Excuse Me While I Pack My Bags and Move House

Farewell

Time flies. When I was a child I never thought I would ever become an adult one day. Time seemed to be stuck in one spot and I didn’t feel I was getting older day by day. Yet it is 2007 February already and it is time to move.

Yes, I have implied many times on this blog, so some of you may know already. I am moving to Australia (I also want to say that I am married to an Australian guy, not an American as some people seem to think).

I have been very busy from the end of last month and this week has been the most crazy week in 2 years. You know, moving involves a lot of work, especially when it comes down to international moving. That is why I haven’t been able to post new recipes recently and I also don’t have anyting left in my kitchen to cook (ingredients or kitchen ware etc).

Yet while I am moving My Korean Kitchen to Australia, I won’t close it down. Though the food I serve you might be slow for a short while.

I will still be posting, but please have patience on any of those big requests I know many of you have.

Thank you.

Square Cucumbers

Square Cucumbers1

Look at these square cucumbers! Have you seen these before?

I recently found them at a local supermarket. It was only US $ 1.50 for 3 of them. I found that they are easier to peel and use for cooking than round ones.

Those kinds of special vegetables are called “incubated vegetables”. They are classed as partly organic cucumbers (the sprays don’t touch the vegetables). Apparently, it takes a lot of effort to grow for farmers, because they need to put them individually in a certain place (arrangement, wrapper, padding etc), so they are 10-20% more expensive than regular types. However, these cucumbers stay fresh longer and often taste better.

Square Cucumbers2

Have you tried these yet?

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Seasoned Dried Filefish (Jwipo)

Seasoned Dried Filefish (Juipo)4

When I was a child I adored Jwipo (쥐포) so much. It was my favourite snack in the world.

Grilled Jwipo is sold on the street occasionally nowadays but it also used be sold at cinema snack bars as well. There was an episode when I went to see “Jurassic park” with my friend. I found that the snack bar was selling some grilled Jwipo, so I bought one just before the movie started. However as I finishing the one I had in my hand, I wanted to have some more. I ended up continually going backwards and forwards to get more Jwipo during the whole movie. I think I nearly ate about 10 or more of them (It was my second time watching the movie, for the record). It felt like I went to the cinema to eat those Jwipos instead of watching the movie, yet since then I don’t have any memories of eating Jwipo.

The other day, Zenkimchi wrote in his post that Jwipo is one of the strangest foods he had ever had, and that reminded of me how I fell in love with it at one time. So when I went grocery shopping the next day I instinctively grabbed Jwipo. The packet I bought only had 4 disks of Jwipo but it was extra big size for 3300 won (US $ 3.50)

Seasoned Dried Filefish (Juipo)2

I just baked them on a gas burner on medium heat. It was slightly salty and sweet, but fishy. It also was quite chewy. My jaw got sore a bit later. In general, it wasn’t as delicious as I remembered but it was a good snack.

Seasoned Dried Filefish (Juipo)3

Later I looked at the back of the packet and there were a couple of cooking methods recommended by the manufacturer. The first and second methods were for making spicy seasoned or soy sauce seasoned Jwipo as side dishes, which I will cover some other time. The third method was grilling Jwipo on a frying pan with some butter and the forth method was microwaving it slightly and using some Gochujang (Korean chili paste) or mayonnaise as a dipping sauce. The forth one is a common way to serve at a drink bar as well.

Seasoned Dried Filefish (Juipo)1

Jwipo is made out of filefish (dried, pressed, and seasoned). Once there was a rumor about filefishes that they are nearly extinct in Korea because of the massive consumption of Jwipo by Korean people. I have no idea if that is true or not.

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Korean New Year’s Day Food

Korean New Year’s Day Food 0

February 18th (Sunday), 2007 is the official Lunar New Year’s day, which 90% of the Korean population celebrates. The holiday starts from today 17th to 19th. It seems a pretty short holiday because it includes Saturday and Sunday, which most people on salary (us) have a day off anyway.

I don’t know how many of you celebrate New Year’s day on Lunar New Year’s day as well, I would like to share some recipes I have posted in the past that are suitable for Korean New Year’s day, so you can find them easily to celebrate this day in the Korean way. It sounds like good idea, doesn’t it? But there is one problem. Since my blog doesn’t have a very long history yet, I don’t have many recipes that suit New Year’s Day. :(

Hopefully I will make an abundance of recipes this year, so I can properly redo this next year. Fingers crossed.

Here are the links, and Happy New Year!

Recipes

Korean New Year’s Day Food 1

Korean New Year’s Day Food 3

Korean New Year’s Day Food 4

Korean New Year’s Day Food 2

Non Recipe

Korean New Year’s Day Food 5

Steamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu)

Steamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)1

It’s been just over 2 months since I made my failed Kimchi mandu (김치만두). Do you remember that post? I learnt a lot of lessons that day. I read my chronicle on How to make “successful” mandu two times thoroughly just before I gave it a second try. My second time trying it turned out really well. I shared the work with my two sisters, so it made it a lot easier but I still spent half of my day on making these.

The main point of making good mandu is

  • Squeezing dry the ingredients completely if it is possible.
  • Spreading enough flour on the board where you roll the dough each time and the dish where you put the mandu, so it is easy to separate.

Steamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)3

Unfortunately, I got a lot less mandu than last time. I used a similar amount of ingredients but I got half less mandu. I think hand made mandu needs more stuffing than the ones made with a mandu shaper (You need to fill them fairly well to make cute looking mandu for hand made ones, but if you add too much stuffing for mandu shaper ones, it won’t close properly).

Ingredients for 25 dumplings

-Dumpling skinsSteamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)st1

  • All purpose white flour – 3 cups
  • Warm water – 1 cup

-Dumpling stuffing

  • Kimchi- 1⅔ cups
  • 1/2 an onion
  • Mung bean sprouts – 200 g
  • Tofu – 275 g
  • Minced pork – 130 g
  • 1 egg
  • Minced garlic – 1/2 tsp
  • Salt – 1 tsp
  • Sesame oil – 1 tsp
  • Pepper – 3 sprinkles

Preparation (You can click the picture to see the bigger image)Steamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)st2

  1. Sieve the flour, add the water, then knead it (my sister kneaded it for nearly 30 minutes).
  2. Finely chop the Kimchi, onion, tofu, and pork.
  3. Par boil the green bean sprouts and chop them finely too.
  4. Squeeze the bean sprouts, tofu, onion, meat, and Kimchi, separately in a straining cloth.
  5. Mix all the squeezed ingredients in a big bowl and season it with the garlic, salt, sesame oil, and pepper.
  6. Add the eggs and mix them well.

My sister worked so hard being a hand model for this recipe, especially squeezing all those ingredients. It is quite hard work if you want to do it properly. Thanks again Hyunji!

StepsSteamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)st3

  1. Spread some flour onto the board and plate.
  2. Slice a dough piece off.
  3. Roll the dough into round shapes, not too thin not too thick.
  4. Put the rolled pastry on one hand and add filling on top (you need to fill it with an adequate amount of the stuffing to make a good looking mandu).
  5. Seal the pastry then place it on a plate (You can seal it into whatever shape you want, I fold it in half then wrap the ends round to touch each other)
  6. Repeat steps 1 to 5 until you use up all the ingredients.
  7. Put some kind of cloth on a steamer and put the mandu on top.
  8. Steam it for 5-10 minutes.
  9. Serve it on a plate with dipping sauce (a mix of; soy sauce – 1 tbsp, sugar – 1/2 tsp, chili powder 1/4 tsp, a dash of vinegar and a dash of sesame oil).

I also made some mandu soup (만두국) with the rest of the mandu (the ones that I didn’t steam), but steamed mandu tasted better.

Steamed Kimchi Dumplings (Jjin Kimchi Mandu in Korean)2

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My Failed Kimchi Dumplings (Kimchi Mandu in Korean) and What I have learnt

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