Kimchi in Space 270
rtknox00 writes "For astronauts spending months in space, the smallest touch of home can make a big difference. So when South Korea's first astronaut Ko San boards the International Space Station this April he'll be bringing along a hefty supply of kimchi, the national dish of his native country. While bringing a cherished food on a long journey might seem like a simple act, taking kimchi into space required millions of dollars in research and years of work." Science may never get Thorramatur in orbit.
Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
f(kimchi) >> f(buritto)
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Interesting)
He was blunt about kimchi, stating that Koreans need to stop touting kimchi as their finest example of cuisine and westerners' first introduction to Korean food. Instead, they should focus on other Korean delicacies that are more likely to be agreeable to western palettes. If kimchi is the first Korean thing westerners eat, many will stop there and won't bother trying Korean food again. I know Koreans really love their kimchi, but it really is a very different taste for Americans. Nothing like a bowl of garlic and onion kimchi for breakfast, yum... Not!
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Popularism doesn't always mean right as Elitism doesn't always mean the best.
Re:Awesome! (Score:4, Informative)
Indeed. Being half-Korean myself I know the joys of kimchi but I know it's also rather a large leap for most Western palettes. What I've found works well, when I introduce folks to Korean food, is to start with good old Korean BBQ, like bulgogi [wikipedia.org] and kalbi [wikipedia.org]. That usually goes over very well and opens up people to want to explore Korean food further. I of course do have kimchi on the table, since it is unique to Korean food. But I also put a little bowl of water on the table. Many people find it easier to try kimchi if they first dip it in the water to wash it off... it's not so stout on the first try. It's how my mother introduced me to kimchi, and how I introduced my wife and my kids (as well as many friends). Works well.
Re:Awesome! (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, have a slice of vegemite on toast ya girls
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
I dated a half Korean girl, her mom used to make it all the time.
The stuff smells like the ass of a dead dog, tastes great, but leaves you with Montezumas revenge 10x worse than Taco Hell ever thought about doing.
Why in space?
Because in space no one can hear your scream.
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I disagree (Score:3)
Now things like natto and stinky tofu, those are way over the top. Kimchi, if thought as a typical condiment fits in with the traditions of westerns. To consume a salt and sour "side" with a meal. like pickles or olives.
I find that a little bit of kimchi on the side w
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I actually like durian though.
Fresh ripe durian smells good to me. It's the _stale_ durian smells that I don't like - e.g. what's left the next day after the "nice" smells are gone.
As for kimchi I like the red chili + cabbage kimchi too. I'm not sure I'd like the smellier versions of kimchi
On a related note, I didn't like "Chow Tofu" aka "stinky tofu". Tasted like it smelt... Oh yeah, check out belacan sometime - once you heat it up the smell get
Well, at least... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Well, at least... (Score:5, Funny)
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It won't be the food that'll stink up the place so bad, but the unholy farts that can be generated afterwards.
(The stuff tastes great when it's done right --especially the hotter Winter stuff-- but it damned sure reeks to high Heaven on both ends of the digestive tract...)
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Imagine the Korean astronaut testing the specific impulse of his personal "reaction jet".
Whilst the other astronauts test their "forced reactions".
Koreans are taking repulsion propulsion to new heights (or high heaven as some might say).
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Millions of dollars? Years of research? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Millions of dollars? Years of research? (Score:5, Funny)
Coca-Cola (Score:2)
Re:Coca-Cola (Score:5, Informative)
How to recycle flat cola... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Valid answers are the likes of Red Bull and other energy drinks that are banned in some countries because of the amount of stimulants in them. Also acceptable are amounts of coffee that are either measured in gallons or espresso and Turkish coffees.
The basic rule is that a geek drink should contain so much caffeine or other stimulants that your heart stops, thus requiring another mouthful to get it started again.
Coke? Hell even Arts Majors drink that.
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Uh (Score:2, Insightful)
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But they also needed:
a project manager with secretarial staff at 600K/year
at least two IP lawyers with secretarial staff at 1000K/year
a PR department fully staffed at 1000K/year
a HR department to make sure the right people are hired at 300K/year
an IT department for all of the above at 600K/year
a building with sufficient parking space at 200K/year
a pound of cabbage.
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Creating or purchasing custom equipment and infrastructure is a huge expense. (Guys in their basements have lower infrastructure costs, but much worse success rates.)
Re:What country? (Score:5, Insightful)
In the U.S., you have to be a tenured department chair, with a Howard Hughes fellowship or the likes of it... in order to make $300k/year as a scientist. I figure about 0.001% of all scientists fit that bill.
Graduate Students: $0 - $25k/year ($40-60k/year in the industry, as a technician)
Post Docs: $25k-35k/year ($40-100k/year in the industry, as a junior scientist, i.e. technician)
Fellows: $35-50k/year
Assistant/Associate professors: $50-60k/year
Full Professors w/o fellowships, etc: $60-150k/year
The vast majority of all scientists in the U.S. have trouble making ends meet... not earning $300k/year... and I am talking about the BIOMEDICAL scientists, who are the HIGHEST PAID.
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mm.. (Score:5, Funny)
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The Kimchi has gotten loose! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I guess... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well, I guess... (Score:5, Funny)
"Prepare to experience chaos" (Score:4, Funny)
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In space, it's denoted by its proper and full title: Fermentation Augmented Rectal Transport System.
(wait for it...)
Re:"Prepare to experience chaos" (Score:5, Funny)
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dangerous precedent (Score:2)
Fresh Kimchi? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Fresh Kimchi? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Ehe Future (Score:4, Interesting)
Only one 'r' in 'óramat' (Score:2)
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And it's not a "comfort food" by any stretch of the imagination. It's pretty much eaten only out of respect for one's ancestors.
I don't think he's talking about Kimchi (Score:3, Interesting)
And if you'll read the Wikipedia article about it, you'll see what he's talking about. I think I just about lost my appetite for lunch after reading that. Good Lord, what people used to eat when they were poor and had to make use of the whole animal! I mean, i
Great idea (Score:2, Flamebait)
Bad enough any space station eventually ends up smelling like a men's room in Jersey City after a while.....they really want to add kimchi to the mix?
I encountered kimchi once. Imagine, if you will, the stinkiest, foulest, most gag-inducing fart you have ever smelled. Kimchi is worse.
Re:Great idea (Score:4, Funny)
Hey -- how did you find out about both my diet and my sexual habits? See -- this is why we need protection of our personal data....
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I pity the poor astronauts. (Score:2)
At least if the Korean's gastronomy is used to it, he won't foul the air twice.
But the Westerners had better lay off the stuff, or there will be hell to pay.
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If you RTFA, you'll find that the "space kimchi" has been irradiated to stop the fermentation process, and ha
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However there is nothing to compare in nastiness to the icky, squishy, fishy stuff I had to eat at some super classy Seoul restaurant, except maybe the silkworm lavae they sell on the street to kids.
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Dude... you're not supposed to cook kimchi.
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Dude -- ever been to Korea? (Score:2)
But I'll grant you that it doesn't smell bad unless you cook it, so I'd certainly agree that it's something best not done.
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Kimchi and alpha-galactosidase (Score:2, Funny)
But what about Greep? (Score:2)
Troubleshooting (Score:2, Funny)
Dak-Ho, would you suit up and go check that out, please?
What about his fellow travelers? (Score:5, Funny)
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I think I'll opt out on the fermented/rotted shark. Thanks.
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So, um, why exactly were you hoping it would taste more gross than it did? Do you have some goal of eating disgusting things?
I'm afraid I don't get it. Anything which is described [wikipedia.org] as something which will likely cause you to "gag involuntarily on the first attempt to eat it due to the high ammonia content" sounds like something I'd not try.
Cheers
Re:What about his fellow travelers? (Score:4, Insightful)
/Loves sushi
//Likes kimchi fine myself
///Finds most ethnic cuisines to be at least worth a try
Reminds me of the M*A*SH episode. . . . (Score:4, Interesting)
Needless to say, Frank finds one of these bombs and uncovers it. As he's standing there practically gloating to Hawkeye about being right, Hawkeye promptly opens the top, to Frank's evident distress, at which point a pungent odor wafts into the air. Hawkeye then lets Frank in on what's been happening and explains these are kim-chi pots the villagers are burying.
Funny what one can learn from watching t.v.
Food. What you are used to eating (Score:5, Insightful)
Time to adapt for me personally; 2-3 years, and 3 years tops. After that, no craving for food that you were previously used to eating. You get totally localized.
I guess my point is, instead of packaging food that is obviously unsuitable for the purpose (because it fucking stinks for one), why not train to live on food that is especially suitable for space flight.
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In my own experience, if you live in a place long enough you adapt to the food such that you feel just as weird going "back in the other direction"
Eh, only if you dive in head first. But a lot of people like to still eat their home country's food, or mix elements from their original culture in with the culture of their new home. Otherwise there wouldn't be the Asian supermarket, the Indian supermarket, and so on. Those places aren't filled with white folk looking to try a new fried rice or curry recipe.
How Ironic will it be (Score:2)
The durian lobby is en route to JSC as we speak... (Score:2)
kimchi isn't much of a problem (Score:2)
ugggh
try living in a tin can with the permeating odor of certain cheeses and millions of dollars will be needed to spent on suicide prevention measures
as it is, i believe astronauts have a problem with fungus and foot odor already
hmmm... on the other hand, maybe that actually prepares them well for limburger cheese, and it will be well tolerated?
just wait until the first indonesian or thai or filipino (a m [wikipedia.org]
Kimchi, huh? (Score:2)
Astronaut sounds like my wife (Score:3, Interesting)
I used to like most kinds of Korean food, but after having so much of it for so many years, I've gotten burned out on it, and now the only things I like are the pul-go-gi and the gal-bi. Imagine the l as sounding more like a single syllable lr, and the g sounding both like a g and a k, and that should give you an idea how it sounds.
Surströmming (Score:4, Informative)
Thorramatur (Score:3, Informative)
I guess every country has its own favourite unedible food.
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Truly lovely country, would be thrilled to live there, except y'all eat stuff my dog tries to roll in.
world worst bad breath (Score:2)
LOL - it's really a food? (Score:2)
You know the saying, "We're in deep kimchi now..."
Re:kimchi (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:kimchi (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:kimchi (Score:5, Informative)
There's one HUGE difference though, kimchee is not typically cooked when it's made, whereas sauerkraut is cooked. Both are fermented I think it's the same micro-biology that does it though. And kimchee has at least garlic, usually hot spices, ginger and FISH SAUCE (fermented juice from preserved fish) in it. I use the purified form of the latter, along with usually one or two cans of drained and crushed anchovies for flavor.
The cool part is that the vitamins in the kimchee stay intact, so you get the vitamin C that was in there along with what is created during fermentation. So if you are in an agrarian society and need a supply of vitamins for the winter, kimchee works well. If you have gut problems it will overwhelm whatever bugs are ailing you, and it gets a slow moving gut running like a well-oiled shotgun if you need that.
For the uninitiated, kimchee is rather offensive stuff. But properly made home-made kimchee is a comfort food that does wonders. I go from cranky and anxious to happy and relaxed with a few mouth fulls of the stuff. I need to make another batch, am on my last jar come to think of it.
Re:kimchi (Score:4, Informative)
Sauerkraut is not cooked, when it is made, for exactly the reasons you cited in kimchi.
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Is it cooked when it's canned? It always seems to me like it's "dead", where as kimchee will bubble and froth if you had the jar closed because the microbes are still alive doing their stuff.
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Re:kimchi... Thank you Kakubi (Score:2, Interesting)
I eat gimchi, and I like it, a LOT. I used to like the sweetened version, but after being unable to find it in restaurants in SF/Bay Area (outside of Ran Du, in Stockton, CA, run by a Chinese woman who grew up in Korea), I had to accept the more sour/pungent variety. Now, when I eat my Shin Ramyun, I sometimes put in several spoonsful of gimchi and the spicy tofu or spicy soybean and an egg.
I don't often burp or fart from eating gimchi. If the astronauts
Re:kimchi... Natto in Space on Soyuz Mission... (Score:2)
http://www.japanfile.com/modules/smartsection/item.php?itemid=462 [japanfile.com]
"While NASA was content with the chicken and the egg, the Soviets chose natto for their research. In 1987, Alexander Serebrov, the Soviet Union's most experienced cosmonaut, took dried natto with him on a Soyuz mission. There he found that natto's 80-90% rate of soybean protein absorption made it an ideal candidate for future travel in space."
Also, see Slashfood (no, sorry slashers, it's not related to Slashodot... FORTUNATELY...):
http://www.s [slashfood.com]
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