Tag Archive: Food and Culture

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.

Related Posts

Korean Sweet Pancakes (Hoddeok) – Fully Home Made Version

Eggs Baked on Elvan Stone

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

Eggs Baked on Elvan Stone

Eggs Baked on Elvan Stone 1

On my birthday, I got this weird present. They weren’t wrapped with pretty pink ribbon nor beautifully packed with wrapping paper, since I got them on my birthday, I consider that they were my birthday present.

The present I got is eggs baked on Elvan stone. Have you ever had eggs baked on Elvan stone before? I wouldn’t think so. It was my first time trying these eggs too.

You can see them at a sauna (public bath) in Korea. They are called “Maekbanseok gyeran” (Maekbanseok is Elvan stone and gyeran is an egg) Apparently lots of people love to eat those eggs there. Eggs baked on Elvan stone are more expensive than normal eggs, my sister thinks that one egg is about US 50 cents or more. The person who gave them to me works at a sauna, so he said he got it cheaper than retail price.

Eggs Baked on Elvan Stone 2

It takes about 3 hours or more to bake the eggs on the stone, and they taste really good when they are still warm, but they were cold when I had them. It tastes like roasted chestnuts to me (only the egg white part). The unshelled egg is soft, delicate, and shiny. When I first cracked the shell, I thought they were boiled in soy sauce or something.

Eggs Baked on Elvan Stone 3

Now you would wonder why these eggs are so special? I did too.
I couldn’t find any reason for their popularity, but Elvan stone is known as a really useful stone for health. It gets rid of harmful metals in your body, it is good for the skin (it cleans skin diseases, like pimples, tumors etc), and when it is heated, it releases far infrared rays, which are good for blood circulation, delaying aging, and activating cells. So eggs baked on Elvan stone must be good! :)

In English, there is some information about Elvan stone at Olumpus Spa. It summarizes pretty well. Now I feel like going to a spa and having some warm baked eggs on Elvan stone. What about you?

Other health related Posts

Radish and Oysters on Rice (Gulbap in Korean)

Ginger Tea (Saenggang Cha in Korean)

Ginseng Tea (Insam Cha in Korean)

Brown Seaweed Soup and My Birthday

Brown Seaweed Soup and My Birthday flowers
(Flowers from my honey)

When is your birthday, Sue? Triple one, that’s the date I was born.

It can confuse people with November 1st, but still, pronouncing triple one sounds kind of cool. :D

It was very noisy from the early morning today. It was still dark outside but the strong smell of sesame oil woke me up. My two little sisters were up to something (they have been staying with us for two weeks now), making me some birthday soup.

What is birthday soup?

  • So called brown seaweed soup (miyeok-guk) is the birth day soup in Korea. However people eat it on normal days as well.

Why do people have it on a birthday?

  • Brown seaweed soup was actually consumed by a woman who delivered a child. Because it helps to clean blood vessels and to produce milk, it has abundant iodine to reduce the swollen body and calcium to help build strong bones, which are all important for both mother and child.
  • It is symbolic to have on a birthday, because while a baby’s mother has this soup, the baby also eats it through the milk. Though, my theory is to remind people about their mother’s hard work for delivering them and say thank you to their mother on their birthday. So on your birthday, you should say thank you to your mother. :)

This is a picture of the brown seaweed soup (Miyeok-guk) my sisters made for me.

Brown Seaweed Soup and My Birthday soup

I don’t know what she added to season it, but it would probably be some salt. The obvious ingredients are brown seaweed, some beef cuts, and sesame oil. It was delicious yet the sesame oil overpowered the overall taste. I hope my sister doesn’t read this post. Because I said it was very good. :D Sister, the thought is what counts!!

My sisters are self claimed night elves. They’ve been baking cookies, cakes and helping me cooking meals while they are staying with us.

Chocolate cake from the night elves (they used a prepackaged mix)

Brown Seaweed Soup and My Birthday cake1

Pork Belly (Samgyeopsal in Korean) Party

Pork Belly (Samgyeopsal in Korean) Party on the magazine

It’s been a very long time since I last had samgyeopsal. I think Koreans have to eat samgyeopsal on a regular basis – Otherwise people go crazy like me.

According to a recent Korean news paper, Koreans consumed about 17 kg of pork per person in 2005, compared to beef – 6.6 kg and chicken – 7.4 kg, and more than 50 % of the pork was the samgyeopsal. To meet this consumption, Korea has imported massive amounts of samgyeopsal from 14 countries, the amount was about 85,000t for the last 11 months. Why are Koreans so crazy for samgyeopsal?

Well, for me, it is delicious. That is all I can say. :D I especially like it when the meat is cooked in a golden crispy way.

The reason I haven’t had it for a long time was, simply, I didn’t have a grill plate for it. I wasn’t going to buy it until I moved out from this house, because I didn’t want to increase our load, but my tolerance had nearly reached the limit. I decided to buy a grill pan finally, whether it will be a burden or not. (I will tell you about the grill plate in the next post.)

This is the samgyeopsal we ate. (1.4 kg served 4 people – about US $22, I know it is a lot to eat, but we haven’t had this for nearly for 8 months, we were like some kind of hungry wolves. :) )

Pork Belly (Samgyeopsal in Korean) Party pork

It was s~o good, the meat was melting in my mouth. I totally loved having baked Kimchi with the meat. It is another level of delight. :D

Pork Belly (Samgyeopsal in Korean) Party cooking

Enjoying Samgyeopsal dos and don’t

Do

  • Have some fresh vegetables with the meat. You can wrap the meat with some lettuce and Perilla leaves (Korean style sesame leaves – Ggaennip in Korean). It is healthier and also helps digestion.
  • Bake some garlic and spicy green chilies on the grill and add them when you wrap the meat. It really enhances the taste.
  • You can also bake some fermented Kimchi on the grill. Some restaurants serve you 1 year old fermented Kimchi. It is not as horrible as you may think, it totally rocks. Some experts say that it is the best part of having samgyeopsal.
  • Cook the meat on the strong heat for a short time. That way you don’t loose the meat juice (you don’t want it to go dry).

Don’t

  • While the meat is cooking on the grill, don’t turn it over every so often. Apparently the more you do, the more it looses its flavour. Some experts say that only turning the meat once is best.
  • Don’t stretch out your hands to pick the meat from the opposite side. People get angry at you. (Every wolf is hungry here)
  • Don’t keep eating. You need to learn the beauty of cooperation by joining in turning the meat when it is cooked. You are a mean spirited person if you keep eating while the others work together to turn the meat.
  • Don’t eat the meat when it is burnt. It is bad for your health (The burnt part can cause cancer).

I couldn’t keeping taking pictures after smelling it (and who would?), so I can’t give you a visual image of “dos and don’t”, yet I am going to hold another party soon, then I can show you more of the side dishes I made.

Related Posts

BBQ Grill Plate

Pork Belly BBQ (Samgyeopsal Gui)

Steamed Pork Wrapped in Leaves (Bossam in Korean)

Steamed Pork Ribs (Dwaeji Galbi Jjim in Korean) – Natural Sauce Version