Grandfather chicken, strangely enough.
Battery chicken rendering corporation or BCRC. It was first founded in Seoul south korea following the start of world war II as a crude personel-mine detection device.
china, because they frie just about evrything they frie their noodles, their chicken, their beef, their fish and everyhting else they eat
Idaho, Kentucky, Vietnam, Korea, Mississippi
· Kazakhstan · Kenya · Kiribati · Korea, North · Korea, South · Kosovo · Kuwait · Kyrgyzstan
Sort of like Kentucky up north, Atlanta down south.
Korea are very smart when coming to math. Korea is in another country.
Probably Chinese Food, but it is not so simple.It really depends on how you define frying. China and Japan both have deep-frying as a method of food preparation, but this is a minority cooking style. Korea has no deep-frying (except for foreign cuisine imports like french fries). However, all three cuisines use various forms of stir-frying and sauteing, which may be considered to be frying. It all depends on how you look at it.It is probably the hardest to find Chinese food that is not fried in some way (and not a soup) than it would be for you to find non-fried Korean or Japanese food, and so I would be inclined to say that China has more fried foods, but you can find many fried Japanese foods (okonomiyaki, tempura, teriyaki) and many fried Korean foods (pajeon, japchae, fried chicken). It is also worth noting that Chinese food in the United States and other Western countries is very dissimilar to Chinese food that you would find in China, especially in the more rural areas. It is similar to how Tex-Mex or Taco Bell is quite different from actual Mexican food.
The main agricultural products for north korea is beef and milk, chicken,eggs,and pork.
The official name is The Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
Korea and Germany
ROK means the Republic of Korea. Another day in the ROK means another day in the Republic of Korea. I believe this is spoken by "Radar" in the TV series M*A*S*H.
No. It's not even close. 100,000 square kilometers is somewhere between Iceland and South Korea in size. Or, to put it another way, it's roughly the size of Kentucky or Indiana.