There is a certain belief in Korea that eating hot soups in the summer will cool you down (simplified form: you eat, you sweat, you feel cool).
Personally, I can do without the hot soups and the resulting sweaty body during these humid summer months.
Luckily, there is an alternative: cold noodles (naengmyeon; 냉면).
Properly made and served, they are not only delicious but also a remedy for summer temps and their effects upon the human body.
Above you can see a large bowl of cold noodles (in this case "water cold noodles"; mul-naengmyeon; 물냉면), served in icy water (there are actual bits of shaved ice) with cucumber slices and part of an Asian pear. (There's also a hard-boiled egg.)
Personally, I can do without the hot soups and the resulting sweaty body during these humid summer months.
Luckily, there is an alternative: cold noodles (naengmyeon; 냉면).
Properly made and served, they are not only delicious but also a remedy for summer temps and their effects upon the human body.
Above you can see a large bowl of cold noodles (in this case "water cold noodles"; mul-naengmyeon; 물냉면), served in icy water (there are actual bits of shaved ice) with cucumber slices and part of an Asian pear. (There's also a hard-boiled egg.)
When mixed and cut with scissors, the noodles look like this; some vinegar and mustard sauce has been added to the noodles, and there is a little bit of red pepper that is a standard serving.
For two people, a table setting might look like this: two bowls of cold noodles, a plate of dumplings (만두), a light kimchi side dish, and soy sauce for dipping the dumplings.
Delicious, filling, and cooling--in my mind much better than eating a hot soup (though, I have to say, those soups are usually delicious too!).
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