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Korean Culinary Cures: From Tummy Aches To Hangovers, Here's How Moms Cook Up Relief

The author's mother, Jenna Cho, holding a pot of <em>samgyetang</em> in her home in Mercer Island, Wash.
Eileen Cho
/
for NPR
The author's mother, Jenna Cho, holding a pot of samgyetang in her home in Mercer Island, Wash.

In first grade, I was hospitalized with pneumonia for over a week. I remember having to take an antibiotic syrup that gave me acid reflux. Immediately after I swallowed it, my Korean immigrant mother spoon-fed me a homemade liquid with small pieces of boiled Korean pear (bae), spices, and honey. This was her take on baesuk, a Korean fruit punch/tea, that she brought to the hospital in a thermos. I remember it lulled my stomach and soothed my throat and chest. The Korean-American pediatrician who oversaw my treatment at the hospital told my mom that he wished he had thought about feeding me this concoction first.

After I was discharged, I vomited for several days with an upset stomach from all the medicines I had to take. My mom would stay up late, soaking rice in water to make me jook, Korean rice porridge, in the morning. I always associated jook with medicine, as it always magically made my stomach feel better. My mom trusted Western medicine, but she also looked to Korean food remedies to help with prevention and treating my symptoms.

Cooking foods to soothe sick children is a ritual for mothers around the world. But in Korea, some foods are widely believed to help treat ailments, boost health and prevent disease.

Koreans have been using foods as remedies since the days when monarchs ruled Korea. The best-known written documentation of these culinary remedies is found in Donguibogam (동의보감), edited by the royal physician Heo Jun during the Joseon dynasty in the 17th century. Donguibogam, which translates as "a priceless book of medicines," consists of 25 volumes — an encyclopedia of sorts — that explore how ailments affect organs and what can be done to treat and prevent diseases. This book is still highly regarded and widely used by Eastern Medicine doctors all over Asia and was added to the UNESCO Memory of the World Register in 2009.

While the research on the medicinal powers of many of these foods is scant, belief in their curative properties is widespread. Here's a look at some of the most popular Korean healing dishes.

<em>Samgyetang </em>(삼계탕), chicken with ginseng soup
Eileen Cho / for NPR
/
for NPR
Samgyetang (삼계탕), chicken with ginseng soup

Samgyetang (삼계탕), chicken with ginseng soup: Samgyetang is a soup made with a whole small chicken stuffed with glutinous rice, garlic, red dates (jujube), peeled chestnuts, and ginseng. (Scroll down for the recipe.) It is traditionally consumed hot by Koreans in the summer on the warmest days of the year, because it is believed to help regulate body temperatures. (There is some science to back up this idea.) Many Koreans strongly believe that ginseng warms up the body, especially the stomach, though the science doesn't seem to support this claim.

<em>Kongnamul-guk</em>, soybean sprout soup
Eileen Cho / for NPR
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for NPR
Kongnamul-guk, soybean sprout soup

Kongnamul-guk (콩나물국), soybean sprout soup: This can be served two ways, with Korean chili flakes for a spicy kick or without. It is commonly believed to help cure hangovers in adults. My mom always said the saltiness of the soup, combined with the natural vitamins found in soybean sprouts, helped "clean" the liver and stomach. While the idea of detox diets isn't backed up by science, scientists in Korea have found some evidence — in rats — that soybeans reduce blood concentrations of acetaldehyde (what alcohol breaks down to as you metabolize it).

The author's mother washes seaweed to make <em>miyeok-guk (</em>미역국), seaweed soup.
Eileen Cho / for NPR
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for NPR
The author's mother washes seaweed to make miyeok-guk (미역국), seaweed soup.

Miyeok-guk (미역국), seaweed soup: Miyeok-guk is made with a protein broth, most commonly beef broth, and miyeok (미역), or seaweed. In Korea, new moms are given this as part of their recovery diet in the hospital. (It's why miyeok is symbolically enjoyed on birthdays.) As certified food scientist Jessica Gavin notes, seaweeds can be rich in minerals like calcium, phosphorus, iron and iodine – all of which are indeed considered important during pregnancy and lactation. In the U.S., my mom has brought thermoses to the hospital filled with this soup to my aunts after childbirth — and I am sure she's not the only Korean immigrant who's done this.

<em>Jook</em> (죽)<em>,</em> or rice porridge
Eileen Cho / for NPR
/
for NPR
Jook (죽), or rice porridge

Jook (죽), rice porridge: You could compare jook to chicken noodle soup. It's a Korean staple for the sick, especially those with stomachaches. It's made by slow-boiling rice that's been left out to soak in water for many hours. The soft, moist texture of the porridge is easily swallowed and digested — my mother would force-feed me this whenever I was nauseous and couldn't keep other foods down. Jook would always calm my stomach. Many Koreans mix in different ingredients, such as pumpkin and abalone, and it is often enjoyed for breakfast or when recovering in the hospital.

A wall of kimchi options at H Mart in Bellevue, Wash.
Eileen Cho / for NPR
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for NPR
A wall of kimchi options at H Mart in Bellevue, Wash.

Kimchi (김치), Korean fermented vegetables: Kimchi comes in hundreds of variations. Two types commonly consumed for health benefits are ggakdugi, or spicy radish kimchi, and mul-kimchi, or water kimchi. Mul-kimchi is often served in the summer, chilled, and the light but salty brine is drunk as a refreshment — it is said to hydrate and replenish the body with salts you sweat out. (American athletes have been known to do something similar, despite a lack of scientific evidence to back up the practice.) Ggakdugi often accompanies soups, such as seolleongtang, or oxtail soup, consumed when hungover. My mom always says the spice of kimchi will "wake up your body and mind."

Baesuk (배숙), Korean pear punch/tea: Baesuk is a traditional Korean punch/tea made by poaching or steaming Korean pear (bae; 배) with black peppercorns, honey, and ginger. If served hot, it is commonly used as a remedy for the common cold, sore throat, or cough. The ginger is believed to aid with keeping the body warm, the honey is thought to soothe the throat, and the Korean pear is said to help with digestion. As The Salt has reported, there's not much science into the healing properties of tea with honey, but doctors speculate that warm drinks might be comforting because they loosen throat phlegm.

<em>Yuja-cha</em> (유자차), or yuja tea, made with the yuja fruit, is especially high in vitamin C. The tea pictured was made with store-bought yuja marmalade.
Eileen Cho / for NPR
/
for NPR
Yuja-cha (유자차), or yuja tea, made with the yuja fruit, is especially high in vitamin C. The tea pictured was made with store-bought yuja marmalade.

Yuja-cha (유자차), yuja tea: Yuja-cha is a tea made with yuja marmalade in hot water. Yuja (유자) the fruit is mostly cultivated in Asia, but the marmalade, called yuja-cheong, can be easily found at Korean grocery stores or on Amazon. Yuja fruit tastes a bit like a hybrid between a lemon, an orange and grapefruit; yuja marmalade is both sweet and bitter. The tea is often enjoyed in the winter, to warm you up, or when you are sick with a cold, because it is believed to be especially high in vitamin C. My mother made her own variation of the marmalade at home, substituting lemons for yuja, because according to her, if it was "fresh" it had more vitamin C. (On this point, mom was wrong: According to Gavin, yuja has 2.3 times as much vitamin C as the equivalent amount of raw lemon juice.)

The author's mother prepares<em> doraji</em> (도라지), or bellflower root.<strong> </strong>In Korea, it's often culturally associated with cough relief.
Eileen Cho / for NPR
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for NPR
The author's mother prepares doraji (도라지), or bellflower root. In Korea, it's often culturally associated with cough relief.

Doraji (도라지), bellflower root: My mother used to feed me doraji root cut up into tiny cubes and drowned in honey. When raw, doraji has an incredibly bitter taste and smells somewhat like ginseng. Many grocery and departments stores in Korea sell doraji paste in jars, and it's often culturally associated with cough relief. Mom made me down a spoonful every day to combat my severe asthma. (My mother might've been onto something here: Research into the therapeutic potential of bioactive isolates derived from bellflower root has been increasing.) In Korea, doraji is cooked in myriad ways. It's believed to help with maintaining a healthy diet and often used in herbal medicines. If you like Korean bibimbap, you've most likely eaten doraji – it's one of the seasoned vegetables commonly used in the dish. (Once cooked and seasoned, it is no longer bitter.)

As a child, I questioned why my mother was feeding me all these unusual Korean dishes. But now, I see the true healing properties she stirred into her Korean food remedies: selfless love.


Jenna Cho's Samgyetang Recipe

(courtesy of the author's mother)

Ingredients:

1 "young chicken" (we use Cornish hen)

1 cup glutinous rice, rinse and soak in water for at least 1 hour!

Small piece of 1 ginseng root (fresh preferred)

5 small dried jujubes

5 garlic cloves

2 peeled Korean chestnuts

Black pepper

Salt for dipping

Green onion, chopped (optional)

(Note: Most Korean grocery stores sell a samgyetang dry kit with jujubes, rice, chestnuts and dried ginseng — you just need the chicken and garlic cloves.)

Directions:

  • Strain glutinous rice that has been soaked for an hour. Set aside.
  • Remove inside (giblets) of young chicken and wash the chicken, especially the inside, thoroughly.
  • Stuff the chicken with prepared rice, 3 jujubes, 3 garlic cloves, 2 peeled chestnuts and the piece of ginseng. The chicken will be well stuffed, but if you have rice left over, feel free to add it to the broth.
  • Once chicken is stuffed, use wooden toothpick to close the chicken shut. (Sew the toothpick through. You can use multiple toothpicks.)
  • Place the prepared, stuffed chicken in a pot. Add 1 liter of water (until chicken is covered) and throw in the remaining jujubes and garlic cloves. Cover and cook on medium heat for 25 minutes.
  • Turn down the heat and cook for an additional 20 minutes. You can check to see if it is ready by seeing how cooked the rice is — the rice should be soft.
  • Remove the toothpick(s) from the chicken. Garnish with chopped green onion (optional) and black pepper. Serve the soup with chicken in a bowl, with a side of salt to dip the chicken meat. Kimchi is never a bad idea.
  • Eileen W. Cho is a Korean-American photographer and writer based in Paris, France.

    Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Eileen Cho
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