K Food: Korean Home Cooking and Street Food
By Da-Hae West and Gareth West
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About the recipe
When I was little, I used to watch my mum make kimchi. Stood over a sink, elbow-deep in the kimchi ‘glue’, she would rub the mixture into the cabbage before tearing off a bit of one of the spicy leaves to feed me. One bit was never enough, and I’d always sneak some more until she’d give in and we’d enjoy a pile of the newly made kimchi with a steaming bowl of rice. Kimchi at this stage is very different to what you might be familiar with – it’s fresh and crisp, like a spicy salad, and is deliciously addictive in its own right. If you have the patience to give it a few weeks though, the kimchi will develop its characteristic tangy flavour through fermentation, and it is at this stage that it makes a great base for cooking with.
Recipe From
K Food: Korean Home Cooking and Street Food
By Da-Hae West and Gareth West
1 Chinese cabbage (about 800g)
50g salt
KIMCHI "GLUE"
150ml Myeulchi Gookmul (anchovy stock)
1 tablespoon sweet rice flour
4 tablespoons gochugaru (Korean red chilli powder)
2 spring onions
1 carrot
4 cloves of garlic
1cm piece of ginger
1 apple
1½ tablespoons fish sauce
2 teaspoons saeujeot (salted fermented shrimp)
One way I like to eat really fermented kimchi is to wash the leaves of their seasoning paste, then use these washed leaves to wrap barbecued meats, or simply lay the washed kimchi in one hand, put a small spoonful of rice in the middle with a dollop of gochujang and wrap it up to make a tasty little kimchi parcel.
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