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Medicine and Oriental
Medicine. These are the things that come to mind when it comes to snacks for the elderly, and it is said that the fortress is also visited by many young people.

Reporter Je Hee-won will tell you about this retro craze that is blowing among young people.

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A restaurant specializing in abandoned white food in
a traditional market.

It used to be a place where the elderly used to visit during holidays and sacrifices, but most of the customers these days are in their 2~30s.

Popular items are old-fashioned snacks such as medicine and Korean sweets.

[Operation of a haemopolitan/abandoned bag: I buy it to eat as a snack, it's not a medicine department for sacrificial ceremonies like in the past, but it's usually bought the most by people in their 20s.]

It's a so-called "grandma" craze that combines millennials with a taste buds that grandmothers might love, and many young people are looking for bread instead of bread.

[Lee Bok-deok/Rice cake shop operation: Young people don't eat rice cakes and eat bread, but that's not the case anymore, and a lot of foreigners are coming. Young people eat more (than older people).]

With the establishment of a consumer culture that considers old-fashioned sensibilities to be rather fresh, sales of traditional snacks such as sikhye and yangkan are also noticeably increasing.

In addition, the classic sweets that have been eaten since the parents' generation have also attracted the taste of young people, and their sales have increased dramatically.

This retro craze isn't just about food.

One department store recently filled its main entrance with traditional artifacts.

From mother-of-pearl sobs that can be wirelessly charged to multi-colored half-housed statues, old relics are reinterpreted with modern sensibilities.

[Kang Eun-mi/Seongbuk-gu, Seoul: Actually, these products are very beautiful. Eco bags are also designed to be beautiful rather than buying them because they are traditional, and it's good to wear them....]

The new romance of the old is getting a great response from the MZ generation.

(Video Editing: Kim Byung-jik, VJ: Kim Young-rae, CG: Moon Jung-eun)