Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Ave, Charles!

Go visit Charles's Liminality and be treated to a disquisition (with pictures!) on budae-jjigae—a Korean comfort-food classic—as well as on Korean terms for "soup" and "stew." This stew was one of Anthony Bourdain's all-time favorite dishes.

Here's footage of Bourdain making his version of budae with Anderson Cooper:


And here's a version by Maangchi, who has been called "the Korean Julia Child":


Charles's version sounds intriguing, what with the inclusion of basil and cheese rinds in his recipe. The first photo of his budae looks deceptively tofu-forward, but subsequent images show that everything is, in reality, perfectly proportioned.

Maangchi's version does the thing Charles dislikes: she adds ddeok (rice cakes) alongside two kinds of pasta: sweet-potato cellophane noodles and ramen. Quel cauchemar! Maangchi also does a thing I disagree with: she adds chunks of pork belly. No. Just... no. I get that the rendered fat makes for more savoriness, but chunks of fatty pork are not what I want to see (or eat) in my soup.



6 comments:

  1. Heh. Thanks. I most probably would not have included basil if it had not already been part of the meatballs, but I would definitely do cheese rinds in the broth again.

    I've never seen that video of Anthony Bourdain--I will definitely have to give it a look.

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  2. The episode where Bourdain goes to Korea with his Korean-American(?) assistant is worth a watch. I found a link to the episode here: "No Reservations," Season 2, Episode 11. Can't remember whether it features budae-jjigae, but I think it does.

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  3. Now I want some budae. If only it wasn't a billion degrees outside I might make some.

    As a side note... I keep all my cheese rinds to add to soups and stews. I have for years. I don't recall where I picked that habit up, but it works really well to add flavor and a little substance to the soup as well. I commend it to you as a good technique to employ.

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  4. Mike,

    In Korea, there's a Sino-Korean concept called "i-yeol, chi-yeol," which, when talking culinarily, has to do with eating spicy and/or temperature-hot foods on hot days of the year, and cold foods on cold days of the year. (See here.) So now is the perfect time to make yourself some budae!

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  5. M,

    As for the cheese rinds: I'll get right on that. Do you freeze them, or do you just use them before they go bad?

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  6. I do both. I tend to freeze the ones in the summer, as we generally make more soups and stews in winter. But in winter, I just refrigerate.

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