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South Korean vs Moroccan food & cuisine

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South Korea

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Morocco

In South Korea, people consume about 2047 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 43%, and eggs and dairy coming in last at 5%. In Morocco, the daily total is around 1804 g, with grains leading at 39% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 3%.

South Korea

Morocco

The average South Korean daily plate size is

The average Moroccan daily plate size is

2047 g.
1804 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

At the core of daily Korean meals are rice, a variety of banchan with spinach, bean sprouts, radish, seaweed, often seasoned with garlic, sesame oil, and soy sauce. Fermented condiments, such as gochujang chili pepper and soybean paste, doenjang soybean paste, and ganjang soy sauce, provide distinctive depth and umami. Modest portions of meat, fish, tofu, or eggs round out the meal.

Korean cuisine stands out for balancing contrasts: spicy against mild, fermented against fresh, hot dishes alongside cold ones. It’s also a bold cuisine – the use of chilies is a defining marker, setting it apart from Japanese, or Chinese traditions. Korean soy sauce is darker and richer than Japanese; food generally is heartier and flavored more.

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Moroccan diet is mostly grain-oriented compared to its Mediterranean neighbors, with high wheat, barley, and maize consumption. Primary plant proteins are fava beans, lentils, and chickpeas; animal proteins are goat, mutton, lamb, chicken, pigeon, beef, and fish on the coast. Milk is found in custards and cheeses, yet it is rarely consumed fresh or as yogurt. Characteristic are lemon pickles, argan oil, cold-pressed, unrefined olive oil, and dried fruits. The use of spice is absolutely crucial.

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Grains 422 G

WHEAT

142 G

RICE

229 G

CORN

46 G

BARLEY

3 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

0 G

MILLET

1 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

1 G

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Grains 698 G

WHEAT

488 G

RICE

8 G

CORN

122 G

BARLEY

78 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

1 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

In Korea, rice (bap) is the staple, always eaten with soup and side dishes.  Rice is rarely stir-fried or served alone; it’s central to the table and carries cultural symbolism. Historically, Korea had over 1,500 rice varieties, but most disappeared under colonial rule and modernization. White rice became common only in the late 20th century; earlier, people mixed it with barley, millet, beans, or sorghum (boribap, japgokbap).

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Cereals are an inexpensive, security-providing base for all income levels. Wheat is the most crucial – the average per capita consumption is almost 500 grams daily, three times the global average (156 grams). Wheat is used for breads: classic khobz, yeasted oven-baked rounds, rghifa or mssemen, a griddle-cooked flatbread,  and harcha, a small, circular semolina bread. Wheat also features baghrir pancakes, very popular in North Africa’s streets.

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Produce 870 G

PULSES

4 G

VEGETABLES

574 G

STARCHY ROOTS

54 G

FRUITS

145 G

SEA PLANTS

93 G

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Produce 686 G

PULSES

20 G

VEGETABLES

267 G

STARCHY ROOTS

107 G

FRUITS

241 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Korean food is far from vegetable-poor. Traditionally, meals were plant-centered, with meat reserved for special occasions. Home-style banchan are vegetable-heavy: spinach, bean sprouts, cucumbers, radishes, greens. Stews feature tofu and mushrooms. The BBQ image is more dining-out than everyday.

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Vegetables are essential, though quantities consumed are comparatively low. Due to economic disparities, some struggle with the affordability of fresh vegetables.

Cooked salads are popular in Morocco. They feature eggplants, tomatoes, peppers, and carrots, often roasted or stewed and then served at room temperature or chilled. Vegetable pickles from carrots, cucumbers, turnips, cauliflower, and green beans are common.

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Meats 233 G

POULTRY

60 G

PORK

107 G

BEEF

52 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

1 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

13 G

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Meats 108 G

POULTRY

59 G

PORK

0 G

BEEF

22 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

14 G

OTHER MEAT

5 G

OFFALS

8 G

Are Koreans heavy meat eaters today? Compared to the past, absolutely more than before. Modern Korea has one of the highest per-capita pork consumption rates in the world, and barbecue culture is central to dining out. Yet meat is still paired with plenty of vegetables, rice, and sides — so the meal feels varied rather than dominated by meat.

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Lamb is a type of meat that is especially loved. The liver is eaten first, as it is more perishable than other parts. The intestines and other small bits are hung outside to dry for days in the sun and are used later for flavoring.

Other than the usual meats, game, snails, pigeons, and camels are quite popular.

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Fish and seafood 152 G

FISH

95 G

SEAFOOD

57 G

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Fish and seafood 50 G

FISH

49 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

Each Korean coastline has something to brag about – oysters from the south, crabs and clams from the west, sea cucumbers and abalone from Jeju. Seafood also has a whole ecosystem in Korean cuisine. Fish and seafood are eaten daily – grilled fish on open flames, skewered squid, dried cuttlefish, and fishcakes. Koreans are the world’s heaviest eaters, averaging around 55 kilos (1,940 oz) per person each year.

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Fish and seafood are hugely popular along the coast but way less inland. Fish come in tagines, pastillas, and are grilled whole, baked, or poached, in combination with tomatoes, bell peppers, onions, dried fruits, nuts, and chermoula sauce – all a distinctive North African footprint.

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Eggs and dairy 109 G

EGGS

34 G

MILK AND DAIRY

62 G

ANIMAL FATS

13 G

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Eggs and dairy 114 G

EGGS

24 G

MILK AND DAIRY

84 G

ANIMAL FATS

6 G

Eggs are very common in Korean cuisine. You’ll see them in gyeran-jjim (savory steamed egg custard), fried eggs topping bibimbap or noodles, and rolled omelets gyeran-mari packed in lunchboxes.

Milk and dairy are not traditional, most Koreans are lactose intolerant. After the Korean War, when U.S. aid introduced powdered milk and school milk programs. Today, yogurt drinks and cheese are present, but only as a modern Western influence.

Egg dishes are pretty frequent, from tomato shakshuka to hard-boiled eggs flavored with cumin as a street snack or saffron-tinted eggs for tagine garnishing. Moroccan shakshouka is spiced with cumin, paprika,  harissa, preserved lemon, and olives, and sometimes includes lamb or merguez sausage.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 261 G

NUTS

29 G

SWEETENERS

135 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

65 G

OILCROPS

32 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 148 G

NUTS

15 G

SWEETENERS

94 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

36 G

OILCROPS

3 G

Nuts do appear, but as a garnish, not an everyday ingredient, but sesame and sesame oil are big. It’s actually the signature Korean oil –  aromatic, nutty, used more as a seasoning over bibimbap, japchae, namul vegetables, or any other dish. South Koreans use moderate amounts of neutral oils for frying. When used, they’re soybean and canola at home, and palm oil is widespread in foodservice for cost reasons.

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Moroccan desserts stand out for richness and sweetness, which can be considerably more intense than the typical Western understanding of “sweet”.

This heightened level of sweetness comes from the generous use of honey, sugar, and sweet fruits. It is balanced by nuts, floral waters (orange blossom, rose petals water), cinnamon and saffron.

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Herbs

ANGELICA

CHIVES

JAPANESE PARSLEY

MUGWORT

PERILLA/SHISO

SESAME LEAVES

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

MINT

PARSLEY

THYME

South Korea
Common
Morocco

ANGELICA

CHIVES

JAPANESE PARSLEY

MUGWORT

PERILLA/SHISO

SESAME LEAVES

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

MINT

PARSLEY

THYME

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Spices

BLACK PEPPER

DRY CHILI

ALLSPICE

ANISEED

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

FENNEL SEED

GINGER

GREEN CARDAMOM

MACE

NIGELA SEED

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

TURMERIC DRY

South Korea
Common
Morocco

BLACK PEPPER

DRY CHILI

ALLSPICE

ANISEED

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

FENNEL SEED

GINGER

GREEN CARDAMOM

MACE

NIGELA SEED

PAPRIKA

SAFFRON

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

CHINESE CHIVES

DRIED MUSHROOMS

SPRING ONION

YUZU

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

GINGER

ONION

LEMON

ORANGE WATER

TOMATO

South Korea
Common
Morocco

CHINESE CHIVES

DRIED MUSHROOMS

SPRING ONION

YUZU

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

GINGER

ONION

LEMON

ORANGE WATER

TOMATO

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Condiments

ANCHOVIES

DOENJANG

DRIED FISH/SEAFOOD

DRIED SEAWEED

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

GOCHUJANG

GRAIN VINEGAR

HONEY

PLUM SYRUP

RICE SYRUP

RICE VINEGAR

RICE WINE

SESAME OIL

SESAME SEEDS

SOY SAUCE

ARGAN OIL

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATES

FERMENTED BUTTER

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

PEPPER PASTE

PRESERVED LEMONS

TAMARIND

TOMATO PASTE

South Korea
Common
Morocco

ANCHOVIES

DOENJANG

DRIED FISH/SEAFOOD

DRIED SEAWEED

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

GOCHUJANG

GRAIN VINEGAR

HONEY

PLUM SYRUP

RICE SYRUP

RICE VINEGAR

RICE WINE

SESAME OIL

SESAME SEEDS

SOY SAUCE

ARGAN OIL

CLARIFIED BUTTER

DATES

FERMENTED BUTTER

OLIVE OIL

OLIVES

PEPPER PASTE

PRESERVED LEMONS

TAMARIND

TOMATO PASTE

South Korea

SEASONINGS

South Korean cooks build flavors through depth, fermentation, and balance. At its core are jang – fermented soybean trio –  doenjang, ganjang, and gochujang, which provide the earthy, savory, spicy, and salty base. Fermented vegetables, especially kimchi, give tang and pungency that cuts through the richness of other foods.

Garlic, ginger, sesame oil, and toasted sesame seeds are everyday staples that create warmth and nuttiness. Dried chili flakes, specifically gochugaru, add heat and a deep red color, defining much of Korea’s flavor identity. Overall, Korean food is moderately to very spicy, but on average, it is milder than the hottest regional Thai, Sichuan/Hunan Chinese, Indian, Mexican, Jamaican, or Ethiopian dishes.

A daily, structural ingredient and core stock builder is dashima, kelp. It is simmered to create umami, mineral richness, and subtle ocean flavor, and then it acts as the backbone of soups, stews, and broths. Dashima is almost always combined with dried anchovies to make yuksu broth.

Unlike cuisines that layer in many dried spices, Korea doesn’t. South Korean cooking is anchored by a  fermented bases and chili seasonings:

GOCHUGARU – Korean chili flakes. Sun-dried, mildly smoky and fruity chili with medium heat; essential for kimchi, jjigae, namul, and sauces where clean chili flavor and color are needed.

GOCHUJANG – red chili and fermented soybean paste. Thick, sweet-spicy-umami paste of chili, glutinous rice, and fermented soy; foundational for tteokbokki, bibimbap sauce, spicy stir-fries, jjigae, and chicken wing glazes.

DOENJANG – long-fermented soybean paste. Rustic, deeply savory paste from fermented soy; used to season stews (doenjang-jjigae), soups, namul, and as a marinade component.

CHEONGGUKJANG – fast-fermented whole-bean paste; pungent, probiotic-rich; for hearty stews.

GANJANG – soy sauce. Light yangjo soy for all-purpose seasoning and soup soy guk-ganjang for broths; controls salinity, color, and umami in nearly every dish.

AEKJEOT – fish/anchovy sauce. Salty, umami booster for kimchi brines, stews, and some marinades; used sparingly to deepen savoriness.

Morocco

SEASONINGS

Moroccan cuisine combines sweetness with savor and adds spiciness without overwhelming heat. Cumin, coriander, saffron, ginger, and cinnamon are the main spices that give a distinctive profile compared to more subtle Mediterranean cuisines. Dried and fresh chili peppers are used lavishly; mint, fresh cilantro, and parsley freshen up dishes; bell peppers, tomatoes, onions, and garlic prevail in aromatics; olives and preserved lemons bring a tangy kick. Orange flower, jasmine, and rose petals water infuses exotic aromas into desserts.

RAS EL HANOUT – a dried spice mix popular in Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria, blends from a dozen to 80 spices. The name means “head of the shop” – the best spices the seller has to offer. Each shop, company, or family may have their own blend. Common ingredients, though, include cardamom, cumin, clove, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, allspice, dry ginger, chili peppers, coriander, black pepper, sweet paprika, fenugreek, and turmeric.

LA KAMA – a lesser-known but traditional Moroccan spice blend that includes black pepper, turmeric, ginger, cinnamon, and nutmeg.

Also popular in Moroccan cooking are:

Levantine ZA’ATAR – dried oregano, thyme or marjoram, sumac, sesame seeds, salt.

Arabic BAHARAT – black pepper, cumin, coriander, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, nutmeg, paprika.

SAUCES

HARRISA, a hot chili pepper paste made from a variety of chiles, could be the baklouti, guajillo, anaheim, chiles de arbol peppers, along with garlic, coriander, caraway, cumin, and lemon juice (or preserved lemon) and olive oil and is widely used as a marinade, dip or sauce.

CHERMOULA is a marinade and relish used in Moroccan, Algerian, Libyan, and Tunisian cooking, it slightly reassembles the Latin American chimichurri. In Morocco its often used for fish. Frequent ingredients include fresh cilantro, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice or preserved lemon, cumin, paprika, chili peppers, salt. It can come in different hues and tones: green (without paprika and red elements, with red tone due to sweet paprika or harrisa and yellow tone due to turmeric (source).

Moroccan cuisine is exclusive with four distinct cooking styles that are both cooking techniques and flavor combinations on the same time: m’hammer (red), m’chermel (marinated), m’qali (fried) and q’dra (skills).

M’HAMMER is a classic way of preparing tagine in which roasted meat is doused in a sauce made of onions, paprika, and cumin. A generous amount of paprika is used, giving sauce a brownish red color, and the meat is cooked in the sauce, its later taken out, charred under the broiler (source) and put back.

M’CHERMEL is a cooking style that is characterized by marinating food in chermoula sauce.

After marinating, food can be cooked in any other style, but the term m’chermel describes the process and style of cooking with this particular marinade.

European tradition cooks usually pan-brown the meat in the beginning before stewing. M’QALLI method is vice versa – first, the meat is stewed, and when it absorbs the broth and becomes tender, is fried. Compulsory spices are ginger, saffron, and turmeric.

Q’DRA is also the name of deep cookware unique for this type of cooking. It involves cooking meat very slowly, until it becomes exceptionally tender. This will be considered the most casual cooking technique; literally what Moroccans will prepare almost every day. (source) A liquid yellow broth is made with saffron and turmeric, pepper, cinnamon, parsley, and smen, while paprika and ginger are never used for this style.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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