We should be particular about food habits as it is important to eat well during the scorching days of summer, when the high
humidity can leave you feeling drained, dehydrated and lacking in energy.
From
authentic Chinese cuisine to recuperative soups and fresh seafood, Incheon is a
city that always stimulates the appetite and palette with its range of delicious
and nutritious food options.
◆ Exotic Dumplings in Chinatown
Some of the most famous dishes can be
found in Chinatown, which is heavily populated with famous restaurants adorned
with red lanterns and traditional nibbles. One of the most popular eateries
here, Siprihayng, offers four types of traditional dumplings from Tibet that are
a top draw with tourists. Called Onggibyeong, they are made using crisp dough
and especially soft fillings. Demand is such that purchases are limited at
weekends to two per person.
On the same street, Mandabok serves up jajangmyeon, or black-bean-sauce
noodles, just as it used to be made 100 years ago. Although Koreans prefer to
consume it nowadays by mixing the noodles with chunjang, or black bean sauce
made with meat and various vegetables, here the noodles are served only with
meat that is stir-fried with black bean paste. The lack of vegetables and
seasonings hark back to the days when such ingredients were hard to come by.
◆ Traditional Honey Chicken
Dakgangjeong, or honey-drenched fried
chicken with hot sauce, is the most popular food at the city's Sinpo Market.
Chinese sailors developed a taste for it decades ago when it was hard to
preserve food, as they found that frying the chicken and coating it with hot
sauce stops it from going off so quickly.
Upon entering the market, the dish's scent immediately tickles the olfactory
glands, tempting passersby with its mouth-watering aroma. The chicken is fried,
coated in red sauce and served with chopped peppers and peanuts. Fans rave about
the addictive taste of the crispy skin and tender meat.
◆ Cold
Noodles
The type of naengmyeon, or cold noodles, served in Hwapyeong-dong
is just as famous, especially in summer. It is made by adding vegetables, meat
and an egg to chewy noodles, then pouring cold meat stock on top and adding
vinegar and mustard sauce.
The area is dense with naengmyeon restaurants selling surprisingly generous
portions of the dish at shockingly low prices, much to the delight of tourists.
In fact, their bowls are three times larger than those used in other noodle
restaurants. There are two kinds of cold noodles sold here, each for W5,000
(US$1=W1,113) -- making them W1,500 to W3,000 cheaper than in other areas.
◆ Grilled Mackerel with Makgeolli
An area in eastern Incheon is
a famous den of alleyways full of restaurants selling grilled mackerel. Because
the area used to house a brewery, it began to draw laborers and college students
with little money who wanted to unwind with alcohol, and mackerel was a perfect
accompaniment to drinks because it is cheap but healthy.
The most popular dish divides the fish into two parts, each cooked in a
different way. As the restaurants use local mackerel, it is smaller than those
sold in other restaurants. But it is also softer and more succulent, and goes
down a treat with some cold beer and makgeolli, or traditional Korean rice
wine.