it looks nothing special,
just a couple of pieces of skate, a prawn and some dressings, but looks can be so deceiving, this is Hongeo, and to put it mildly the smell will put most people off of eating it, the
smell tends to linger in the mouth as well as on clothes, in fact,
hongeo-specialized restaurants advise customers to seal their jackets in
plastic bags before eating, and spray them with deodorant before leaving, photograph Gael
Chardon/Flickr, Hongeo
is a bizarre South Korean dish with a pungent aroma that most people describe
as a mix of dirty public toilet and wet laundry left untended for days,
so how did this dish come about? the history
of hongeo can be traced back to the 14th century, back when Japanese pirates
patrolled the South Seas, forcing the residents of Heuksan Island to move up
the Yeongsan River and take their fare with them. They noticed that all their
fish eventually went bad, but not the skate, which, left to ferment in its own
urine was naturally preserved. It eventually became a regional specialty in
South Korea’s southwest provinces of North and South Jeolla, wait a second, ferment in its own urine? yes the fish does not pee in a way that normal fish and animals do, the skate releases urine through its skin, and that’s
exactly the stuff hongeo chefs marinate the meat in for about a month in order
to obtain the stomach-churning delicacy, Hongeo is definitely an acquired
taste, but it’s not exactly an obscure dish in South Korea. According to NPR, 11,000 tons of hongeo are consumed in the Asian
country every year, and southern cities like Mokpo are famous for their hongeo restaurants,
“I can’t
understand who in the world would pay to eat a rotten fish in a restaurant that
smells like an uncleaned public restroom,” one South Korean man told the New York Times, “I’ve eaten
dog, durian and bugs, but this is still the most challenging food I’ve ever
eaten,” food blogger Joe McPherson said. “It’s like licking a urinal.” and if that was not bad enough its
chewy flesh and crunchy cartilage also make it hard to swallow, that added to the gag reflex many people will experience when trying it means there must be a proper way to eat it, and there is, Sue Ahn, a
prominent South Korean food journalist, says there is a proper way to eat
hongeo and getting it down easier until you get used to it, “You have
to pick up the hongeo, breathe through your mouth, then out your nose.
After that, you eat it,” she says, adding that after trying it at least four
times you’ll get hooked by “that minty feeling in the back of your throat many
say is addictive”, well it may be, but for myself I will stick to smoked haddock or salmon!
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