Engineering:Dolsot

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Short description: Korean piece of cookware or serveware
Dolsot / Gopdolsot
Dolsot bibimbap, Hangang, Paris 001.jpg
Dolsot-bibimbap, bibimbap served in a dolsot
Korean name
Hangul
돌솥
Revised Romanizationdolsot
McCune–Reischauertolsot
IPA[tol.sot̚]
Hangul
곱돌솥
Revised Romanizationgopdolsot
McCune–Reischauerkoptolsot
IPA[kop̚.t͈ol.sot̚]

A dolsot (돌솥; lit. "stone pot") or gopdolsot (곱돌솥; lit. "agalmatolite pot") is a small-sized piece of cookware or serveware made of agalmatolite, suitable for one to two servings of bap (cooked rice).[1][2][3] In Korean cuisine, various hot rice dishes such as bibimbap or gulbap (oyster rice) as well as plain white rice can be prepared and served in dolsot. As a dolsot does not cool off as soon as removed from the stove, rice continues to cook and arrives at the table still sizzling.[4]

On the bottom of a dolsot, there forms a thin crust of scorched rice, to be scraped off and eaten in the case of bibimbap, or made into sungnyung (숭늉, infusion) in the case of unseasoned rice dishes. In the former case dolsot can be brushed with sesame oil beforehand to facilitate scraping.[4] To make sungnyung, the unscorched part of rice is scooped and transferred into another serving bowl right after served, and hot water or tea (usually mild grain teas such as barley tea or corn tea)[5] is poured into the dolsot when it is still blistering hot. The infusion with loosened chunks of scorched rice remains warm til the end of the meal, when it is typically savoured.

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References