Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Bulgogi Ddukbokki

Ingredients
  • bulgogi
  • rice cakes
  • sugar
  • soy sauce
  • onions (and other random vegetables you want)
  • corn oil
Directions
  1.  Make sure there is some corn oil in the pan and spread it around
  2. Then add in soy sauce, about the size of the white of an egg
  3. Add sugar about the size of the yellow part of an egg
  4. Let it dissolve in med heat
  5. Chop up the onions and add them to the pan
  6. While cooking, boil water and make sure the rice cakes are nice and soft
  7. Add bulgogi and rice cakes to the frying pan
  8. Cook until the bulgogi is done
  9. Serve and enjoy

Rabokki

Ingredients
  • gochujang
  • gochuccarro (the flakes)
  • rice cakes
  • sugar
  • water
  • garlic
  • ramen
  • suggested things to add
    • onions
    • carrots
    • dumplings
    • odeng
    • cabbage leaves
    • green onions
    • hard boiled egg
    • etc.
Directions
  1. Get a frying pan or a pan large enough to have at least an inch of water in it
  2. Fill it up to about 1 inch water
  3. Add 4xs more gochujang than you do sugar (ie: 4tbs gochujang and 1 tbs sugar)
  4. Add as much gochucarro as you want
  5. Add as much garlic as you want, probably not too much
  6. Put fire on low heat and stir until it dissolves (may need med heat for it to dissolve)
  7. Chop up the vegetables you want and other suggested things and dump it all into the pan
  8. Keep stirring once all dissolved, add another inch of water and put in med heat
  9. When heated and bubbling, add the ramen and the soup base in and stir
  10. While cooking the ramen, add in the rice cakes as well
  11. Keep adding water as needed (it evaporates pretty fast)
  12. When the rice cakes and ramen noodles are cooked all the way, taste test to see if the sauce is too watery or not
  13. If it is too watery, just keep cooking and stirring at med heat until needed

Also I've heard that if you boil dried anchovies and use that water to cook the rice cakes and use it as the water base, it tastes better, but I haven't tried it yet.

Starting the Korean Cookbook

So this summer, the plan was to learn how to cook from my mom before I went back to school and had to cook for myself. So far, it's been kind of failing...

Not only does my mom only claim to know very few recipes, the ingredient that I need will most likely not exist at Des Moines. Also, another problem is that my mom does not measure anything. It's mostly eyeballing.

Nevertheless, I will try my best to put up random recipes that I find successful.