Jump to content

Sungnyung

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kanguole (talk | contribs) at 09:25, 13 April 2020 (History: link Gyerim yusa). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Sungnyung
Korean name
Hangul
숭늉
Revised Romanizationsungnyung
McCune–Reischauersungnyung

Sungnyung is a traditional Korean infusion made from boiled scorched rice.

Preparation

This drink is typically made from nurungji, the roasted (but not charred) crust of rice that forms on the bottom of a pot after cooking rice. Water is poured on this brown crust and the contents are put to a simmer until the water gains enough flavor of the scorched rice.[1]

Making sungnyung from dolsot-bap
Dolsot-bap (stone bowl rice)
Pouring hot water on nurungji (scorced rice)
Closing the lid of dolsot
Brewed sungnyung in dolsot

History

Records of sungnyung can be found in the late Joseon era documents of Imwon Gyeongjeji (임원경제지) and also in the 12th-century Chinese Song Dynasty's Gyerim yusa,[1] which supports the theory that sungnyung has been eaten since the Goryeo period.

Rice in Korea was traditionally made by using a heavy iron cauldron (like a Dutch oven), with the rice being cooked until all water had been boiled away and a crust made on the bottom of the pot.[2] Making sungnyung would not only prevent waste of the remaining rice that was sticking to the pot, it would also naturally clear out the pot's insides which made cleaning easier. As sungnyung was made after rice had been served, it was typically served after the meal.[1]

The consumption of sungnyung waned as nickel-silver pots and modern electric rice cookers gained popularity, as they do not generally leave a layer of roasted crust after the rice is steamed.[1] However, in the late 20th century sungnyung began to gain popularity again and many electric rice cookers now come with the ability to cook sungnyung.[3] Prepackaged nurungji are also commercially available and can be used to make sungnyung in a short of amount of time by just adding boiling water.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d (in Korean) Nurungji at Encyclopedia of Korean Culture
  2. ^ (in Korean) Sungnyung at Doosan Encyclopedia
  3. ^ (in Korean) Making nurungji, MK Business News, 2005-07-15. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
  4. ^ (in Korean) Nurungi's evolution, Gwangju Dream, 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2010-06-26.