My discovery of the year is Chong's Sesame Oil. Made fresh in a tiny little storefront in L.A.'s Koreatown, the oil is absolutely fantastic! I had no idea fresh sesame oil could taste so alive. No hint of rancidity at all. Available in a variety of sizes, Chong's comes in both light and dark. The small 16 ounce bottle of light is $10, which is a bargain.
I've heard that you can get Chong's to mail the oils to you, but I haven't tried it. If you're in L.A., just go to their store in Koreatown, although finding the store is a bit tricky because the store is on the phantom 8th street. Phantom 8th street, you ask? Yes. Because, it turns out that there are two 8th streets: the main 8th street and a tiny side street that parallels it for about a hundred feet which is also called 8th street. Chong's is on that parallel side street.
Chong's Grocery
3560 W 8th Street
LA 90005
213 387 0651
BTW, according to the Korean spelling, the store should really be called Jeong's Grocery. Just saying.
Showing posts with label Korean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Korean. Show all posts
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Friday, November 5, 2010
Nongshim Hearty Rice Noodle Soup
Nongshim runs some great ads. They always get me to buy their new instant noodle products. My latest try was their "hearty rice noodle soup" or duk bae kee noodle soup. Nongshim tends to be hit-or-miss and this noodle was a bad miss. The rice noodles take forever to cook, and if you follow their directions, the soup is just a gross mess. But the ad is still great!
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Corn Pancakes á la Bindae Duk
One of my favorite things to eat is a type of pancake made with mung beans called bindae duk. But the problem with making this at home is that you need mung beans, which you have to soak for several hours and then grind. So I don't make it very often. But then one day, I was at a Korean restaurant in London and they served a kind of pancake made with cornmeal that was very much like bindae duk. I thought that was brilliant: a quick, easy way to make bindae duk using a very common ingredient. In addition, they'd added baking powder which made the pancakes fluffy and light. I really liked that. Of course, pancakes made with corn aren't the same as pancakes made with mung beans, but when you have a craving, they're awfully close, and so wonderfully hearty and delicious. Here's my version of it.
Corn Pancakes á la Bindae Duk
About a cup of very roughly ground cornmeal
About a 1/4 cup of flour
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1 teaspoon of baking powder
1 egg
Add water to the cornmeal, just enough to barely cover. Let soak for two to three hours. Add flour, salt, baking powder and egg. The batter should be fairly thick, but still runny, so if it's too thick, add more water. If too thin, add more flour.
Heat a skillet. Add oil. Wait until the skillet is fairly hot. Then fry up pancakes — the size is up to you.
There's also a dipping sauce, but it's fairly simple: soy sauce and vinegar, the proportion up to you.
Eating these pancakes with just the dipping sauce is pretty satisfying, but it's so much more fun if you add things like kimchee, green onions, bacon, etc to the pancakes. Just remember that you're going to have to fry up these ingredients beforehand, especially bacon. That's fairly easy. Just fry the ingredients in the skillet until they're mostly cooked and then scoop some batter right on top. Just be careful when you flip the pancakes over.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Japanese Style Korean BBQ
In Japan, Korean BBQ is called yakiniku. The meat is flavored for Japanese tastes, but the experience is pretty much the same: large platters of beef or pork grilled at the table. But I think things are changing. I just caught the end of a program that showed one Japanese restaurant serving individual portions of meat. Usually, at a Korean restaurant, you order a platter of a specific cut or part (marinated/unmarinated steak, ribs, tribe, etc.). So, unless you're with a large group, you only order one or two platters. But in Japan, people wanted to be able to order a piece at a time, like at a sushi restaurant, so they could eat a variety of meat. I've often wished that myself! This is such a great idea and hope Korean BBQ restaurants here in the US follow suit.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Citrus Kimchee
About a month ago, I was watching a Korean cooking show called Best Cooking Secrets and this kimchee master came on and said, "Today I am going to make citrus kimchee" and I thought, "What! I have to try that!" While I've eaten a lot of different kinds of kimchee, I'd never even heard of one with citrus fruits in it (and I've heard of some weird ingredients, like 7-up). This recipe calls for tangerines, which gives the kimchee a nice tangy sweetness.
For most people, kimchee is just the very spicy fermented cabbage side dish you usually get at Korean restaurants. Even many Koreans don't realize that there are over 180 different kinds of kimchee — there's even a kimchee museum in Seoul dedicated to its glories. Kimchee isn't really one dish, but a term for a kind of fermented food, just like pickles used to be. At one time, you'd never say just "pickles". You'd say "cucumber pickles" or "beet pickles" or "pickled watermelon rinds" or "pickled pig's feet". That's the same with kimchee.
Kimchee, pickles, sauerkraut — it's all one and the same thing, foods that have been preserved in salt. In fact, when Kimchee was first being made (about 8,000 years ago), the only difference between kimchee and sauerkraut was the variety of cabbage or vegetable. It was only later that Koreans started adding spices like garlic and ginger. The red, chili infused versions are late-comers, as chili peppers weren't introduced to Korea until the 16th century. The popular cabbage kimchee you usually see is called mak kimchee. At the better Korean restaurants, you'll also see mul kimchee, which is a white kimchee served in a broth of its own fermented liquid ("mul" means water in Korean). Citrus kimchee is in that category. [For examples of different kimchees, with pics, click here.]
Mul kimchees tend to be one of the easier kinds of kimchees to make since you can make it with chunks of ginger and whole cloves of garlic — with kimchees like mak kimchee, you have to spend quite a lot of time mincing all the garlic, ginger, scallions, etc. Having said that, this particular recipe does require some diligent work in the peeling of all the tangerines. Extra flavor has a price!
Citrus Kimchee
2 cups of Chinese cabbage, washed and cut into small one to two inch squares
1 small Korean radish, cleaned and cut up into small, flat rectangles (about a cup or so)
6 Tangerines, just the pulp*
1/4 cup of Minari (Korean watercress), cut into 4 half-inch pieces
2 cloves of Garlic, sliced into strips
1 teaspoon of Ginger juice — to get ginger juice, grate a hunk of ginger in a Microplaner (the one with the smallest holes)
2 tablespoons of Korean dried chili or 2 sliced red chili pepper
Kosher salt
Put the cut-up cabbage in a big bowl (you want the cabbage to have lots of room and be happy). Sprinkle the cabbage with enough salt to coat the cabbage with a light layer. Shake up the cabbage a little (you want to make sure every bit of the cabbage gets a little salt). Let the cabbage stand for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, clean the radish. First wash and then trim all the hairy parts with a small knife. Cut into small, flat rectangles.
After 30 minutes, the salt will have extracted some liquid from the cabbage. You want to keep that. Add the cut-up radishes along with the minari, garlic, ginger juice, and Korean dried chili. Mix thoroughly with your hands. Add half the tangerine pulp*. Mix again with your hands. Put the mixture into a container, like a pickling jar or even a plastic box — just make sure whatever you are using has a tight lid. Put some water into the bowl that had the cabbage in it — about a cup. Add the other half of the tangerine pulp to the water. Clean your hands in the water. While you're at it, clean the bowl, swishing the water gently around and around. I know this sounds odd, but there's a method to this madness: by cleaning the bowl with your hands, you'll extract every bit of flavor left in the bowl and on your hands. There's also a theory that using your hands while cooking transfers your energy into the food, so it's crucial that you're in a happy mood when you cook. Now add that liquid into the container. Put the container in the refrigerator. In about three days, the kimchee should be ready to eat.
*To get the tangerine pulp, use this technique. Take a sharp, small knife and cut off the top and bottom of a tangerine. Place the tangerine firmly on a cut end. With the knife, cut away the skin and inner membrane, going from top to bottom, easing the knife around the curve of the tangerine. With the membrane gone, it should be easy to remove the pulp, either with a knife or with your fingers.
Here's a picture of a display from the Kimchee Field Museum. All the dishes are examples of ancient kimchee.
credit: Wikimedia Commons
For most people, kimchee is just the very spicy fermented cabbage side dish you usually get at Korean restaurants. Even many Koreans don't realize that there are over 180 different kinds of kimchee — there's even a kimchee museum in Seoul dedicated to its glories. Kimchee isn't really one dish, but a term for a kind of fermented food, just like pickles used to be. At one time, you'd never say just "pickles". You'd say "cucumber pickles" or "beet pickles" or "pickled watermelon rinds" or "pickled pig's feet". That's the same with kimchee.
Kimchee, pickles, sauerkraut — it's all one and the same thing, foods that have been preserved in salt. In fact, when Kimchee was first being made (about 8,000 years ago), the only difference between kimchee and sauerkraut was the variety of cabbage or vegetable. It was only later that Koreans started adding spices like garlic and ginger. The red, chili infused versions are late-comers, as chili peppers weren't introduced to Korea until the 16th century. The popular cabbage kimchee you usually see is called mak kimchee. At the better Korean restaurants, you'll also see mul kimchee, which is a white kimchee served in a broth of its own fermented liquid ("mul" means water in Korean). Citrus kimchee is in that category. [For examples of different kimchees, with pics, click here.]
Mul kimchees tend to be one of the easier kinds of kimchees to make since you can make it with chunks of ginger and whole cloves of garlic — with kimchees like mak kimchee, you have to spend quite a lot of time mincing all the garlic, ginger, scallions, etc. Having said that, this particular recipe does require some diligent work in the peeling of all the tangerines. Extra flavor has a price!
Citrus Kimchee
2 cups of Chinese cabbage, washed and cut into small one to two inch squares
1 small Korean radish, cleaned and cut up into small, flat rectangles (about a cup or so)
6 Tangerines, just the pulp*
1/4 cup of Minari (Korean watercress), cut into 4 half-inch pieces
2 cloves of Garlic, sliced into strips
1 teaspoon of Ginger juice — to get ginger juice, grate a hunk of ginger in a Microplaner (the one with the smallest holes)
2 tablespoons of Korean dried chili or 2 sliced red chili pepper
Kosher salt
Put the cut-up cabbage in a big bowl (you want the cabbage to have lots of room and be happy). Sprinkle the cabbage with enough salt to coat the cabbage with a light layer. Shake up the cabbage a little (you want to make sure every bit of the cabbage gets a little salt). Let the cabbage stand for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, clean the radish. First wash and then trim all the hairy parts with a small knife. Cut into small, flat rectangles.
After 30 minutes, the salt will have extracted some liquid from the cabbage. You want to keep that. Add the cut-up radishes along with the minari, garlic, ginger juice, and Korean dried chili. Mix thoroughly with your hands. Add half the tangerine pulp*. Mix again with your hands. Put the mixture into a container, like a pickling jar or even a plastic box — just make sure whatever you are using has a tight lid. Put some water into the bowl that had the cabbage in it — about a cup. Add the other half of the tangerine pulp to the water. Clean your hands in the water. While you're at it, clean the bowl, swishing the water gently around and around. I know this sounds odd, but there's a method to this madness: by cleaning the bowl with your hands, you'll extract every bit of flavor left in the bowl and on your hands. There's also a theory that using your hands while cooking transfers your energy into the food, so it's crucial that you're in a happy mood when you cook. Now add that liquid into the container. Put the container in the refrigerator. In about three days, the kimchee should be ready to eat.
*To get the tangerine pulp, use this technique. Take a sharp, small knife and cut off the top and bottom of a tangerine. Place the tangerine firmly on a cut end. With the knife, cut away the skin and inner membrane, going from top to bottom, easing the knife around the curve of the tangerine. With the membrane gone, it should be easy to remove the pulp, either with a knife or with your fingers.
Here's a picture of a display from the Kimchee Field Museum. All the dishes are examples of ancient kimchee.

Friday, December 26, 2008
Cooking Korean Food with Maangchi
My husband found Maangchi's Korean cooking videos on YouTube. I liked them so much I went to her site and found a wealth of no-nonsense information on home-style Korean cooking. Even if you've never tasted Korean food, her recipes and instructions will have you making Korean food like an old Korean grannie. The fun and instructive videos are what really makes the site special. And what makes the videos special is Maangchi's sweet and out-going personality.
Here's Maangchi making tang su yuk, which is sweet and sour pork remastered to suit Korean palates. It's basically a Chinese dish which you'll usually find in Chinese restaurants catering specifically to Koreans, as well as in some Korean restaurants. I'm classifying it as sweet and sour pork but tang su yuk is usually made with beef, although more and more restaurants are now letting you choose either beef or pork. Personally, it's not a dish I like making at home. It's a lot of work and you have to really love deep-frying. And I don't. I've had most of my worst accidents deep-frying*. It's also one of those dishes that will almost always taste better at a good restaurant. There's something to be said about cooking a dish over and over again, night after night. Like practicing the scales on the piano.
*If you cook on a regular basis, you will not be able to avoid burning yourself. That's why I always have a tube of organic aloe vera handy, one with a very high concentrate of pure aloe vera. I've had extremely severe burns heal before my eyes using aloe vera. The trick is to slather it on thick and often. The gel becomes like a second skin, healing and protecting.
Here's Maangchi making tang su yuk, which is sweet and sour pork remastered to suit Korean palates. It's basically a Chinese dish which you'll usually find in Chinese restaurants catering specifically to Koreans, as well as in some Korean restaurants. I'm classifying it as sweet and sour pork but tang su yuk is usually made with beef, although more and more restaurants are now letting you choose either beef or pork. Personally, it's not a dish I like making at home. It's a lot of work and you have to really love deep-frying. And I don't. I've had most of my worst accidents deep-frying*. It's also one of those dishes that will almost always taste better at a good restaurant. There's something to be said about cooking a dish over and over again, night after night. Like practicing the scales on the piano.
*If you cook on a regular basis, you will not be able to avoid burning yourself. That's why I always have a tube of organic aloe vera handy, one with a very high concentrate of pure aloe vera. I've had extremely severe burns heal before my eyes using aloe vera. The trick is to slather it on thick and often. The gel becomes like a second skin, healing and protecting.
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