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Friday, May 20, 2011
Dolsot Bibimbap
Bibimbap is one of my very favourite meals. I used to eat it just about every single day when I lived in Seoul. Eating out is the thing to do in Korea - often to socialise at lunchtime with co-workers, but for me, working weird shifts, I often ate alone, something unheard of for Koreans it seems. Although I loved the days when I had company, I would always enjoy eating out when I had something as delicious as this to indulge it. Back then, I never tried to make it at home because basically cooking, esp when garlic is involved, is not the best idea when you live in a one room apartment with the stove 2m from your bed. Anyway, when surrounded by reasonably priced and excellent restaurants, I'm happy to leave it to the pros.
If you get the chance, do visit South Korea. Not only does it have delicious food, but it is beautiful - even Seoul is surrounded by wooded hills. The culture has both modern and traditional elements tourists will enjoy.
This colourful dish can be made many ways - many restaurants have their own way of doing it with particular vegetable combinations. Dolsot bibimbap (the winter version) is served in a large stone bowl that I think is heated on a stove. I haven't found these wonderfully heavy bowls for sale here so I have made mine with some earthenware lidded pots I have which I preheat in the oven. Bibimbap is usually also topped with bulgogi (thinly-sliced beef) though of course I get mine without. I do usually go for the egg on top though. The egg in summer is usually fried while for the winter version of this dish, shown here, it would be cracked straight onto the hot rice, too cook as the sizzling bowl is brought to your name. Who doesn't love the excitement of sizzling dishes delivered to your table? You can make normal bibimbap and in the summer use more raw ingredients like beanspouts, lettuce and grated carrot but on cold days the crackling rice and warm vegetables of the dolsot version is just the thing.
What I love most about this dish is the morish spicy Gochujang sauce - a chile paste you can buy from Korean food stores - or, if you are lucky, the Asian food aisle of the supermarket. I had to visit 5 Asian shops before I found this last time - not because they didn't stock it, but because I was doing my shopping at the wrong time and they had all sold out!
Here is a picture of what I used to make it for a cold rainy day yesterday. The green packet is yummy salty seasoned Korean seaweed and the bottle is Asian seasame oil. Usually I would use carrots but thanks to our juicer we had run out. Parsnip made a sweet and earthy alternative to both carrot and the bracken fronds my favourite bibimpap restaurant used (which I haven't found here).
Dolsot Bibimbap
Get all your vegetables washed and chopped first of all, then you can just cook them, one after the other, in the same pan (less dishes to wash). All the vegetable toppings can be at room temperature but the rice must be fresh and hot.
I'm going to give you directions to make enough for 4 people but you can adjust quantities to suit.
Ingredients:
8 shiitake or other mushrooms, trimmed and sliced
1-2 bunches of spinach, trimmed and rinsed well.
1 parsnip and 1 small carrot / 2 med carrots jullienned
1 med / 3/4 large zucchini
8 small sheets Korean seaweed (seasoned laver) cut into strips with scissors
1-4 cloves garlic (depending how much you love it), thinly sliced
1 /18 ozpacket of firm tofu, dried in (paper) towels, sliced into 2cm strips
2 t tamari
spray vegetable oil for cooking
1 t or less of Asian seasame oil for seasoning (strong flavour)
4 cups of fresh cooked rice.
-I used brown rice as I love the flavour but I'm not the best at cooking it - it likes to spit and bubble over from my rice cooker (any tips appreciated) so I keep my eye on it, adding water gradually to avoid big boil-overs. About halfway through cooking I added a handful of black rice which apart from probably being nutritious and all, dyes the rice a wonderful purple colour! White Korean rice is very yummy too - I love the smell of it cooking, but today I'm giving you this especially healthy and nurturing version.
Method
1) put the rice on in the rice cooker. If you have earthenware bowls and want to make this dolsot version, preheat your oven now too - you can put the bowls in so they heat up with the oven.
2) heat a frying pan and spray with a little oil, add the tofu, season with the tamari and fry tofu till golden brown on each side. Remove and set aside, leaving pan on heat.
3) spray frying pan with oil and add zucchini. saute until soft but firm - about 2 minutes.
4) now add mushrooms to pan, spraying on both sides. When they are partially cooked, add the garlic. Don't cook too long - about 3 minutes, you want them soft and starting to brown but not all shrivelled.
5) remove the mushrooms, leaving most of the garlic slices if poss. Add just a splash of water then put the spinach in, letting it steam just long enough so the leaves are just wilted, about a minute or two. Transfer immediately to a colander, rinse with cold water and squeeze water from the spinach. (or with perfect timing and perfect sprinkle of water, the spinach may be just softened enough to skip this 'rescue' step). Combine garlicky spinach with a few drops of seasame oil - a little goes a long way.
6) add parsnip / carrot to frying pan with further dash of water - just enough to stop them sticking to the pan. Saute until limp, about 3 minutes. Sprinkle with salt and set aside.
7) when rice is cooked, transfer 1 cup of cooked rice into each bowl - remember to use good oven mits if removing hot bowls from the oven. Cover bowls and put back in oven to let the edges crisp up.
8) while the rice is in the oven, mix up the following paste:
Yangnyeom Gochujang
Makes about 1/2 cup
4 T Korean chile paste (gochujang)
2 T Asian seasame oil
1 T tamari / light soy sauce
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 T (toasted) seasame seeds
1 green onion, chopped
1 T Korean malt syrup (mool yut) or sugar - I leave this out and it's still great
Combine in a small bowl to serve with your bibimpap (let everyone add their own, so they can have it as spicy as they like). If you want to make this paste in advance (or you have left-over), it will keep in a well-sealed container in the fridge for about a week.
9) Test your rice bowls - when the edges are starting to stick and go crunchy, it's ready to add the toppings and serve.
Now stack the seaweed sheets and slice into three strips. We do this last to keep the seaweed crispy. Arrange the vegetables, including seaweed on top of the rice in each bowl, separating the colours for best visual appeal. If you especially enjoy seasame oil, you can drizzle a few drops on each bowl and if you want to add an egg, you can do this now. Serve with the yangnyeom gochujang and any side dishes you may like - last night we had seasoned roast pumpkin. Another day I'll share some other Korean side dish ideas.
10) When people have been served and added the amount of paste they wanted, they mix everything together in their bowl with a metal spoon. Yes, this is one Korean dish that is usually eaten with a spoon, not chopsticks!
"jal meokkesseumnida!"
i saw them make this on food safari once and its def something i would love to try - have you seen the korean bbq restaurant in east perth?
ReplyDeletealso im pretty sure you found those bracken fronds once, somewhere in northbridge cos i tried one and they were in the fridge for ages lol you had something else pickled, it was bright yellow! what was that??
Oh, that yellow thing was pickled daikon radish which I slice and use for kimbab (Korean 'sushi roll'). I have some in the fridge now: I should learn how to make the lip-smacking spicy daikon condiment they often serve with kimpap (as they serve ginger in Japan). Hmm, I will have to keep an eye out for more bracken in Northbridge - thanks for remembering!
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