee Bean, where the old Burger King
used to be near the subway). He was surrounded by a huge crowd for a large portion of
the evening. I was hoping for more Middle Eastern food. In like April of last year they
had a festival and I had THE BEST FALAFEL ever! It was late, cold, and raining like crazy,
but everyone I was with huddled together and had two or three each. It was falafel from
heaven that warmed our little souls. I couldn’t find any falafel this time around, but it
wasn’t raining. I ate till I was stuffed and then rolled myself home.

October 11th, 2007 at 1:55 am
Bernd
 4 

Do you sell Geese (German Gans) for Christmas?

December 12th, 2007 at 9:39 pm
Stephen Williams
 5 

The Deli has moved. Now right underneath the restaurant in a former telecom store. Still the only to get a decent corned beef sandwich in Seoul. Christian makes a damn fine Rueben as well. He can get that Christmas turkey or goose, you need to plan WAY ahead, at least a month. Realize if they don’t grow it here it has to be shipped. Some things are just not worth the cost. The restaurant catered a diner for 35 of us in December, roast turkey and all the trimmings, fabulous!!!!

February 24th, 2008 at 4:25 pm
 6 

Thanks for the update, Stephen.

February 24th, 2008 at 8:26 pm
bobo
 7 

you’re making my tongue hard with your inari eater…exquisite woman..stimulating food…marinating some shortribs with Coke etc for a kalbi pig out this pm..

October 25th, 2009 at 3:12 am

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