Saeu-jeot
| Alternative names | Salted shrimp | 
|---|---|
| Type | Jeotgal | 
| Place of origin | Korea | 
| Main ingredients | Shrimp | 
| Korean name | |
| Hangul | 새우젓 | 
| RR | saeujeot | 
| MR | saeujŏt | 
| IPA | [sɛ̝.u.dʑʌt̚] | 
Saeu-jeot (Korean: 새우젓) is a variety of jeotgal, salted and fermented food made with small shrimp in Korean cuisine. It is the most consumed jeotgal along with myeolchi-jeot (멸치젓, salted anchovy jeot) in South Korea. The name consists of the two Korean words saeu (새우, shrimp) and jeot. Saeu-jeot is widely used throughout Korean cuisine but is mostly used as an ingredient in kimchi and dipping pastes. The shrimp used for making saeu-jeot are called jeot-saeu (젓새우) and are smaller and have thinner shells than ordinary shrimp.
The quality of saeu-jeot largely depends on the freshness of the shrimp. In warm weather, fishermen may immediately add salt for preliminary preservation.