ボックムバプ

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Revision as of 22:50, 19 June 2025 by Fire (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox food | name = ''ポックムパプ'' | image = Bokkeum-bap.jpg | caption = | alternate_name = チャーハン | country = 韓国 | region = | national_cuisine = 韓国 | creator = | year = | mintime = | maxtime = | type = ''ポックム'' (炒め物)<br />チャーハン...")

Bokkeum-bap/ja
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ポックムパプ
Alternative namesチャーハン
Typeポックム (炒め物)<br />チャーハン
Place of origin韓国
Associated cuisine韓国
Main ingredientsパプ (炊いたご飯)
Variationsキムチポックムパプ (キムチチャーハン)
Similar dishesチャーハン, チャオファン, カオパット, ナシゴレン

ポックムパプKorean볶음밥)またはチャーハンは、韓国料理であり、パプ(炊いたご飯)と他の材料を油で炒めて作られる料理である。炊いたご飯以外の最も主要な材料の名前が、料理名の冒頭に付くことが多く、例えばキムチポックムパプ(キムチチャーハン)などがある。

As an add-on

In Korean restaurants, fried rice is a popular end-of-meal add-on. Diners may say "bap bokka juseyo" (밥 볶아 주세요. literally "Please fry rice.") after eating main dishes cooked on a tabletop stove, such as dak-galbi (spicy stir-fried chicken) or nakji-bokkeum (stir-fried octopus), then cooked rice along with gimgaru (seaweed flakes) and sesame oil will be added directly into the remains of the main dish, stir-fried and scorched.

By ingredients

The name of the most prominent ingredient other than cooked rice often appears at the very front of the name of the dish. Kimchi-bokkeum-bap (kimchi fried rice), beoseot-bokkeum-bap (mushroom fried rice), saeu-bokkeum-bap (shrimp fried rice) are some examples. When there is no main or special ingredient, the dish is usually called either bokkeum-bap (fried rice) or yachae-bokkeum-bap (vegetable fried rice).

By style

Korean Chinese fried rice, often called junggukjip bokkeum-bap (중국집 볶음밥; "Chinese restaurant fried rice") in South Korea, is characterized by the smoky flavor from the use of wok on high heat, eggs scrambled or fried in the scallion-infused oil, and the jajang sauce (a thick black sauce used in jajangmyeon) served with the dish.

Another popular dish, cheolpan-bokkeum-bap (철판 볶음밥; "iron griddle fried rice") is influenced by the style of Japanese teppanyaki. The Japanese word teppan (鉄板; "iron griddle") and the Korean word cheolpan (철판; "iron griddle") are cognates, sharing the same Chinese characters.

See also