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Category Archives: Korean

Hotteok (Korean pancakes)

20 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by Zoli in breakfast, dessert, kids, Korean, pastry, snacks, Street food, Vegetarian

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Tags

brown sugar, fried pastry, Hotteok, kids, Korean pancakes, street food, vegetarian

Korean pancakes

I’m always on the lookout for sweet fried things to make for my kiddies. Not the most food trendy sentence now is it? I love making them pancakes, crepes, fritters and on Thanksgiving morning, beignets are our family’s special treat. These hotteok are a street food, not a breakfast food traditionally. I don’t remember ever eating these in Korea—I first saw them in a girleatworld instagram post. Served hot, they are delicious with a crispy outside, soft and chewy inside and melted brown sugar nut syrup oozing out.

They’re a little labor intensive for first thing in the morning, but you could make the batter the night before or start it early in the am and fry up a batch by brunch time. I made them for an after school snack and then heated up a leftover one with some fruit for my daughter’s breakfast. Of all things, my 8-yr old son wasn’t too keen on them—he said he likes eating ‘hot food with a fork’ and not with his hands!

Ingredients for 8-10 hotteok
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup glutinous rice flour
(if you don’t have the rice flour use 2 cups flour)
1/2 cup each of water and milk (or 1 cup milk)
2 tsp instant yeast, such as Fleischmanns
1/2 tsp salt
2 tbsp sugar
mild-flavored vegetable oil (or olive oil)
black sesame seeds (optional)

Filling
1/4 to 1/3 cup brown sugar
1/4-1/2 tsp cinnamon
2-3 tbsp chopped nuts

1) Warm the milk slightly and add in the yeast, sugar and 1 tbsp oil. Stir and let sit for a few minutes.
2) Add in the flour and sesame seeds if using. Mix rigorously for a minute, then cover tightly and let rise for 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
3) Knock air out. The dough will be very sticky.
4) Use plenty of flour to work with this sticky dough. Scrape the dough onto a floured surface. Shape into a log and divide it in two, then divide those halves and so on until you have 8-10 equal-sized pieces of dough.
5) Mix the filling together.
6) With floured hands so they don’t stick, flatten slightly a dough ball in your palm and then cup your hand to form a little pocket for the filling. Add about 2 tbsp of filling and then fold the sides over it and seal the hotteok. It should be a nice round ball shape. Set it seam-side down on a floured surface. Repeat with the remaining dough balls. Cover with a tea towel to keep them moist.
7) Heat up about 3 tbsp oil (I used olive oil) in a heavy bottomed frying pan and add the hotteok seam-side down. Fry the dough balls till golden brown on the bottom and then flip.
8) With a spatula or hotteok press, press the dough balls down until they are flattened discs. Fry till that side is golden brown and then flip again. When both sides are browned, lower the heat, cover and cook for another minute.

Serve straight away. They must be nice and hot!
Korean pancakes
Korean pancakes

Korean pancakes

Korean pancakes

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Vegan radish kim chi (kkakdugi)

13 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by Zoli in gluten free, healthy, Korean, salad, spices, vegan, Vegetarian

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

banchan, gochugaru, kimchi, kkakdugi, Korean radish kimchi, vegan, vegetarian

radish kimchi

I love cabbage kimchi but another popular recipe is Korean radish kimchi, or kkakdugi (깍두기). I know a few people who prefer these spicy, crunchy cubes of radish above all other kimchis. It is usually made with the same pickling marinade as napa cabbage kimchi but I find it a lot easier to make. Admission: so far my vegan napa cabbage kimchi hasn’t turned out as well as I would like. The first time I made it, I didn’t salt the cabbage for long enough (overnight is recommended) and the second time I made it, after a week it tasted a little vinegary. So I consider radish kimchi just a perfect place to start the for the kimchi noobs.

First things first—you must have a few things to hand before you begin:
makes a medium batch of kimchi—enough for 3 or 4 meals
A large bowl
A large strainer
2 tbsp salt
1 tsp sugar
1/4 cup Gochugaru (Korean red pepper flakes)
1 large or 2 small Korean radish (about 2 lbs of radish)
1 tsp fresh ginger
3-4 cloves fresh garlic
1/4 cup soy sauce
2-3 green onion, sliced thinly
1-2 tsp rice flour (or plain flour in a pinch)
1/4 cup water

**Disclaimer! You may need to make this recipe a few times to really get it down as there are a few variables, such as 1) how salty or sweet you like your kim chi and 2) how spicy you like it. When salting the radish, if you add a lot of salt, it will be salty, no matter how much you rinse the radish. Likewise, you do not want to undersalt it. Go chu gar u red chili powder is the agent of fiery spice so you may not want to add in the entire 1/2 cup (or you may want to add more). Unfortunately, you will have to figure this out for yourself.

1) Begin by peeling the radish and cubing it.
2) Pour over about 1/4 cup of coarse sea salt and mix with your hands. Let sit for about 30 minutes, mixing a few times with your hands. Then rinse and strain several times in cold water to rinse off as much salt as you can. I recommend you even soak in cold water for a few minutes and then rinse several times.
3) To make the chili paste, heat up the water and stir in the rice flour until mixed. Simmer gently on low heat until it starts to thicken slightly and then turn the heat off and let cool. Add in the gochugaru to make a thickish chili paste.
4) Mince the garlic and ginger, then add the green onion (I had to use chives in a pinch), sugar and soy sauce. Add to this the chili paste and combine thoroughly.
5) Mix about 3/4 of the paste into the radish in a large bowl with your hands. You may want to wear plastic gloves just in case. If you do use a spoon, make sure to mix together well. Taste and add the rest of the chili paste if you think it needs to be more spicy.
6) Put into an airtight container in the fridge. It may taste a little salty at first but as it pickles and more juices come out from the radish, it will become less salty. I thought it tasted perfect after a week.

radishcubed and saltedgo chu ga rupaste ingredientsmixed pastemixingfinished

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