
순두부
Gangneung's legendary sea-water tofu — impossibly silky, mineral-fresh, and a masterpiece of Korean regional cuisine.
카테고리
국물요리
📖 상세 정보
Chodang sundubu (초당순두부) is a style of extraordinarily soft tofu (순두부, sundubu) that originates from the Chodang neighborhood in Gangneung, on Korea's east coast. What distinguishes it from all other Korean tofu is the coagulant used in production: instead of the standard nigari (magnesium chloride, called gansu in Korean) used to set conventional tofu, Chodang sundubu is coagulated with fresh East Sea seawater. The seawater coagulation method produces tofu of almost unbelievable delicacy. The curds form more slowly and gently than with chemical coagulants, resulting in a silken texture that trembles on contact and melts on the tongue before any chewing is necessary. The flavor carries the marine minerals of the East Sea — a faint, clean salinity that tastes like distilled ocean air rather than salt. Sundubu in the Chodang style is typically served fresh and plain — just the set curds, often still warm from the pot, with a small dish of seasoned soy sauce (yangnyeom ganjang) made with green onion, sesame, and a pinch of chili. There is no elaborate processing, no additional seasoning in the tofu itself — the flavor is entirely the expression of the soybean and the sea.
💡 여행자 팁
Take the KTX from Seoul to Gangneung (approximately 1h 45min) and then a taxi to the Chodang Tofu Village — it is a manageable day trip from Seoul.
Order the raw fresh sundubu (생순두부) first before any cooked preparations — this is where the seawater terroir is most clearly tasted.
Chodang sundubu is an excellent option for vegetarian and vegan travelers — plain tofu served with soy dipping sauce contains no animal products.
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