Special sauce and tricky prawn on Trump’s South Korea menu

Agence France-Presse

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Special sauce and tricky prawn on Trump’s South Korea menu

AFP

A special sauce more than a century older than the United States will be on the menu for Donald Trump at his state banquet in Seoul – along with a diplomatically tricky prawn

SEOUL, South Korea – A special sauce more than a century older than the United States will be on the menu for Donald Trump at his state banquet in Seoul on Tuesday, November 7 – along with a diplomatically tricky prawn.

The dinner, at the Blue House compound next to a former royal palace, includes a beef rib dish accompanied by a gravy made with an “exquisite, 360-year-old soy sauce”, said a spokesman for Seoul’s presidential office.

The age implies it was made in 1657, the year the father of the US Declaration of Independence signatory Benjamin Franklin was born.

Fermented food including soy sauce is a staple in South Korean cuisine, with soy sauces made by famous artisans and fermented for decades – or centuries – sold for tens of thousands of dollars per liter.

In one food show in 2012, a group of artisans displayed soy sauce they claimed had been made 450 years ago, with a price tag of 100 million won ($90,000).

Tuesday’s menu also includes a grilled sole – known to be Trump’s favorite fish – and an unnamed official told the South’s Yonhap news agency: “The menu contains food that has local, traditional flavor that could also appeal to the taste of the US head of state.”

But it is a marked contrast to the largely familiar US-style fare the president was offered by Shinzo Abe in Japan, with whom he has a significantly warmer relationship than with South Korean President Moon Jae-In.

Within hours of Trump’s arrival in Tokyo, Trump and Abe sat down to cheeseburgers, accompanied by tomato ketchup, and the centerpiece of the state banquet there was a steak.

The Seoul meal also features a prawn that Moon’s office said was caught near a disputed island claimed both by the South and Japan.

The Seoul-controlled island off the east coast – called Dokdo in Korea and Takeshima in Japan – is at the heart of a decades-long territorial dispute and diplomatic row between the two countries. – Rappler.com

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