Though
doenjang and
ganjang are usually made together,
doenjang can also be made without producing any filtrate. •
Tojang () – When the aged brine is boiled to become
ganjang, the rest (aged
meju chunks) are mashed to become
tojang. •
Jangjae () – Smaller amount of brine is used from the beginning. No soy sauce is produced in the process, and the
meju aged with the smaller amount of
brine becomes
jangjae, another type of
doenjang. While traditional
doenjang is made with soybeans and brine only, many factory-made variants of
doenjang contain a fair amount of wheat flour just like most factory-made soy sauce does. Some current makers also add fermented, dried, and ground
anchovies to accentuate
doenjang's savory flavor.
Korean Ministry of Food and Drug Safety's
Food Code classifies
doenjang into three categories by their ingredients. •
Hansik-doenjang (, "Korean-style fermented soybean paste") –
doenjang made with traditional style
meju and brine. •
Doenjang (, "fermented soybean paste") –
doenjang made with non-traditional
meju (which can be made of
soybean,
rice,
barley,
wheat or
degreased soybean, and ripened using traditional method or
Aspergillus) and saline solution. •
Seasoned doenjang () – product that contains more than 90% of
doenjang or
hansik-doenjang. ==Use==