

The term “choco pie” originated in the US, but the sugary snack is also known as “choco pie” in places like Japan and South Korea. In a sense, we sent Choco Pie boxes to the employees in the hospital,” the official said. “We heard the soldier has not recovered enough yet to eat food. It was not an act for publicity,” an Orion spokesman told the Korea Herald. “We sent the Choco Pies as a welcoming present to Oh, who came to Korea after going through hardship. When word got out about his sweet tooth, Choco Pie producer Orion Confectionery sent Oh 100 boxes of the snack and offered to provide the treats to him free for life, paper reported. Oh said some North Koreans got the treat from workers at the now-closed Gaeseong Industrial Complex, across the demilitarized zone, where South Korean companies manufactured their products using North Korean labor, the Korea Times reported.
Korean choco pie cracker#
When he awoke from surgery at Ajou University Hospital last month, he casually mentioned he had a craving for the popular South Korean snack, which consists of chocolate, a graham cracker crust and marshmallow filling. Oh Chong Song, 25, is still recovering from gunshot wounds and a variety of ailments – including tuberculosis, hepatitis B and parasitic worms – after his daring escape on Nov. The North Korean soldier who defected from the Hermit Kingdom has more than freedom to look forward to – a lifetime supply of Choco Pies. North Korea defector sounds alarm about woke US ideology North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un attends farm ground-breaking as food crisis grips nation Kim Jong Un’s daughter, 10, likely successor, spelling doom for his sister

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