Yoon Sook-ja

Yoon Sook-ja (born June 6, 1948) is a South Korean cooking researcher and professor.

Yoon Sook-ja
Yoon in 2016
Born (1948-06-06) June 6, 1948
Alma materSookmyung Women's University
Dankook University
EmployerInstitute of Traditional Korean Food
Korean name
Hangul
윤숙자
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYun Suk-ja
McCune–ReischauerYun Sukja

Education and career

She got her master's degree in Food and Nutrition at Sookmyung Women's University, and took her doctoral course in Food and Nutrition at Dankook University. She was the associate professor of Traditional Cookery at Baewha Women's University, and now she is the head of the Institute of Traditional Korean Food,[2] where she is also a professor in the Department of Food and Cooking. Additionally, she is the head of the Tteok Museum. She has given presentations on Korean food in London.[3][4]

She was one of the people in charge of South Korea's return banquet at the 2007 Inter-Korean summit.

Bibliography

  • 1997, Our Kitchen Gadget (LIFE & DREAM)
  • 1998, Korean Traditional Cuisine (JIGU PUBLISHING Co.)
  • 2000, Korean Foods in Season (時節飮食) (JIGU PUBLISHING Co.)
  • 2001, Korean Traditional Desserts : Ricecakes, cookies and beverages English translation from the Korean by Young-Hie Han. ISBN 978-89-7006-239-6[5]
  • 2002, Indigo Town's Hangwa (Jilsiru)
  • 2003, Tteok in Scenery, Good-Morning Kimchi (Jilsiru)[6]
  • 2006, Beautiful Wedding Food (Jilsiru), Korea's Tteok Hangwa Eumcheongnyu (JIGU PUBLISHING Co.)
  • 2007, Our Beautiful Alcohol (Jilsiru), Basic Cooking of Korean Food with Professor Yoon sook-ja (JIGU PUBLISHING Co.)
  • 2008, Our Food Ingredients Good for Eat Q&A (JIGU PUBLISHING Co.) - Joint Authorship with Choi Bong-seun, Choi Eun-hui

Translation

Supervision (Children's Books)

  • 2006, You and Me, Grab a Spoon and Come on in (Knowing Our Country Well 5 - Foods, Daekyobook)
  • 2007, Meju Flowers Blooming (Food Relics, Trip Our Relics 4, Joongang Publishing)
gollark: Look, if I had a use for trigonometry I would go copy an existing MicroPython implementation or something.
gollark: Unless you count the hardcoded digits of Tau.
gollark: PotatOS is several thousand lines of cryptic incomprehensible code and doesn't include trigonometry anywhere!
gollark: No use randomly writing mathematical code for a random platform when I have no idea what to do with it.
gollark: I don't see why I would want that, and that's not listed, but I imagine you could implement it.

See also

References

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