Translations:Korean cuisine/43/en: Difference between revisions

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Message definition (Korean cuisine)
===Vegetables===
[[File:Korea.food-Miyeok.guk-01.jpg|thumb|[[Miyeok guk]], a soup made from the sea seaweed, [[miyeok]]]]
{{see also|List of Korean dishes#Vegetable-based dishes}}
Korean cuisine uses a wide variety of vegetables, which are often served uncooked, either in salads or [[Pickling|pickles]], as well as cooked in various stews, stir-fried dishes, and other hot dishes. Commonly used vegetables include [[Korean radish]], [[napa cabbage]], cucumber, potato, sweet potato, spinach, bean sprouts, scallions, garlic, chili peppers, [[Edible seaweed|seaweed]], [[zucchini]], mushrooms, [[Nelumbo nucifera|lotus root]]. Several types of wild greens, known collectively as ''[[chwinamul]]'' (such as ''[[Aster (genus)|Aster]] scaber''), are a popular dish, and other wild vegetables such as [[Bracken|bracken fern]] shoots (''gosari'') or [[Campanula takesimana|Korean bellflower]] root (''doraji'') are also harvested and eaten in season.Traditional medicinal herbs in Korean cuisine, such as [[ginseng]], [[lingzhi mushroom]], [[wolfberry]], ''[[Codonopsis pilosula]]'', and ''[[Angelica sinensis]]'', are often used as ingredients in cooking, as in ''[[samgyetang]]''.

Vegetables

Miyeok guk, a soup made from the sea seaweed, miyeok

Korean cuisine uses a wide variety of vegetables, which are often served uncooked, either in salads or pickles, as well as cooked in various stews, stir-fried dishes, and other hot dishes. Commonly used vegetables include Korean radish, napa cabbage, cucumber, potato, sweet potato, spinach, bean sprouts, scallions, garlic, chili peppers, seaweed, zucchini, mushrooms, lotus root. Several types of wild greens, known collectively as chwinamul (such as Aster scaber), are a popular dish, and other wild vegetables such as bracken fern shoots (gosari) or Korean bellflower root (doraji) are also harvested and eaten in season.Traditional medicinal herbs in Korean cuisine, such as ginseng, lingzhi mushroom, wolfberry, Codonopsis pilosula, and Angelica sinensis, are often used as ingredients in cooking, as in samgyetang.