Zum Hauptinhalt springen Zur Suche springen Zur Hauptnavigation springen
Beschreibung
"Hansik is not just food-it is a living culture shaped by nature, philosophy, and the Korean way of life."
Food as Culture, Not Merely Cuisine

Rooted in centuries of history and shaped by Korea's natural environment, philosophy, and way of life, hansik-Korean cuisine-is far more than a collection of dishes. It is a living cultural system that reflects how Koreans understand nature, community, and the human body. Four Seasons of Hansik invites readers to encounter Korean culture through food, revealing how everyday meals embody emotional sensibilities, aesthetic values, and a deep respect for balance and harmony.

A Cuisine Shaped by Land, Sea, and Seasons
Korea's geography and four distinct seasons have shaped a cuisine deeply attuned to nature. Surrounded by seas and rich in mountains and plains, the Korean Peninsula fostered a food culture centered on rice, seafood, wild greens, and fermented staples. Seasonal foods (sijeolsik)-from spring herbs and summer stamina dishes to autumn harvest foods and winter fermentation-reflect the belief that food and medicine share the same origin. Eating in season is presented not only as a culinary preference, but as a philosophy of living in rhythm with nature.

Yin-Yang, the Five Elements, and the Harmony of Taste
Central to hansik is the harmony of yin and yang and the Five Elements, which guide the balance of flavors, colors, and ingredients. Sour, bitter, sweet, spicy, and salty tastes are combined to nourish specific organs and maintain bodily equilibrium. Dishes such as bibimbap exemplify this principle, blending multiple flavors and colors into a single, balanced whole. The book also introduces gamchilmat, the deep umami flavor born from fermentation and time, which has become a defining characteristic of Korean taste.

Fermentation and the Depth of Flavor
Fermented foods such as kimchi, doenjang, gochujang, and jeotgal form the backbone of Korean cuisine. Through carefully managed fermentation, these foods develop complex layers of flavor that deepen over time. The book shows how fermentation is not only a method of preservation, but a cultural practice that connects Korean food to nature, patience, and collective memory-qualities increasingly valued in contemporary global food culture.

Elegance, Restraint, and the Korean Table
Beyond taste, Four Seasons of Hansik explores the elegance and restraint that define Korean food culture. Values such as moderation, balance, and communal sharing are reflected in table settings, side dishes, and traditional vessels including celadon, white porcelain, onggi, woodenware, and bangjja yugi (brassware). Food is presented without excess, emphasizing harmony between people, nature, and the table.

Hansik as Living Cultural Heritage
By weaving together philosophy, regional foodways, seasonal customs, and aesthetic traditions, this book offers an immersive introduction to Korean cuisine as cultural heritage. It invites readers to see hansik not simply as what Koreans eat, but as how they live-how a single bowl of rice can carry history, care, and a way of life, and how Korean cuisine continues to speak to the modern world through timeless principles of balance and harmony.
"Hansik is not just food-it is a living culture shaped by nature, philosophy, and the Korean way of life."
Food as Culture, Not Merely Cuisine

Rooted in centuries of history and shaped by Korea's natural environment, philosophy, and way of life, hansik-Korean cuisine-is far more than a collection of dishes. It is a living cultural system that reflects how Koreans understand nature, community, and the human body. Four Seasons of Hansik invites readers to encounter Korean culture through food, revealing how everyday meals embody emotional sensibilities, aesthetic values, and a deep respect for balance and harmony.

A Cuisine Shaped by Land, Sea, and Seasons
Korea's geography and four distinct seasons have shaped a cuisine deeply attuned to nature. Surrounded by seas and rich in mountains and plains, the Korean Peninsula fostered a food culture centered on rice, seafood, wild greens, and fermented staples. Seasonal foods (sijeolsik)-from spring herbs and summer stamina dishes to autumn harvest foods and winter fermentation-reflect the belief that food and medicine share the same origin. Eating in season is presented not only as a culinary preference, but as a philosophy of living in rhythm with nature.

Yin-Yang, the Five Elements, and the Harmony of Taste
Central to hansik is the harmony of yin and yang and the Five Elements, which guide the balance of flavors, colors, and ingredients. Sour, bitter, sweet, spicy, and salty tastes are combined to nourish specific organs and maintain bodily equilibrium. Dishes such as bibimbap exemplify this principle, blending multiple flavors and colors into a single, balanced whole. The book also introduces gamchilmat, the deep umami flavor born from fermentation and time, which has become a defining characteristic of Korean taste.

Fermentation and the Depth of Flavor
Fermented foods such as kimchi, doenjang, gochujang, and jeotgal form the backbone of Korean cuisine. Through carefully managed fermentation, these foods develop complex layers of flavor that deepen over time. The book shows how fermentation is not only a method of preservation, but a cultural practice that connects Korean food to nature, patience, and collective memory-qualities increasingly valued in contemporary global food culture.

Elegance, Restraint, and the Korean Table
Beyond taste, Four Seasons of Hansik explores the elegance and restraint that define Korean food culture. Values such as moderation, balance, and communal sharing are reflected in table settings, side dishes, and traditional vessels including celadon, white porcelain, onggi, woodenware, and bangjja yugi (brassware). Food is presented without excess, emphasizing harmony between people, nature, and the table.

Hansik as Living Cultural Heritage
By weaving together philosophy, regional foodways, seasonal customs, and aesthetic traditions, this book offers an immersive introduction to Korean cuisine as cultural heritage. It invites readers to see hansik not simply as what Koreans eat, but as how they live-how a single bowl of rice can carry history, care, and a way of life, and how Korean cuisine continues to speak to the modern world through timeless principles of balance and harmony.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Prologue
Elegance Beyond Delicacies in Hansik
Hallyu: Spawning Culture through Food
The Flavors of Korean Cuisine
The Style of Korean Cuisine
The Four Seasons of Hansik
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Epilogue
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2026
Fachbereich: Östliche Philosophie
Genre: Importe, Philosophie
Region: Osten
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: 232 S.
ISBN-13: 9781565915374
ISBN-10: 1565915372
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Kim, Jiyoung
Lee, Kwayong
Hersteller: Korean Book Service
Bookchair Vertrieb Korean Book Services Helmut Hetzer Verlag
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Korean Book Servcies, Prinzenweg 10, D-93047 Regensburg, service@koreanbook.de
Maße: 260 x 197 x 27 mm
Von/Mit: Jiyoung Kim (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 04.02.2026
Gewicht: 0,974 kg
Artikel-ID: 135316242