Korean alcoholic drinks

Korean cuisine has a wide variety of traditional alcoholic drinks, known as sul (). Many of these drinks end with the Sino-Korean word -ju (; ), and some end with the native Korean word -sul. The Sino-Korean -ju is not used as an independent noun.

Korean name
Jusageobae (holding a drinking party)
by Hyewon (1758–1813)
Korean name
Hangul
Revised Romanizationsul
McCune–Reischauersul
IPA[sul]
Suffix
Hangul
-술
Revised Romanization-sul
McCune–Reischauer-sul
IPA[sul]
Suffix 2
Hangul
-주
Hanja
Revised Romanization-ju
McCune–Reischauer-chu
IPA[tɕu]

There are an estimated 1,000 or more kinds of alcoholic drinks in Korea. Most are made from rice, and are fermented with the aid of yeast and nuruk (a wheat-based source of the enzyme amylase). Fruits, flowers, herbs, and other natural ingredients have also been used to craft traditional Korean alcoholic drinks. There are six distinct flavors: sweet, sour, pungent, roasted, bitter, and spicy. When the flavors are balanced, the alcohol is considered of good quality.

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