Soy sauce is not treated as a seasoning, but as time itself.
We use soy sauce aged for more than twelve years, never rushed and never adjusted to speed. It is allowed to settle slowly, so depth forms without sharpness, letting the food breathe rather than be overtaken by salt.
The soy sauce jars are placed facing west, where sunlight remains steady and temperature changes are gentle. This direction supports natural air circulation and even fermentation, without forcing the process. The aim is not intensity, but balance—an aging that unfolds quietly over years.
From long-aged soy sauce to broths simmered for more than thirty-six hours, our cooking follows the same principle. Flavor is not meant to fill the body, but to ease it. What remains after the meal should feel light, shaped by time rather than technique. This is how we continue the philosophy of Korean cuisine—through patience, restraint, and trust in fermentation.


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