Jorim | |
Korean name | |
---|---|
Hangul | 조림 |
Hanja | n/a |
Revised Romanization | jorim |
McCune–Reischauer | chorim |
Jorim is a generic Korean cuisine term referring to dishes made of vegetables, meats, seafood, or tofu in a mixed sauce by simmering for a long time. Jorim is the noun of jorida (hangul:조리다) which means "simmering in a thick soup or sauce". The term did not appear in cookbooks until the 17th century because cuisine terms were not yet specialized in Korea. Siui jeonseo is the first mentioned document on the term with a recipe for jangjorim (hangul:장조림).
The sauce for jorim is mostly ganjang (soy sauce) used, however, in cooking fish with red flesh such as mackerel, permit, or saury, gochujang or chili pepper powder is added to ganjang and cooked.
Jang-jorim, made of beef
Gyeran-jang-jorim, soy sauce braised eggs
Yeongeun jorim, made from lotus root
Ueong jorim, made from greater burdock
Galchi jorim made with beltfish
Dubu jorim made with tofu