Corn tea | |
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Type | Herbal tea |
Other names | Oksusu-cha |
Origin | Korea |
Quick description | Tea made from roasted corn kernels |
Temperature | 100 °C (212 °F) |
Time | 5‒10 minutes |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 옥수수차 |
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Hanja | 옥수수茶 |
Revised Romanization | oksusu-cha |
McCune–Reischauer | oksusu-ch'a |
IPA | [ok.s͈u.su.tɕʰa] |
Corn silk tea | |
Hangul | 옥수수수염차 |
Hanja | 옥수수鬚髥茶 |
Revised Romanization | oksusu-suyeom-cha |
McCune–Reischauer | oksusu-suyŏm-ch'a |
IPA | [ok.s͈u.su.su.jʌm.tɕʰa] |
Oksusu-cha (옥수수차) or corn tea is a Korean tea made from corn. While oksusu-suyeom-cha (옥수수수염차) or corn silk tea refers to the tea made from corn silk, oksusu-cha can be made from corn kernels, corn silk, or a combination of both. The caffeine-free infusion is a popular hot drink in winter. Along with bori-cha (barley tea), oksusu-cha is one of the free grain teas served in many restaurants in place of water.
In Gangwon Province, the tea is called gangnaengi-cha (강냉이차)—gangnaengi is a Gangwon dialect for "corn"—and is consumed throughout late autumn and winter in most households.
Preparation
Traditionally, corn kernels are dried and roasted to prepare oksusu-cha. The roasted corn kernels are then boiled in water until the tea turns yellow. The tea is then strained and the boiled corn discarded. Although the drink is naturally sweet, sugar is sometimes added when a sweeter flavor is desired.
Roasted corn kernels are available at groceries, traditional markets and supermarkets in Korea, as well as at Korean groceries abroad. Tea bags containing ground corn are also commercially available.
Blends
Oksusu-cha is often combined with bori-cha (barley tea), as the corn's sweetness offsets the slightly bitter flavor of the barley.
Gallery
- Jasaek-oksusu-cha (purple corn tea) tea bag
- Roasted corn kernels
- Boiling roasted corn kernels
See also
- Bori-cha – barley tea
- Hyeonmi-cha – brown rice tea
- Memil-cha – buckwheat tea
- Roasted grain beverage
References
- ^ Lee, J. (4 January 2016). "5 winter warmers that are caffeine-free". Christian Today. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
- ^ Jung, Alex (13 July 2017). "Best Korean drinks -- from banana milk to hangover juice". CNN Travel. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
- Kayal, Michele (28 July 2015). "Seoul food: Fueled by heat-seeking Americans, Korean cuisine is hot, hot, hot". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
- ^ "Gangnaengi-cha" 강냉이차. Doopedia (in Korean). Doosan Corporation. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
- 장, 박원 (13 February 2001). "샘표식품, 우리보리차.옥수수차 시판". Maeil Business Newspaper (in Korean). Retrieved 30 June 2010 – via Naver.
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