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Naengmyeon

Naengmyeon / Raengmyŏn
Naengmyeon (cold noodles).jpg
A bowl of naengmyeon
Alternative names Cold noodles
Type Guksu
Place of origin Korea
Region or state Pyongyang, Hamhung (N. Korea)
Jinju (S. Korea)
Associated national cuisine North Korea
Serving temperature cold
Main ingredients Noodles (flour and starch of buckwheat, potatoes, sweet potatoes)
Variations Mul-naengmyeon, bibim-naengmyeon, hoe-naengmyeon
 
Korean name (South Korea)
Hangul 냉면
Hanja 冷麵
Revised Romanization naengmyeon
McCune–Reischauer naengmyŏn
IPA [nɛ̝ŋ.mjʌn]
Korean name (North Korea)
Chosŏn'gŭl 랭면
Hancha 冷麵
McCune–Reischauer raengmyŏn
IPA [ɾɛŋ.mjʌn]

Naengmyeon (/nŋmjʌn/; 냉면; 冷麵, in S. Korea) or raengmyŏn (랭면, in N. Korea) is a Korean noodle dish of long and thin handmade noodles made from the flour and starch of various ingredients, including buckwheat (메밀, memil), potatoes, sweet potatoes, arrowroot starch (darker color and chewier than buckwheat noodles), and kudzu (칡, chik). Buckwheat predominates (despite the name, it is not a wheat but rather is more closely related to sorrel). Other varieties of naengmyeon are made from ingredients such as seaweed and green tea.

According to the 19th-century documents of Dongguksesigi (동국세시기, 東國歲時記), naengmyeon has been made since the Joseon Dynasty. Originally a delicacy in northern Korea, especially in the cities of Pyongyang (평양) and Hamhung (함흥) in North Korea, naengmyeon became widely popular throughout Korea after the Korean War.

Naengmyeon is served in a large stainless-steel bowl with a tangy iced broth, julienned cucumbers, slices of Korean pear, thin, wide strips of lightly pickled radish, and either a boiled egg or slices of cold boiled beef or both. Spicy mustard sauce (or mustard oil) and vinegar are often added before consumption. Traditionally, the long noodles would be eaten without cutting, as they symbolized longevity of life and good health, but servers at restaurants usually ask if the noodles should be cut prior to eating, and use scissors to cut the noodles.


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