In constrast, Traditional Korean "Royal" cuisines, once only enjoyed by Royal Court Family Members and the "Yang-Ban[?]" or upper-class of the Joseon[?] dynasty, are served in luxury and took hours and days to prepare. They exhibit a unique blend of warm and cold, hot and mild ingredients that tantalize the tongue by harmonizing rough and soft bite textures with a range of solid and liquid foods, and are often served on hand-forged "bronze" plates.
Some of these traditional "royal" cusines, which can cost as much as $250 U.S. Dollars per person without drinks, all come with individual servants and are still served at high-end restaurants in select locations within the city of Seoul.
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Traditional Non-Royal Korean table settings Koreans traditionally ate (and a large number still do eat) seated on cushions at low tables. The presentation of a Korean meal is almost as important as the taste. A typical table setting consists of:
Traditional Korean table manners Although there is no prescribed order for eating the many dishes served at a traditional Korean meal, many Koreans start with a small taste of soup before eating the other dishes in any order they wish. Unlike other chopstick nations, Koreans do not eat rice with chopsticks, instead using a spoon at formal or public meals. Koreans never pick up their rice or soup bowls but leave both on the table and eat from them with spoons. Side dishes, however, are eaten with chopsticks. Bad manners include blowing one's nose at the table (considered the rudest of acts), chewing with an open mouth, talking with food in one's mouth, making audible eating noises, sticking chopsticks straight up in a dish, mixing rice and soup, picking up food with one's hands, eating rice with chopsticks, and overeating. In informal situations, these rules are often broken.
It is customary not to finish all the food provided, in order to show that the eater has been thoroughly satisfied by the meal. Accordingly, it is usually perfectly acceptable to ask for refills on any of the side dishes, since all traditional Korean restaurants are, in this sense, "all you can eat."
Traditional Korean foods & dishes (Note that English spellings of Korean words may vary.)
"Fusion" food is also rapidly becoming popular in South Korea, fusing the cuisine of two or more ethnicities into new creations. There are many "Japanese fusion" or "Chinese fusion" or "Western fusion" restaurants all over South Korea. Controversies
The traditional Korean dish gaegogi, or dog meat soup, has been controversial in recent years. See the entry Gaegogi for more information.
See also cooking, cuisine, Wikipedia Cookbook
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