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Gimbap (Korean: 김밥; lit. Gim rice; IPA: [kim.p͈ap̚]), also romanized as kimbap, is a Korean dish made from cooked rice, vegetables, fish, and meat rolled in gim—dried sheets of seaweed—and served in bite-sized slices. [1] The origins of gimbap are debated.
Originating from the seaside city of Chungmu, the rolls are thinner and the surface is usually left unseasoned. [1] Chungmu gimbap is traditionally served with side dishes of kolddugi muchim (꼴뚜기 무침), sliced baby octopus marinated and fermented in a spicy red pepper sauce, and radish kimchi (무김치).
Its popularity led to the creation of the Spam kimbap (rice and vegetable filled seaweed roll) in Korean cuisine. [60] Because of a scarcity of fish and other traditional kimbap products such as kimchi or fermented cabbage, Spam was added to a rice roll with kimchi and cucumber and wrapped in seaweed.
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Ogokbap (오곡밥, five-grain rice): Usually a mixture of rice, red beans, black beans, millet, and sorghum, but can vary with glutinous rice and other grains in place of these. Patbap (팥밥): rice with red bean; Kongbap (콩밥) Kongnamulbap (콩나물밥): rice with bean sprouts kongnamul and sometimes pork; Gimbap (literally, seaweed-rice ...
The blockbuster popularity of frozen kimbap surprised even Trader Joe’s employees, who noted that many customers were buying the $3.99 vegetarian product (it’s made with tofu) in bulk.
Gim (Korean: 김), also romanized as kim, [1] is a generic term for a group of edible seaweeds dried to be used as an ingredient in Korean cuisine, consisting of various species in the genera Pyropia and Porphyra, including P. tenera, P. yezoensis, P. suborbiculata, P. pseudolinearis, P. dentata, and P. seriata.