Gimbap


Gimbap, also romanized as kimbap, is a Korean dish made from bap, vegetables, and optionally cooked seafood or meat, rolled in gim—dried sheets of seaweed—and served in bite-sized slices. Reference works describe gimbap as developing from Japanese norimaki, introduced to Korea during the period of Japanese colonial rule, while also noting that Korea had earlier traditions of wrapping rice and side dishes in seaweed, such as bokssam, from the Joseon era, which are sometimes cited as precursors rather than direct equivalents. However, the style of rolling seaweed into a ball on bamboo mat and cutting it to eat is generally agreed to have originated in Japan.
The dish is often part of a packed meal, or dosirak, to be eaten at picnics and outdoor events, and it can serve as a light lunch along with danmuji and kimchi. It is a popular takeout food in South Korea and in other countries.

Etymology

Gim refers to edible seaweed in the genus Porphyra and Pyropia. Bap broadly refers to cooked rice. The compound term gimbap is a neologism; it was not a part of the Korean language until the 20th century.
The term gimbap was used in a 1935 Korean newspaper article but at the time, the loanword norimaki was used as well. Norimaki, borrowed from the name of a similar Japanese dish, was part of the Japanese vocabulary that entered into the Korean language during Japanese occupation. The two words were used interchangeably until gimbap was made the universal term, as part of efforts to clear away remnants of Japanese colonialism and purify the Korean language.

History

The origins of gimbap are debated. One commonly accepted theory suggests that the dish is derived from the introduction of the Japanese sushi variant makizushi to Korea during the Japanese occupation of Korea. During that period, Korean cuisine adopted Western food and drink, as well as some Japanese food items such as bento or sushi rolled in sheets of seaweed. Since then, gimbap has become a distinct dish, often utilizing traditional Korean flavors, as well as sesame oil, instead of rice vinegar. This theory is supported by a newspaper from 1935, in which the term gimbap first appeared in Korea.
An alternative theory, suggested in the Encyclopedia of Korean Culture, published by the Academy of Korean Studies, is that the food was developed from the long-established local tradition of rolling bap and banchan in gim. Production of gim in Gyeongsang and Jeolla provinces is reported in books from the fifteenth century, such as Kyŏngsang-do chiriji and Sinjŭng Tongguk yŏji sŭngnam. Yŏryang Sesigi, a Joseon book written in 1819 by , refers to cooked rice and filling rolled with gim as bokssam.
Regardless, gimbap and makizushi now refer to distinct dishes in Japan and Korea: the former called kimupapu in Japanese and the latter called gimchobap or norimaki in Korean. Gimbap is usually seasoned with sesame oil, while makizushi is seasoned with rice vinegar.

Ingredients and preparation

Gim and bap are the two basic components of gimbap. While short-grain white rice is most commonly used, short-grain brown rice, black rice, or other grains may also serve as the filling.
Some varieties of gimbap include cheese, spicy cooked squid, kimchi, luncheon meat, pork cutlet, pepper, or spicy tuna. The gim may be brushed with sesame oil or sprinkled with sesame seeds. In one variation, sliced pieces of gimbap may be lightly fried with an egg coating, which allows stale gimbap to be eaten.
Fillings vary, often with vegetarian and vegan options. Popular ingredients include danmuji, ham, beef, imitation crab meat, egg strips, kimchi, bulgogi, spinach, carrot, burdock root, cucumber, canned tuna, or kkaennip.
To make the dish, gim sheets are toasted over low heat, cooked rice is lightly seasoned with salt and sesame oil, and vegetable and meat ingredients are seasoned and stir-fried or pan-fried. The toasted gim is then laid on a gimbal—a bamboo gimbap roller—with a thin layer of cooked rice placed evenly on top. Other ingredients are placed on the rice and rolled into a cylindrical shape, typically in diameter. The rolled gimbap is then sliced into bite-sized pieces.

Variants

  • Chungmu-gimbap — originating from the seaside city of Chungmu, the dish features thinner rolls with an unseasoned surface and only rice as the filler ingredient. It is served with spicy ojingeo-muchim and seokbakji.
  • Mayak-gimbap — a specialty of Gwangjang Market in Seoul. Mayak translates as "drug", a reference to its allegedly addictive and concentrated flavour. Small gimbap filled with carrots, spinach, and danmuji is sprinkled with ground sesame seeds and dipped in its pairing sauce, made from soy sauce and mustard.
  • Samgak-gimbap — literally "triangle-shaped gimbap". This variety is similar to Japanese onigiri and is sold in convenience stores in South Korea. Fillings vary greatly; the expiration date is one day; it typically provides between of food energy.
  • Nude gimbap — unlike traditional gimbap, while the ingredients of nude gimbap go inside the gim, the rice wraps around the outside, similar to a California roll. However, unlike a California roll, nude gimbap still uses traditional gimbap ingredients.
  • Yukhoe gimbap — this variety is similar to the Japanese raw seafood makizushi but uses yukhoe—a Korean raw meat dish with pickled radish, kkaennip, and scallion.
  • Memil gimbap — this variety uses buckwheat noodles instead of rice.