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| A bowl of Songpyeon |
One of the major foods prepared and eaten during the Chuseok holiday is Songpyeon, a Korean rice cake which contain stuffing made with healthy ingredients such as sesame seeds, black beans, mung beans, cinnamon, pine nut, walnut, chestnut, jujube, and honey. When making Songpyeon, steaming them over a layer of pine-needles is critical. The word “song” in songpyeon means "a pine tree" in Korean. The pine needles not only contribute to songpyeon’s aromatic fragrance, but also its beauty and taste. On the eve of Chuseok, the entire family gathers together to make songpyeon.
Another popular Korean traditional food people eat during Chuseok is Hangwa. It is an artistic food decorated with natural colors and textured with patterns. Hangwa is made with nutritious ingredients, such as rice flour, honey, fruit, and various roots. People use natural ingredients to express various colors, flavors, and tastes. Because of its decoration and nutrition, Koreans eat Hangwa not only during Chuseok, but also for special events like weddings and birthday parties.
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| The many colorful kinds of hangwa |
drinking the liquor and food.
A variety of folk games are played on Chuseok to celebrate the coming of Autumn and rich harvest. Village folk dress themselves to look like a cow or a turtle, and go from house to house along with a Nongak band playing music. Other common folk games played on Chuseok are Archery and Ssireum (Korean Wrestling). Though folk games also vary from region to region.
Ssireum is the most popular Korean sports played during Chuseok. Korean men usually hold Ssireum contest during Chuseok. Ssireum takes place inside a circular sand pit where two men wrestle each other while holding tight on each other's satba, red and blue band, and a player loses when a player’s upper body touches the ground. The ultimate winner becomes 'Cheonha Jangsa', 'Baekdu Jangsa', or 'Halla Jangsa'; these all mean “the most powerful”. Due to its popularity among both the young and the old, Ssireum contest is being held more frequently, not limited on the important holidays.
The Ganggangsullae is a traditional folk dance under the full moon in the night of Chuseok. Women wearing Hanbok make a big circle holding each other's hands and singing while dancing altogether in a big circular motion. There are several stories about it's origin.
One of the well-known stories says that the dance dates back to the Joseon Dynasty (1392 - 1910) when the Koreans were fighting against the Japanese invaders. The Korean army dressed the village women in military uniforms and had them dance around the mountain to look like that the Korean military was greater in number than it actually was from the enemy's side. The Koreans enjoyed their victory partly thanks to this scare tactic.




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