Ligaya Mishan, On a Hot Iron, Sizzling Magic; Pork is the star at a Korean barbecue spot in Queens. New York Times, Sept 29, 2016 (in his column "Hungry City" in the weekly Food section).
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/2 ... lushing-queens.html
Note:
(a) Out of the slide show of 11 photos, photo No 7 appears in print.
(b) "The crowd is of one mind at Tong Sam Gyup Goo Yi: From every table rises a [convex] gleaming black cast-iron dome with a tapered handle, like the lid of a giant pot, and on every dome lie stripes of pork belly, more white [which is fat] than red, flesh nearly overrun by fat. * * * James Jung, a native of Chuncheon in the mountains east of Seoul, South Korea, and his wife, Whajung Lee, who grew up in Seoul, opened Tong Sam Gyup Goo Yi in 2002."
(i) Chuncheon 春川(市)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuncheon
(capital of Gangwon-do 江原道)
(ii) The Korean surname Jung most likely is 鄭, which also is transliterated as Jeong.
(iii) restaurant name: Tong Sam Gyup Goo Yi
(A) For the meaning of Tong, see (iv). It takes me a long time to figure it out.
(B) Go to photo 2 of the NYT slide show, you will see the hangul (Korean alphabet) for "Sam Gyup" is exactly the same as those of the first two syllables of "samgyupsal" (see (c) below).
(C) For the same Korean restaurant, some in the Web spell the last two syllables as "goo ee." The same; just different transliterations. See, eg, Lee (Korean surname)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_(Korean_surname)
(李 can be transliterated as Rhee or Yi)
gui (food)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gui_(food)(hanja: none)
(iv) Photo 2 indicates Tong is represented by 통.
(A) The hanja for 통 is just seven: 通統痛桶慟洞筒.
인명용 한자사전
http://hanja.nameunse.com/?c=12&s=%ED%86%B5#
(B) dleehal, Tong Sam Gyup Goo Ee Korean Restaurant. Maangchi.com, June 7, 2010
www.maangchi.com/talk/topic/tong ... e-korean-restaurant
("I came across this restaurant on the net only. I will eat their very soon. I have been told by my Korean friend the name means 'Mucho SAM GYUP SAL' he likes to mix Spanish & English… From reading it’s a small but incredible place that is all about the pork belly (bacon) I live in New Jersey so it few hours to get there. If anyone has been to this place or wants to go let me know I welcome your opinions and your company. David")
(C) tera-se7en, Learn Korean / Korece Öğrenelim. Korea & Turkey Friendship Forum, undated
www.korea-fans.com/forum/konu-le ... renelim.html?page=2
("통 (caliber; generosity; boldness); 통이 크다 generous; broad-minded; bold; daring")
In Korean language, the "tong" 통 definitely is neither pig nor pork (as one may guess from Chinese pronunciation IN JAPAN for 豚. |