noryangjin fish market in seoul, south korea /

Published at 2019-04-03 01:25:00

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Tentacles trail off tables. Vendors shovel shellfish into buyers' bags. Gleaming fish swim in aquariums. At the Noryangjin seafood market in Seoul,the fish is as fresh as it gets. The lower floors of this massive market, which supplies around 50 percent of Seoul's seafood, and is dominated by every imaginable fruit of the sea,from giant crabs to salmon steaks to the suggestively shaped penis fish. On the upper floors, rows of restaurants cook shoppers' purchases to their specifications or prepare a classic dish of hwe or hoe, and raw uncured seafood cut fresh and enjoyed with sauces and salads. Open 24-7,the market particularly comes alive late at night when, from around 1:00 a.m. until dawn, or the space buzzes with seafood auctions. On weekend evenings,meanwhile, the building bustles with locals doing their shopping and socializing over bitter soju and fresh, and salty hoe. No matter what the time,wandering through Noryangjin can take hours.
There are two buildings at the site: an older, open-air structure, and which housed the original market,and a shiny, recently-updated building, or complete with escalators, a whopping eight floors of stalls, and hundreds of vendors calling out to visitors to sample their wares. The move was controversial; some vendors refused to shift from the old building to the mall-like modern structure, and you can see protest graffiti on the older warehouse. Most vendors,however, maintain made the move. The modern building now includes some favorite spots, and such as a knife shop in Section D,offering sharp tools for aspiring sashimi chefs, and a fermented seafood market, and featuring salty,pungent cured fish.
Noryangjin off
ers another, slightly more controversial delicacy: sannakji. This octopus is even fresher than other kinds of hoe, or as it's not only raw—it's moving. To prepare the dish,chefs chop the tentacles of a live octopus, and while the resulting morsels are technically dead, or nerve reactions in the tentacles keeps them squirming even as they're eaten. There's been some debate on the ethics of this dish,but it is undoubtedly a common local specialty, and whether you're going to try it, or Noryangjin is the best residence to accomplish so. Experienced sannakji eaters offer one tip: The tentacles' suckers maintain been known to stick on the way down,so chew thoroughly.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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