Tag: korean food

Maesil Ice Cream

Maesil Ice Cream

I’ve already gone on and on about maesil before, but to briefly recap, maesil are small green fruit that grow on maehwa trees, an East Asian relative of apricot and plum trees. We are lucky enough to have some maesil trees in our front garden, 

Crown Daisy Doenjang-guk: A Light Summer Soup With a Green Herbal Kick

Crown Daisy Doenjang-guk: A Light Summer Soup With a Green Herbal Kick

I am a fiend for soup and stews. I have a theory that there are two types of people in this world: those who eat ramen for the noodles and those who eat ramen for the broth. I fall into the latter category. I think 

Mugwort Magic and Korean Twisted Donuts

Mugwort Magic and Korean Twisted Donuts

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort is a magical plant. The Romans used to stick it in their shoes to protect them from exhaustion on long journeys by foot, and in medieval Europe, it was used to ward off evil spirits — in Germany, it is sometimes called St. John’s plant, because it is believed that John the Baptist wore a girdle made of mugwort to protect him on his voyage into the wilderness. It had its practical uses, as well. It was a common ingredient in many beverages, including beer in place of hops.

It is still used in East Asia (including Korea) to ward off a variety of illnesses that can be summed up as general malaise. It is rolled into a stick that is burned (like sage by new-agers in the West), placed on acupuncture needles or ground into a fine fluff and burned on the skin of the sufferer. It is also used to make a variety of soups and rice cakes — most of the green rice cakes you buy here have either been flavored with mugwort or spinach.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

But like all good magic, it has its dangerous side. Too much mugwort can be poisonous.

Folk medicine has its questionable aspects, but I tend to believe that there may be something to it when a particular ingredient has been lauded for its healing properties in both the East and the West for centuries, if not millennia. It’s still a bit early for fully grown mugwort, which is harvested mid-summer, but the young plants have been appearing in the markets here since April. It’s sold in huge bundles, which I can never manage to get through all in one go, so after using what I needed, I was still left with a giant pile. I thought about rice cakes, but me and rice flour are still not getting along so well, so I decided to make Korean kkwabaegi (twist) donuts instead.

There was a little street stand that sold these donuts on my walk home from school in my old neighborhood in Incheon. The smell of frying dough wafted down the length of the street, and by the time you got to the stand, you were helpless. You can also make these donuts with rice flour, which I think makes them nicer, but I didn’t have any on hand, so I opted for a wheat flour version instead.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort has a strong, biting flavor, a rough, abrasive texture and extremely potent aromatic qualities. I wanted to give the donuts a little of the first, none of the second and a lot of the third, so I ground the mugwort up in my food processor and infused the milk with it.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Kneading dough is one of my favorite things to do, but I broke a sweat while kneading yesterday for the first time this year. It’s unfortunate that the conditions that make dough rise the best are the same ones that make pulling it together less pleasant.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

But if the yeast is happy, I guess I’m happy. And the yeast has been very happy in my kitchen lately. My sourdough starter bubbled up out of its jar earlier this week, and the rise you see above happened in less than an hour.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

In fact, the dough was rising so quickly that I had to rush to get through the shaping and get them into the hot oil. By the time I got the last donut rolled and twisted, the first one has begun to over-rise and untwist.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Mugwort flavored Korean twisted donuts.

Big, fat donuts, golden-brown and crispy on the outside and light green and spongy on the inside. The flavor was just barely there, but when I tore one open fresh out of the oil to be sure they were cooking through, the smell of mugwort wafted up and filled the area of the kitchen around the stove instantly.

I was only sorry B wasn’t home to try them while they were still hot, but he was happy enough with the baker’s dozen that greeted him when he got home.

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Galbi Jjim: Korean Braised Beef Short Ribs

Galbi Jjim: Korean Braised Beef Short Ribs

Galbi jjim (soy sauce braised beef short ribs) is one of those things that just takes time. It takes time to cook, and it takes time to learn how to cook. It’s the meal that’s always waiting for us at B’s family’s house in Busan 

Haap: Traditional Korean Dessert Cafe in Cheongdam

Haap: Traditional Korean Dessert Cafe in Cheongdam

Haap is not your average ddeok jip (rice cake shop). Chef/owner Shin Yong-il studied French dessert making in France, at École Lenôtre, and has worked at Gosire, a famous Korean restaurant in Japan, and Poom Seoul, a Korean fine-dining restaurant. He also served as  a