Bosintang Explained

Bosintang
Alternate Name: (North Korea),,,,
Country:Korea
Creators:-->
Main Ingredient:Dog meat, vegetables, spices
South Korean name
Rr:Bosintang
Mr:Posintang
Koreanipa:pronounced as /ko/
North Korean name
Context:north
Rr:Dangogiguk
Mr:Tangogikuk
Koreanipa:pronounced as /ko/

(South Korean name) or (North Korean name) is a Korean soup that uses dog meat as its primary ingredient. The meat is boiled with vegetables such as green onions, perilla leaves, and dandelions, and flavorants such as doenjang, gochujang, and perilla seed powder.[1] It is seasoned with agastache rugosa before eating. The soup has been claimed to provide increased virility.[2]

The dish, as with all dog meat consumption in South Korea, has become highly controversial in recent decades. There are now a number of significant legal restrictions around the butchering of dogs. According to a 2020 survey of South Koreans, 83.8% have never eaten dog meat before.

Names

There are a number of names for the dish.

Revised
Romanization
HangulHanjaTranslation
boshintangKorean: 보신탕Korean: 補身湯"invigorating soup"
yeongyangtangKorean: 영양탕Korean: 營養湯"nutritious soup"
boyangtangKorean: 보양탕Korean: 補養湯"invigorating soup"
gaejang(guk)Korean: 개장(국)Korean: 개醬(국)"dog soy bean paste soup"
sacheoltangKorean: 사철탕Korean: 四철湯"soup for all seasons"
dangogitangKorean: 단고기탕Korean: 단고기湯"sweet meat soup" (North Korean name)
gutangKorean: 구탕Korean: 狗湯"dog soup"
gujangKorean: 구장Korean: 狗醬"dog soy bean paste soup"
jiyangtangKorean: 지양탕Korean: 地羊湯"land sheep soup"
meongmeongtangKorean: 멍멍탕Korean: 멍멍湯"woof woof soup"

History

Most scholars agree that people on the Korean peninsula have consumed dog meat for thousands of years. The history of is more recent. A 1849 book Dongguksesigi contains a recipe for that includes boiled dog and green onion.[3]

Boshintang is considered to be a similar dish to yukgaejang, which uses beef as its primary ingredient.

Recent status

In June 2018, a South Korean municipal court ruled that killing dogs for their meat was illegal, though this law did not make it illegal to consume dog meat.[4]

According to a 2020 survey conducted by the Humane Society International of 1,000 South Koreans, 83.8% never consumed dog meat and had no plans to ever do so. 58.6% supported the outright ban of its consumption, with 57% of people responding that it had a negative impact on international perceptions of South Korea.[5]

On January 9, 2024, the South Korean parliament passed a law prohibiting the breeding and slaughter of dogs for consumption which will take effect in 2027 following a three-year grace period.[6]

Controversy

See main article: article.

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20130104160658/http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=001&oid=081&aid=0000006956& 2004 Seoul Shinmoon article
  2. News: November 12, 2001 . S Korea dog meat row deepens . . 2009-12-31.
  3. Web site: [서울신문] [씨줄날줄] 개고기/함혜리 논설위원 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303183636/http://www.seoul.co.kr/news/newsView.php?id=20080415031014 . 2016-03-03 . 2009-10-19. 2008 Seoul Shinmoon article
  4. Web site: "한국 개고기 시장 1조4000억" - 프레시안 . 2012-12-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111028124423/http://www.pressian.com/article/article.asp?article_num=20061024160458&Section= . 2011-10-28 .
  5. October 23, 2020 . 식국민 84% "개고기 소비한 적 없고, 먹을 생각 없다" . Hankyoreh News.
  6. Web site: South Korea passes bill to ban eating dog meat, ending controversial practice as consumer habits change . Yeung . Jessie . Bae . Gawon . Seo . Yoonjung . Stewart . Marc . January 9, 2024 . CNN . January 11, 2024.