Kongbap (Korean콩밥) is a Korean dish of white or brown rice cooked together with one or more varieties of soybeans.[1] Kongbap may be made from scratch by combining and cooking together dried rice and soybeans—usually black soybeans. Outside Korea, the word "kongbap" is commercially used in premixed multi-grain packages in dried form. In Korea, multigrain rice consisting of grains other than soybeans is called japgok-bap (mixed cereal rice).

Kongbap
Alternative namesSoybean rice
TypeBap
Place of originKorea
Associated cuisineKorean cuisine
Main ingredientsRice, soybeans
Similar dishesPatbap
Korean name
Hangul
콩밥
Revised Romanizationkongbap
McCune–Reischauerk'ongbap
IPA[kʰoŋ.bap̚]

Etymology

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The Korean word kong (bean) alone usually refers to soybeans and is contrasted with other words like pat meaning adzuki beans. As such, kongbap (bean rice) would not also be applied to patbap (red bean rice). Rice cooked with beans other than soybeans, such as French beans (gangnangkong in Korean) or peas (wandu in Korean), are usually named using the specific bean name, as in gangnang-kong-bap (French bean rice) or wandu-kong-bap (pea rice).

Kongbap in culture

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Although it is generally acknowledged as a healthful and nutritious food, kongbap was not universally enjoyed as it was associated with imprisonment. Kongbap had long been a staple of Korean prison food.[2] The Korean phrase kongbap meokda (콩밥 먹다; literally "to eat kongbap") translates colloquially as "to be imprisoned."[3] This is similar to a phrase in England with the same meaning: "to do porridge."

With a recent health food trend in South Korea, the popularity of beans has risen and kongbap is more commonly eaten in Korean households than before.[4][5]

Similar dishes

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  • Japgok-bap (mixed-grain rice) is a bap including short-grain white and brown rice, green peas, adzuki beans, black soybeans, yulmu (Coix lacryma-jobi var. ma-yuen), black glutinous rice, barley and sorghum. The dried mixture is generally soaked in water for several hours or overnight before cooking, in order to ease the softening process of the beans while cooking.
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See also

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References

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  1. ^ (in Korean) Kongbap Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine at Encyclopedia of Korean Culture
  2. ^ (in Korean) The reason why kongbap was replaced with boribap Archived 2009-01-26 at the Wayback Machine from JoongAng Ilbo
  3. ^ (in Korean) Definition and common phrases of kongbap from Nate Korean dictionary
  4. ^ (in Korean) Mixed grain rice, Medical Today, 2009-09-15. Retrieved 2010-06-27.
  5. ^ (in Korean) Black beans Archived 2012-07-09 at archive.today, Joongang Ilbo, 2010-06-04. Retrieved 2010-06-27.