two days ago I made mandu (dumplings), the filling is ground pork, kimchi, tofu, green onions and a little sesame oil and sesame seeds as well as black pepper...
Bravo, Kristin, beautiful mandu (and a beautiful pic of them, too)! I could almost taste them. When I used to return home from college, my grandmother would make mandu for me to eat, served always in a rich chicken broth (manduguk). But I liked them even better leftover, that is, first poached in broth then simply pan-fried lightly (the little dumplings just need to go brown a little) and served with cho jang (vinegar dipping sauce). I could eat a hundred!
As for homecooked Korean favourites, apart from the obvious (bulgogi of course, which I have enjoyed at least once a week throughout my life and see no reason why this will ever stop), two very simple homecooked dishes to me represent the soul of Korean home cooking, at least as I grew up eating it.
Tubu tchigae is a simple hot pot of tofu made with strips of pork, zucchini and lots of fresh chilies, flavoured with kochujang (of course!). While we usually had kimchi and various panchan at hand for meals, I don't these days. So this one-pot meal, together with a big pot of proper sticky Korean rice, is simply a delicious desert island meal in itself that gives the greatest comfort and satisfaction! I'm imagining eating it right now, seated on a stool at my mother's butcher block kitchen counter in Cambridge, MA (how I miss that kitchen!). I eat with a long handled metal Korean spoon - taking a spoon of piping hot, steaming rice, dipping it into the chili-tinted broth, then a mouthful of still-firm tofu, a bite of pork, a crunch of chili...
Another iconic homecooked Korean food that it is equally simple is changjorim - soy-braised Korean 'hot meat'. In fact, I made a pot a couple of nights ago with a beautiful piece of top rib on the bone. I usually choose shin of beef, however, for this tough but economical cut has just the right amount of gelatinous, connective tissue to result in a tasty, fiery hot jelly. To make, simply place the meat (I cook it in one piece) in a big cast iron pot, add soy sauce (Kikkoman of course, no other will do), water, a few slices of ginger and garlic, some sesame oil and toasted sesame seeds, and a handful of whole fresh red chilies, as many as you dare. I like our Korean 'hot meat' really hot! Slowly braise for upwards of hours until the meat is falling apart. De-fat, shred the meat into the soy-and-chili cooking liquid, place in the fridge and allow to go cold and set to a jelly. Serve, again with the de rigueur pot of piping hot, slightly sticky steamed white rice together with kimchi or simply a crispy cucumber salad (thinly sliced and salted cukes in vinegar and sugar). The meat should be very hot from the chilies and is eaten almost more as a condiment to flavour the bland but delicious rice - and the contrast between the fridge-cold 'hot meat' and the piping hot steamed rice is, well, the spice of life!
Marc
Edited by Marco_Polo, 17 October 2005 - 10:44 PM.