Doenjang-guk


Doenjang-guk or soybean paste soup is a guk made with doenjang and other ingredients, such as vegetables, meat, and seafood. It is thinner, lighter, and milder than doenjang-jjigae. It is similar to the Japanese miso soup. It is sometimes mild, sometimes strong, and accompanied with rice most of the time.
Doenjang-guk is an example of a banchan, one of several small dishes served with meals at restaurants and in home cooking. Other banchan include kimchi, marinated vegetables, and pickled/salted seafood. This soup is perhaps the cheapest meal in Korea.

History

In the Joseon period, the royals had five meals, and in three of those they had doenjang-guk as a side dish, specifically on a small table on the right side of the main table, together with other Korean traditional foods such as vegetables, meat, egg, and sesame oil.

Ingredients

The most simple form of this soup is clear soybean paste soup. It is mainly composed of a good fermented soybean paste and stock. It accompanies more complex one-bowl rice dishes that have many ingredients, like bibimbap with sliced raw fish and avocado, mushroom, and other vegetables. The ingredients for this soup are anchovy-kelp stock, vegetable stock, or unsalted chicken broth; doenjang paste; and optionally some scallions.
The most commonly eaten form of this dish is soybean paste soup with cabbage and it is eaten at any time of the day. The broth has a deep, comforting flavor, the cabbage adds texture and sweetness, and it is light since there is no grease. The ingredients are dried anchovies; napa cabbage leaves, white-stemmed chard, or bok choy; doenjang; garlic; chili peppers; all-purpose flour or rice water; and fish sauce.
To make the broth for a doenjang-based soup or stew, it is common to begin with the water used to wash rice, ssaltteumul. This rice water adds starch to the soup and works as a binding agent between the soybean paste and the broth, while improving the flavor of the doenjang. A substitute can be made by mixing in a teaspoon of flour or rice flour.

Types

Mu-doenjang-guk is light yet very flavorful. Prepared with Korean radish, and also some basic aromatic vegetables, such as onion, garlic, scallion, chili peppers, dried kelp, ssaltteeumul, and dried shiitake mushrooms.Paraetguk or parae-doenjangguk is grassy seaweed soup with soybean paste, a regional specialty of Jeju Province.Cheonggyeongchae dubu-doenjangguk is made with tofu, bok choy, and gochujang in addition to the regular ingredients used to make the broth.Naengi guk is very similar to mugwort soup made with nangyi, gukkanjang, wild sesame powder and the rest of the common ingredients for the doenjang-guk base broth. Many vegetables can be added to accompany the main ingredients.