Difference between revisions of "Bread Ritual"

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(Created page with "'''The Bread Ritual''' is a traditional ritual performed by the Jin, which involves weighing and combining three ingredients, mixing, kneading, then dry-frying small round...")
 
 
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*The eating of the bolko is then representative of death - which is the purpose of the whole process.
*The eating of the bolko is then representative of death - which is the purpose of the whole process.


Plain bolko are often made in private family bread rituals on a weekly or monthly basis, but celebratory bolko are often made for special occasions - with bolko vendors popping up around Jin-populated areas in recent years selling bags of flavored bolko as a cheap, convenient and fun street food.
Plain bolko are often made in private family bread rituals on a weekly or monthly basis, but celebratory bolko are often made for special occasions - with bolko vendors popping up around Jin-populated areas in recent years selling bags of flavored and/or stuffed bolko as a cheap, convenient and fun street food.


[[category:Food and Beverage]]
[[category:Food and Beverage]]

Latest revision as of 02:24, 15 January 2021

The Bread Ritual is a traditional ritual performed by the Jin, which involves weighing and combining three ingredients, mixing, kneading, then dry-frying small rounds of bread dough, which puff up into bite-sized, crisp pockets of bread known as 'Bolko'.

They are traditionally made with flour, water and salt:

  • The three ingredients represent the physical aspects of life.
- The flour represents the physical self
- The water represents the physical world in all its fluidity and transience.
- The salt represents the 'other' i.e. Other people with whom you interact.
  • The kneading of the dough then represents the spiritual, infusing the physical with the means to exist meaningfully.
  • The cooking in a hot skillet represents the trials of life that we face.
  • The eating of the bolko is then representative of death - which is the purpose of the whole process.

Plain bolko are often made in private family bread rituals on a weekly or monthly basis, but celebratory bolko are often made for special occasions - with bolko vendors popping up around Jin-populated areas in recent years selling bags of flavored and/or stuffed bolko as a cheap, convenient and fun street food.