Monthly Archives: January 2007

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui)

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) 1

I was having spicy seasoned pork the other day for dinner, but strangely I had a huge craving for Samgyeopsal BBQ (삼겹살 구이). What is this? Am I becoming like a hobbit? Do you have a similar experience like this? I was quite satisfied with the meal I was having, but some parts of my stomach obviously weren’t satisfied. So the next day, I bought some Samgyeopsal meat to meet the requirement of my tummy.

This time I just bought 800g of the meat for 4 people (last time I bought 1.4 kg) I wished I had bought more meat, but it is better to eat less than get sick later, right?

There aren’t many things you need to prepare to enjoy Samgyeopsal BBQ and below are what I prepared for our dinner.

What I baked with

You can bake pretty much anything you want. These are pictures of what I baked on the grill with Samgyeopsal. (Green chili, Sliced garlic, Enoki mushrooms, Kimchi)

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) mushrooms

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) kimchi

I personally think they are the must have items to enjoy Samgyeopsal BBQ properly. Especially, golden crispy baked mushrooms taste super ultra best. :)
Some restaurants serve tofu, bean sprouts, or onions to bake as well.

What I wrapped with

Some lettuce, Perilla leaves (known as sesame leaves, ggaennip), Thin sliced pickled white radish

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) lettuces

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) pickled radish

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) wraped with lettuce

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) wraped with radish

I haven’t made pickled white radish myself yet but I am going to make it in the future. In the meantime, it is available at the supermarket in Korea. Hopefully you can find them where you live too. :) Pickled white radish has a slightly sweet and sour taste. So it gives an extra flavour to the wrap when you eat them together.

What else I enjoyed with it

Seasoned garlic chives (부추 무침 – recipe will follow near the end of this post, though it wasn’t as good as I hoped. I need to develop it more), Ssamjang (dipping sauce for lettuce), Cucumber

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) seasoned leek2

Seasoned garlic chives are a small companion for the meat. When you eat the meat, it gives a nice flavour, supposedly sweet and sour taste plus onion fragrance. Most Korean restaurants serve thinly sliced spring onions instead of the garlic chives, but I thought it is easier to deal with the garlic chives than thin slicing spring onions, since I don’t have the proper equipment.

What I did before I start baking

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) rubbing

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) 2

My sister thinks that it is important to spread some oil by rubbing one piece of pork on the grill before you add the rest of the meat. That way the meat doesn’t stick to the plate.

Seasoned Garlic Chives

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui) seasoned leek1- Ingredients for 4 servings

  • Garlic chives – one fistful
  • 1/2 a small onion

Sauce (mix these in a bowl)

  • Soy sauce – 1 tsp
  • Refined rice wine – 1 tsp
  • Anchovy sauce – 1/2 tsp
  • Dark brown sugar – 1/2 tsp
  • Chili powder – 1/2 tsp
  • Apple vinegar – 1/2 tsp
  • Sesame oil – 1/2 tsp
  • Minced garlic – 1/4 tsp
  • Parched sesame – 1/4 tsp

-Steps

    1. Rinse the garlic chives in cold water.
    2. Divide them into 3 portions and thin slice the onion.
    3. Put the garlic chives and onion into a big bowl.
    4. Just before you serve it add the sauce and mix them well. If you mix them too earlier the garlic chives go soggy.
    5. Serve it on the plate.

      As I said earlier, seasoned garlic chives wasn’t as good as I hoped. I think I had more garlic chives than the sauce, relatively, so I need to make more sauce next time to give it the proper taste.

      Related Posts

      Pork Belly (Samgyeopsal in Korean) Party

      BBQ Grill Plate

      Garlic Chives and Baked Garlic Salad

      Vegetables Wrapped with Pickled Radish (Mussammari in Korean)

      Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) – Pre Mix Version

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) on the magazine

      Have you seen these pancakes before? They are called Hoddeok, and you can easily spot them on the street, especially in winter in Korea. Hoddeok used to be my favourite street snack when I was a child, yeah I was that spoiled kid who cried for sweet snacks and embarrassed my mom. :)

      The other day, my self proclaimed elves (my sisters) found a Hoddeok recipe and they were busy making them. They somehow miscalculated the amount of the ingredients, so it wasn’t quite as good as it could be, but it was still good for their first try.

      So I thought I should compare our Hoddeok with something more professional before I present it to you, and since I haven’t found any Hoddeok carts on the street (I said this is quite a small city on other posts), I decided to compare with one from the factory.

      This is the premix packet for Hoddeok and what is inside.

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) package Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) package inside

      • Product name – Q1 stuffed pancake mix
      • Made by – Samyang
      • Purchase price – 2500 won (US $2.60) from Homeplus
      • Weight – 550g (supposedly able to make 10 pancakes)
      • Contents – Premix 396g (left), filling jam mix 150g (right), Dry yeast 4g (centre)

      There are instructions on the side of the box in Korean and here are the steps from the box with additional opinions of mine. The extra ingredients you will need are: water 260ml and some vegetable oil.

      Step 1. Sieve the premix (the yellowish packet), then add the dry yeast (silver packet) and water, knead it with a wooden spatula.

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) prep1

      Step 2. Cover the bowl with wrap, and ferment it for 2 hours at room temperature (20-25 ℃) The volume of the dough needs to increase by 2 times.

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) step2

      Step 3. When the dough is ready, put some oil on your hands (anti stick purpose) and separate an adequate amount of the dough(to allow ten to be made), then put it on your hand.

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) step3

      Step 4. Widen the dough with your hands and put a spoonful of jam mix (the green packet). Seal the dough. Repeat it for the rest of the dough. (You need to spread the dough more than in the picture. Otherwise it is hard to seal properly.)

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) prep2

      Step 5. Pre heat the frying pan for 20 seconds and add some oil.

      Step 6. Put 2-3 sealed dough balls onto the pan and turn them over when the bottom part is cooked. (Cook them on medium to low heat)

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) cooking

      Step 7. Press the dough with a spatula and when the both sides are golden brown you can serve them on the plate.

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok)served

      Sweet Pancake Mix (Hoddeok) in half

      Recommendation from the packet : It is best if you consume all the fermented dough (dough without the jam mix) when you make it. However if you can’t finish it all, keep it in the fridge (if you are going to consume it within 24 hours), otherwise keep it in the freezer, and defrost it well before you use it.

      Review of the product (5 is the highest)

      • Price compared to fully homemade version : 2/5 (I think it is expensive to buy this premix packet since I saw how easy it is to make the dough ourselves with easily available ingredients.
      • Convenience : 5/5 (Since it is made for convenience, it is a well made product)
      • Taste and Flavour : 3.5/5 (It was delicious though was too sweet for me. It has a vanila flavour and slight sense of cinnamon.)
      • Side affect – I got three pimples possibly more on my right cheek after having 3 Hoddeok yesterday. I think it is nothing to do with the product, I just had too much of it maybe (As you can guess, it is very sugary and oily). Also, importantly, people who have a peanut allergy shouldn’t have it. It contains powdered peanuts, though it didn’t say how much it has.

      By the way, you will see a fully homemade version recipe very soon.

      Related Posts

      Korean Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) – Fully Home Made Version

      Spring Rolls in Laver (Gimmari in Korean)

      Enoki mushrooms Pancakes (Paeng-ee Beosut Jeon in Korean)

      Frozen Cheese Cakes

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)1

      This stew is something you might like on a cold night, along with Soju. The soup was so flavourful and moreish, you can not dislike it if you love Korean food.

      When I had the first spoonful of soup it gave me a feeling as if I solved some kind of a mystery, though the hit of the chili powder on your throat is something you always need to watch out for.

      I cooked this stew on a portable burner, something I very much enjoy doing lately when I cook. I think the food tastes best when it is kept hot during the meal, and it makes you feel as if you are eating at a restaurant.

      Ingredients for 4 people

      (Prep time – 10 minutes, Cooking time – 10 to 15 minutes)

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)ingredients
      • White prawns – 380g
      • Mussels – 300g
      • 4 shiitake mushrooms
      • 1/3 a zucchini
      • White radish – 150g
      • Crown daisy (ssukgat in Korean) – 66g
      • Bean sprouts (kongnamul)- 100g
      • Water 5 cups
      • 11x15cm size dried kelp
      • 1 green chili (spicy)

      Sauce (mix these in a bowl)

      Prep

      1. Clean the mussels individually with a rough cloth or brush and trim the hair with scissors.
      2. Rinse the prawns. (I didn’t cut or trim any parts of them and still survived. :) )
      3. Clean the vegetables (peel the skin as needed. Discard bad beans.)
      4. Thin slice the zucchini and white radish.
      5. Discard the stem from the mushrooms.
      6. Take out the seed from the chili and thin slice it diagonally.

      Cooking (You will need two pots)

      1. Boil the water (5 cups) and when it starts to boil add the mussels.

      2. When the mussels open their shells, sieve the water through a cloth strainer to get rid of the sand that comes out of the mussels (use this water in step 3).

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)prep

      3. Put the boiled water into a pot, add the dried kelp, and boil it for 2-3 minutes.

      4. Take out the kelp (you can throw it away), add the radish and sauce. Stir it well.

      5. Add the rest of the vegetables, prawns, and cooked mussels into the pot and when it starts to boil, you can start eating the cooked ingredients.

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)cooking

      6. Enjoy your meal.

      White Prawn and Mussle Stew (Saewoo Honghap Tang)2

      Terms from the title

      • Saewoo – General terms for shrimps or prawns
      • Honghap – Mussels
      • Tang – Boiled soup or stew

      Related Posts

      Spicy Mussel Stew (Honghap Jjim in Korean)

      King Oyster Mushrooms and Prawns on Rice

      Korea, Outback Steakhouse Membership Service has changed

      In the past I wrote about these

      1. How to Become a Member at Outback Steakhouse as a Foreigner
      2. How to Eat Efficiently at Outback Steakhouse

      However, they changed the rules just last month, and since I continually have some readers wanting information about membership at Outback Steakhouse, I felt like I have to add something to direct them correctly.

      The Birthday coupon or Anniversary coupon service ended on December 31st, 2006. Instead, you can get a 10% discount once from January 1st 2007 to June 30th 2007 if you became an online member before December 31st, 2006.

      The good news is that if you eat at Outback steakhouse from now on, you can apply for “My Outback Membership Card” (Anyone can apply for it and the restaurant will give it to you on the spot), which will give you a 10% discount all the time and on top of that you will get a 15% discount for 15 days around your birthday or anniversary for an unlimited number of times.

      However, to get the discount, you need to register the membership card on the internet first. Here is the registration page in both Korean and English. (Only people with an ID card can apply for it, you have to scroll down to see it.)

      Enjoy your meals.

      Related Posts

      How to Become a Member at Outback Steakhouse as a Foreigner

      How to Eat Efficiently at Outback Steakhouse

      My Korean Kitchen Wears a New Look

      My Korean Kitchen Wears a New Look

      Attention please!

      As you may have noticed, I have changed the template today (Michael has been working so hard. Thanks hun). So don’t be surprised, you are still on My Korean Kitchen and your host, Sue is here with you. :)

      By the way, if you found any errors or problems, please let me know by leaving a comment. We will work on that on the weekend.

      I have a question for you, I want to know how many of you use the translator on this site. Because I am going to get rid of it, if no one uses it. (update Jan 20th – I got rid of it just now, so if you have a problem with it, let me know)

      I also recommend you use Firefox to surf around my blog rather than Explorer, because it upload pictures faster, you can move around to different categories faster and doesn’t give any errors. It is free and it takes less than a minute to download.
      You can down load it from here.

      Get Firefox

      Comments and suggestions about my blog changes are welcome.