This last year has certainly brought families closer together . In a way it was no different for Eric Kim and his mother Jean. Together they cooked traditional Korean dishes and learned a thing or two about each other as well.
Mr. Kim, a cooking writer at the New York Times food section wrote about going home to Atlanta, Georgia in yesterday's section. They worked on a cookbook together, one that featured dishes from Korea. Yet he leaned so much more just being with her. He saw how she blanched pork ribs first with ginger to remove any gaminess. He noticed how she bloomed gochugaru, Korean chili peppers, in a little fat before adding it to red pepper based stews. Pine nuts were always a staple in her kim chi recipe. Mr. Kim thought of the great chef and cookbook writer, Nigella Lawson's words that she wrote in her 2008 article for The New York Times: "quite often you cook something the way your mother did before you." This idea has been dubbed the Pot Roast Principle.We want to cook exactly the same way our mothers and grandmothers did but we all want to tinker with the recipes and make them our own. Mr Kim saw this and put his spin on such classic recipes as bimbimbap, turning it into a sheet pan recipe.
It was this recipe along with his kimchi jiggae with ribs. Mr Kim's bimbimbap is an easy cook. It's two sheet pans in one oven. The first contains sweet potatoes,oyster mushrooms, red onion and kale. Don't crowd them. You want them to brown not steam. Roast them on your oven's top rack until the sweet potatoes are tender while the mushrooms and onions are caramelized. The kale should be crisp. The second sheet pan should be slightly oiled and filled with the rice and eggs that will be baked sunnyside up. after they've been cooked, It's layering the veggies over the rice and then adding the eggs. Sesame oil and a teaspoon of the Korean chili paste or gochujang is layered on top. The ribs with kimchi are another good cook. The ribs are cooked first with the ginger . After they're drained in a colander and rinsed with cold water. The kimchi or fermented cabbage is cooked in a mix of butter and garlic Water is also added. The ribs are added and nestled in the kimchi.It's brought to a boil with over a high heat and then simmered. A medium yellow onion is sliced and layered on top of this. Fish sauce and maisi cheong, green plum syrup finish it off. All the Korean products can be found at Korean markets.
Mr. Kim embraced his mom's recipes yet added his own spins. This is what Korean home or cooking or any cooking really is. Taking the traditional and making it his own. It's what every home chef does.
No comments:
Post a Comment