Saeukkang Explained

Alternate Name:Shrimp Cracker, Prawn Cracker
Type:Snack
Creator:Calbee, Nongshim
Saeukkang
Country:South Korea
Year:1971
Main Ingredient:Rice, shrimp, sour mayonnaise wasabi
Calories:435
Protein:6
Fat:23
Carbohydrate:56

Saeukkang (; also called Shrimp Cracker) is a South Korean snack produced by South Korean company Nongshim since 1971. Around 90g of prawn crackers (around 4-5 sheets) are packaged in parchment paper.[1] [2]

History

Name

'Saeu' translates to shrimp in Korean. When Nongshim President Shin Choon-ho was looking for an appropriate name for the shrimp snack, he got an idea from his daughter mispronouncing Arirang (아라랑), pronouncing it 'Arikkang' (아리깡).[3]

Development

The Nongshim company got ideas from the popular Japanese snack Kappa Ebisen made by Calbee. Nongshim spent more than a year attempting to reverse engineer the Kappa Ebisen snack and had particular difficulty with finding an appropriate temperature to cook the product. The company used large amounts of flour and shrimp during this process, using around 360 tons of flour.[4]

Sales

Using the slogan We make our foods using our technology, Saeukkang was highly successful upon release and helped Nongshim, which previously had a low market share, to grow into what is now among the largest food and beverage companies in South Korea. Many trucks from all around South Korea traveled to Nongshim's factory in Daebang-dong to buy Saeukkang. Only three months after the initial release, Nongshim's sales had already increased by 350%. With their increased income, Nongshim was able to release other successful snacks: Banana Kick in 1978, Honey Twist Snack in 1979, and Potato Chip in 1980. As of 2013, Saeukkang's sales exceeded 7.5 billion packages. Saeukkang can now be found in 76 countries in stores like Walmart in the United States[5] and Taobao in China.

Variants

Nongshim produces different variants of Saeukkang. Other than the standard package (90g), the company introduced different sizes of Saeukkang:

Nongshim also offers Saeukkang in different flavors:

Marketing

TV CF

Lee Jong-suk, a Korean actor and model advertises Saeukkang https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVeP1RngGzw&feature=emb_title.

Since the initial release of the snack, it has been advertised with the slogan "손이 가요~ 손이 가~새우깡에 손이 가요" (loosely translated as "Grab some here, grab some there. Grab Saeukkang anywhere".[6] The slogan has been so successful that it is still used in Saeukkang ads today.

Fan Clubs

There are about 100 Saeukkang fan clubs in Korea's largest web portal, Naver, consisting of both younger and older generations.[4]

Criticism

See also

External links

  1. A method that does not fry with oil, but fries with heated salt
  2. Web site: 국내 최초 스낵 새우깡. 2020-12-08. www.yonhapmidas.com. ko.
  3. Web site: 창업 원로들 "이것만은 내가 챙긴다". 2020-11-24. Naver News. ko.
  4. Web site: 2013-05-19. 국민 스낵 '새우깡' 75억 봉 판매 돌파. 2020-11-24. 식품음료신문. ko.
  5. Web site: Nongshim Shrimp Cracker Spicy, 2.64 Oz, 12 Ct. 2020-11-26. Walmart.com. en.
  6. Web site: GLOBAL NONGSHIM. 2020-11-24. eng.nongshim.com.
  7. Web site: 2005-02-02. 새우깡도 빼빼로도 '짝퉁'이었다. 2020-11-24. The Hankyoreh. ko.
  8. Web site: 농심, '죽은 쥐 새우깡' 한달간 은폐-유통. 2020-11-24. www.viewsnnews.com. ko.
  9. Web site: 2008-04-10. 식약청 "'생쥐깡' 中 제조공정 문제없다". 2020-11-24. The Korea Economic Daily. ko.
  10. Web site: 2014-08-08. 새우깡, 소매점 유통과정서 쌀벌레 혼입. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20140808052242/http://news.kukinews.com/article/view.asp?page=1&gCode=soc&arcid=0004044632&cp=nv. 2014-08-08. 2020-11-24.
  11. Web site: "48년전 그 꽃새우가 아니다"···국산 포기한 '새우깡' 속사정. 2020-11-24. Naver News. ko.