Tradition- Korea
Every New Years day, it is also a Korean tradition to eat Dduk Mandu Guk (Dumpling
soup with rice cakes).
My mother told me another tradition that Koreans do every year. Every New Years day, Koreans eat a traditional dish of Dduk Mandu Guk. She told me that she used to eat it in Korea every New Years day. Koreas New Years is a little different from Americas because Korea celebrates its New Years based on a lunar calendar and not a solar calendar. She told me that before when she was younger that they would eat just Mandu Guk (Dumpling soup) without the Dduk (rice cake) on New Years. It wasnt until sometime later that they added Dduk to it. She said the northern regions of Korea (before North and South split) added Dduk to their soup and it influenced others regions of Korea to follow. She said that each family has different and special methods and ingredients that they add to their dumplings that make each dumpling somewhat unique. This variation makes most families dumpling soup somewhat unique. In my moms dumpling soup, she said that she adds seasoned chicken breast strips on top of the soup to give it a spicy kick to it. When asked why Koreans eat dumpling soup for New Years, she said that every year that passes, we ate another year. So to kind of symbolize that eating and for another good year, Koreans like to eat a nice, warm, filling dumpling soup.
It was kind of neat talking to my mother about this. I didnt realize that Korea celebrated New Years on a different day than us. My mother grew up eating this soup on a different day every New Year since the New Years date would change every year because of the lunar calendar. I really enjoy eating Dduk Mandu Guk and especially on New Years. It is like eating turkey every Thanksgiving. It is a meal I grew up eating every New Years and I feel like I have to eat it every New Years. I actually often go to Koreatown and order a bowl of dumpling soup once in awhile. And it is true what my mother says about each soup being somewhat different. Sometimes the base is different and other times it is the dumpling that has a slightly different taste to it. I realized that all dumpling soups are very similar, and yet somehow pretty different. To this day, I have yet encountered a dumpling soup with the same chicken strips that mother adds. I wasnt sure if I understood my mother correctly when she said they ate another year. I have never heard of a year passing, as eating the year. But overall, it was interesting learning about this.