Senin, 11 Juni 2012

Bibimbap...Yummy :)

Kalo ke restoran korea, kimchi adalah menu andalan yang pasti ada.
Karena kimchi termasuk salah satu banchan yang paling umum.
Salah satu menu favorite aku kalo makan di restoran korea adalah bibimbap atau nasi campur.
Bibimbap sendiri banyak variasinya, terdiri dari nasi, sayur mayur, daging, telur dan saus pedas gochujang.
Disajikan di mangkuk batu yang sudah dipanaskan, membuat telur ceplok mentah yang ditaruh diatas nasi matang dengan sendirinya.

Sebelum makan, semua yang ada di dalam mangkuk batu harus diaduk sampai rata.
Yang paling seru sih makannya butuh perjuangan tersendiri, karena bener2 panas banget.

Kalo makannya lama, pasti banyak kerak nasi yang agak gosong dibagian bawahnya... hehehe... :P


macam-macam banchan


bibimbap... yummy ^_^


Kimchi addict


Lagi kangen banget pingin makan kimchi... :)
Sejak pertama coba makan kimchi, langsung doyan. Selalu kangen sama rasa kimchi yang gmana.... gitu. Bikin lidah rasanya menari kesenengan deh... hehehe...
Emang udah kimchi addict sih, sampe2 cobain kimchi dari berbagai merk yang ada di supermarket...
Mungkin belum semua dicobain, karena belum pernah menjelajah ke supermarket korea yang ada di jakarta selatan (korean town-nya orang korea yang tinggal di jakarta)
Ternyata kimchi buatan Indonesia juga cukup enak loh :D
Kimchi juga termasuk makanan fermentasi yang baik untuk kesehatan.




Kimchi adalah makanan tradisional Korea, salah satu jenis asinan sayur hasil fermentasi yang diberi bumbu pedas. Setelah digarami dan dicuci, sayuran dicampur dengan bumbu yang dibuat dari udang krill, kecap ikan, bawang putih, jahe dan bubuk cabai merah.
Sayuran yang paling umum dibuat kimchi adalah sawi putih dan lobak. Di zaman dulu, kimchi diucapkan sebagai chim-chae (Hangul: 침채; Hanja: 沈菜) yang berarti "sayuran yang direndam."
Di Korea, kimchi selalu dihidangkan di waktu makan sebagai salah satu jenis banchan yang paling umum. Kimchi juga digunakan sebagai bumbu sewaktu memasak sup kimchi (kimchi jjigae), nasi goreng kimchi (kimchi bokkeumbap), dan berbagai masakan lain





Kimchi dibuat dari beraneka ragam bahan sesuai dengan jenis kimchi dan selera orang yang membuatnya. Kimchi yang paling dikenal di luar Korea adalah baechu kimchi yang dibuat dari sawi putih (배추, baechu) dan lobak (무, mu) dicampur bawang putih (마늘, maneul), cabai merah (빨간고추, ppalgangochu), daun bawang (파, pa), cumi-cumi (오징어 ojingeo), tiram (굴, gul) atau makanan laut lain, jahe (생강, saenggang), garam (소금, sogeum), dan gula (설탕, seoltang).
Museum Kimchi Pulmuone yang ada di Seoul mencatat 187 jenis kimchi, mulai dari kimchi zaman dulu hingga kimchi zaman sekarang. Variasi kimchi yang mudah dikenali, misalnya: ggakdugi (깍두기) dengan bahan utama lobak dipotong berbentuk kubus, kimchi ketimun yang disebut oisobaegi (오이소박이), dan kkaennip (깻잎) berupa susunan daun perilla yang direndam dengan kecap asin, cabai merah, bawang putih, dan daun bawang.
Bakteri laktobasilus yang berperan dalam proses fermentasi kimchi menghasilkan asam laktat dengan kadar yang lebih tinggi daripada yogurt


kimchi buatan indonesia :)
 Kimchi dibuat dari berbagai jenis sayuran sehingga mengandung kadar serat makanan yang tinggi, namun rendah kalori. Sebagian besar kimchi dibuat dari sayuran seperti bawang bombay, bawang putih, dan cabai yang baik untuk kesehatan. Kimchi kaya dengan vitamin A, thiamine (B1), riboflavin (B2), kalsium, zat besi[5][6], dan bakteri asam laktat yang baik untuk pencernaan. Pada tahun 2000, strain bakteri asam laktat (strain MT-1077T) penghasil bakteriosin yang diisolasi dari kimchi diberi nama Lactobacillus kimchi.[7][8][9]
Kimchi disebut sebagai salah satu dari lima "makanan tersehat di dunia" menurut majalah Health Magazine. Kimchi kaya dengan vitamin, membantu pencernaan, dan kemungkinan dapat mencegah kanker.[10] Sayuran yang sudah lama diketahui baik untuk kesehatan, apalagi ditambah kultur bakteri hidup pada kimchi yang lebih banyak dari yogurt. Pemakaian cabai merah dalam jumlah banyak pada kimchi juga sering disebut-sebut baik untuk kesehatan






Kimjang (hangul: 김장) adalah tradisi orang Korea membuat kimchi, ggakdugi, dan dongchimi dalam jumlah besar di hari-hari musim dingin. Tradisi ini dilakukan pada hari cerah ketika angin dingin bertiup (awal November hingga pertengahan Desember).
Setelah hari kimjang ditentukan oleh anggota keluarga, kerabat, dan tetangga, mereka berkumpul di satu tempat untuk beramai-ramai membuat kimchi. Satu keluarga yang terdiri dari empat orang biasanya memerlukan sawi berukuran besar antara 40-50 buah.[11] Setelah dicuci, ditaburi garam, dan direndam di dalam air pada hari sebelumnya, lembar demi lembar daun sawi diolesi dengan bumbu kimchi hingga merata oleh para wanita dalam keluarga. Kimjang juga merupakan kesempatan untuk meneruskan resep keluarga, dari nenek ke ibu, dari ibu ke anak perempuan, dan dari mertua ke menantu.
Kimchi yang dibuat diperkirakan cukup untuk dimakan hingga musim semi tahun berikutnya (sekitar Mei-April). Tradisi ini tidak hanya berarti menyiapkan makanan untuk musim dingin, melainkan juga ucapan bersyukur orang Korea telah melewatkan satu tahun dengan selamat, dan awal memulai kehidupan pada tahun yang baru

Di Korea dikenal lemari es khusus untuk kimchi. Sebagian besar orang Korea membuat kimchi dalam jumlah banyak sewaktu panen sawi putih di musim dingin sehingga perlu lemari es khusus untuk menyimpan persediaan kimchi selama setahun.
Orang Korea sering mengucapkan "kimchi" sewaktu berfoto agar terlihat sedang tersenyum sebagai pengganti kata "cheese" yang sering diucapkan penutur bahasa Inggris.

Referensi

  • Lee, Iksop (2000). The Korean Language. Albany, NJ: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-4831-2.
  1. ^ 김치의 이름(명칭) from Hankyorei21
  2. ^ =46 "고추". Encyclopedia of Korean national culture. Diakses pada 9 Desember 2006.
  3. ^ Introduction to Korean Food, Kimchi: History
  4. ^ Kimchi Origin
  5. ^ "Food in Korea". Asianinfo.com. Diakses pada 30 Januari 2007.
  6. ^ "Kimchi". Tour2korea.com. Diakses pada 30 Januari 2007.
  7. ^ http://ijs.sgmjournals.org/cgi/reprint/50/5/1789.pdf
  8. ^ Jung-Sook Leea, Gun-Young Heoa, Jun Won Leea, Yun-Jung Oha, Jeong A Parka, Yong-Ha Parka, Yu-Ryang Pyunb and Jong Seog Ahn; Analysis of kimchi microflora using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. International Journal of Food Microbiology Volume 102, Issue 2, 15 Juli 2005, hlm. 143-150
  9. ^ Myungjin Kim and Jongsik Chun; Bacterial community structure in kimchi, a Korean fermented vegetable food, as revealed by 16S rRNA gene analysis. International Journal of Food Microbiology, Volume 103, Issue 1, 15 Agustus 2005, hlm. 91-96
  10. ^ "World's Healthiest Foods: kimchi". Health Magazine. Diakses pada 30 Maret 2006.
  11. ^ "キムジャンを追う!~韓国冬の風物詩~part1". Konest. Diakses pada 15 November 2009.
  12. Foto-foto kimchi dokumentasi dari koleksi pribadi :)

Minggu, 20 Mei 2012

Jang Dong Gun in All About Eve



























Jang Dong Gun Profile

 

Profile

  • Name: 장동건 / Jang Dong Gun (Jang Dong Geon)
  • Profession: Actor, musician and singer
  • Birthdate: 1972-Mar-07
  • Birthplace: Yongsan-gu, Seoul, South Korea
  • Height: 181cm
  • Weight: 68kg
  • Star sign: Pisces
  • Blood type: O
  • Talent agency: Star M Entertainment 








Early life

Spending his childhood in Yongsan-gu, Seoul, he later went on to the Korea National University of Arts, dropping out before obtaining a degree.

Career

Jang Dong-gun first entered the entertainment world in a talent contest in 1992. He began by acting in TV dramas such as The Last Match, co-starring Shim Eun-ha, and he eventually made his film debut in Repechage (1997) together with Kim Hee-sun.[1]
By the late 1990s he had become quite popular in Korea, but he also became one of the very first Korean stars to garner a fan following in other parts of Asia, after several of his TV dramas were screened there in the late nineties. In 1999, after acting in the critically acclaimed Nowhere to Hide as Park Joong-hoon's younger partner, Jang moved on to star in a feature that was filmed on location in Shanghai. Titled Anarchists, this tale of five young terrorists from 1930s China helped to elevate his status even further.[1]
Jang's real breakout came in early 2001 in Friend, which smashed the box office record set by Shiri to become (at the time) the biggest Korean film of all time. After playing the nice guy in almost all his previous roles, this portrayal of a tough-talking gangster from Pusan led him to local stardom. The following year he also starred in the popular action blockbuster 2009 Lost Memories set in a futuristic Great Japan.[1]
After appearing in the low-budget film The Coast Guard by controversial director Kim Ki-duk, Jang then took the lead role in Kang Je-gyu's Taegukgi, an epic film about two brothers set during the Korean War. Sure enough, this film would beat Friend's record with an astounding 11 million tickets sold. By this time, Jang's name had become known widely throughout Asia.[1]
Jang followed this up with The Promise, a $30 million pan-Asian production by Chinese director Chen Kaige in which he played opposite Hong Kong star Cecilia Cheung. Meanwhile, he was cast in Typhoon as a modern-day pirate who has been betrayed by both North and South Korea. Directed by Friend's Kwak Kyung-taek, Typhoon set a new record in 2005 for the highest production budget in Korean film history at $15 million.[1]
For the next four years, Jang kept a low profile in the Korean entertainment sphere as he worked on his Hollywood debut The Warrior's Way, also starring Kate Bosworth and Geoffrey Rush. The film encountered problems with post-production and distribution, and was only released in 2010.[2][3][4]
He returned to the silver screen in 2009 as the nation's youngest (and most eligible) head of state in Jang Jin's comedy Good Morning, President.[5][6]
He reunited with director Kang Je-gyu in My Way, a film set during World War II based on the true story of a Korean soldier who is drafted by the Japanese army to fight in the Battle of Normandy.[7][8][9] A large-scale, ambitious pan-Asian collaboration co-starring Japanese actor Joe Odagiri and Chinese actress Fan Bingbing, My Way is the most expensive Korean movie to date (with an estimated budget of $28 million).[10] My Way was simultaneously released in Korea and Japan in December 2011.[11]
His next film Dangerous Liaisons is a Chinese adaptation of the French literature classic set in 1930s Shanghai, directed by Hur Jin-ho and co-starring Zhang Ziyi and Cecilia Cheung.[12][13][14] It premieres during Directors' Fortnight at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival.[15]
Jang will make his highly-anticipated return to television dramas in A Gentleman's Dignity, described as a 40-something male version of Sex and the City.[16][17]
Jang is one of the highest paid actors and celebrity endorsers in Korea,[18] consistently topping surveys by industry insiders of most bankable stars.[19] He remains one of Korea's most beloved stars, not only for his projects but because of his gentle, kind image.[20]

Personal life

The famously private actor surprised the country in November 2009 when he went public with his two-year romance with Ko So-young.[21][22] Since co-starring together in the 1999 film Love Wind Love Song, rumors about Jang and Ko had spread several times in the past, but both had consistently denied them. The announcement immediately sparked speculation of an impending marriage although it wasn't until March 2010 that Jang officially told his fans at a fan meeting that he would be marrying Ko in May.[23] After months of media frenzy leading up to their nuptials,[24][25][26][27] the two tied the knot on May 2, 2010 in an extravagant wedding ceremony at Seoul's Shilla Hotel which was attended by their A-list celebrity friends, swarms of reporters and fans from around the world.[28][29][30]
Their son was born on October 4, 2010.[31][32][33][34]

Movies

All movies below are from South Korea except as indicated.

Cover of KoreAm, December 2010

Television dramas

  • A Gentleman's Dignity (2012)
  • All About Eve (2000)
  • Ghost (1999)
  • Springtime (1999)
  • Love (1998)
  • Ready Go! (1998)
  • Myth of a Hero (1997)
  • Model (1997)
  • Medical Brothers (1997)
  • Icing (1996)
  • The Last Match (1994)
  • Il Ji Mae (1993)
  • Our Heaven (1992)

Discography

  • Dong-gun & Bon-seung (1998)
  • Flying (1995)
  • Friendship by Jang Dong-gun & Jun Chul (1994)
  • Jang Dong-kun (Our Heaven OST) (1993)

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Actors and Actresses of Korean Cinema: Jang Dong-gun Koreanfilm.org
  2. ^ Jang's Hollywood debut to bridge East and West Korea Times. October 10, 2010.
  3. ^ Jang Dong-gun brings Asian vibe to Hollywood Korea Times. November 23, 2010.
  4. ^ Interview: Actor Jang Dong-gun 10Asia. November 25, 2010.
  5. ^ Jang Back to Silver Screen in 4 Years Korea Times. July 20, 2009.
  6. ^ Korean stars take turns playing president JoongAng Daily. September 25, 2009.
  7. ^ Jang Dong Gun: 'I Want to Film Movies That My Son Can Watch Later' KBS Global. May 17, 2011.
  8. ^ Jang Dong-gun starrer "My Way" cranks up 10Asia. July 1, 2011.
  9. ^ Actor JANG Dong-gun Korea Cinema Today. January 6, 2012.
  10. ^ Korean Mega War Movie Targets Pan-Asian Audience Chosun Ilbo. December 15, 2011.
  11. ^ Jang-Odagiri film set for release in Japan Korea Times. January 20, 2011.
  12. ^ Jang Dong-gun set for Hur Jin-ho pic joined by Zhang Ziyi and Cecilia Cheung 10Asia. September 22, 2011.
  13. ^ Jang Dong-gun to co-star with Zhang Ziyi, Cecilia Cheung Korea Times. September 23, 2011.
  14. ^ Jang Dong Gun: 'I Am Glad to Work with Zhang Ziyi and Cecilia Cheung' KBS Global. September 28, 2011.
  15. ^ ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ heads to Cannes JoongAng Daily. April 26, 2012.
  16. ^ Jang Dong-gun, Kim Ha-neul cast as leads in new SBS TV series 10Asia. February 8, 2012.
  17. ^ Jang Dong-gun, Kim Ha-neul TV series to begin on May 26 10Asia. April 9, 2012.
  18. ^ Interview with Jang Dong-gun CNN Talk Asia. October 24, 2007.
  19. ^ Jang Dong-gun Voted Korea's Most Bankable Star Chosun Ilbo. October 20, 2005.
  20. ^ Jang Dong-gun back on TV Dramabeans. December 14, 2008.
  21. ^ Guess What! They've Been Dating for 2 Years Korea Times. November 5, 2009.
  22. ^ Korea’s most eligible bachelor finds love JoongAng Daily. November 12, 2009.
  23. ^ Jang to Disclose Wedding Plans in March Korea Times. February 1, 2010.
  24. ^ Star Couple to Marry Vast Assets Chosun Ilbo. November 9, 2009.
  25. ^ Jang-Ko Wedding Sets Off PR War Korea Times. February 4, 2010.
  26. ^ Jang Dong-gun, Ko So-young Expecting Baby Korea Times. April 22, 2010.
  27. ^ Jang Dong-gun, Ko So-young 'Ecstatic' Over Pregnancy Chosun Ilbo. April 23, 2010.
  28. ^ Jang Dong-gun marries Go So-young Dramabeans. May 2, 2010.
  29. ^ Jang, Ko tie knot Korea Times. May 2, 2010.
  30. ^ Jang-Ko fever doesn’t end with the wedding JoongAng Daily. May 4, 2010.
  31. ^ Jang Dong-gun wife gives birth 10Asia. October 4, 2010.
  32. ^ Jang Dong-gun, Ko So-young Celebrate Birth of Son Chosun Ilbo. October 5, 2010.
  33. ^ Actors Jang, Ko become parents October 5, 2010.
  34. ^ Jang plays proud papa JoongAng Daily. October 14, 2010.
Sumber : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jang_Dong-gun

Bae Yong Joon - photos collection