Cheong (food)
Cheong is a name for various sweetened foods in the form of syrups, marmalades, and fruit preserves. In Korean cuisine, cheong is used as a tea base, as a honey or sugar substitute in cooking, as a condiment, and also as an alternative medicine to treat the common cold and other minor illnesses.
Originally, the word cheong was used to refer to honey in Korean [royal court cuisine]. The name jocheong was given to mullyeot and other human-made honey-substitutes. Outside the royal court, honey was called kkul, which is a native Korean word.
Varieties
- Jocheong or mullyeot : rice syrup or more recently also corn syrup
- Maesil-cheong or Maesilaek
- Mogwa-cheong
- Mucheong
- Mu-kkul-cheong
- Yuja-cheong
- Saenggang-cheong
- Gochu-cheong
- Maneul-cheong
- Yangpa-cheong
- Odi-cheong
- Omija-cheong
- Painaepeul-cheong
- Bae-cheong
- ''Bae-doraji-cheong''
''Maesil-cheong''
It can be made by simply mixing plums and sugar together, and then leaving them for about 100 days. To make syrup, the ratio of sugar to plum should be at least 1:1 to prevent fermentation, by which the liquid may turn into maesil-ju. The plums can be removed after 100 days, and the syrup can be consumed right away, or mature for a year or more.