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Old 06-28-2007, 04:20 PM   #40
nikuman
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Somewhere between NYC and Houston
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jay santos View Post
Pulkogi is heaven.

http://www.cooks.com/rec/view/0,1826...243204,00.html

You can find various recipes. Search for pulkogi, pulgogi, bulgogi, bulgoki. Cut up your beef or pork very thin slices. Soy sauce, sugar, korean red pepper paste,

http://www.koamart.com/shop/30-1356-...te__2_2lbs.asp

sesame oil and/or sesame seeds, yellow or green onion, garlic, ginger. Marinate it over night. Fry it up. Make your Chinese style sticky rice. Take some leafy lettuce (not iceberg!) and place it out. Eat lettuce wrap style, with a little rice, piece of meat, then optionally add thin slices of garlic, small pieces of kimche, and/or a dab of samjang (samchang).

http://www.koamart.com/shop/30-1986-...rap_2_2lbs.asp

Or ignore the lettuce and just chow down the meat and rice.

Other great Korean dishes which would be difficult to make at home but are delish.

Ojingo pogum (squid fried rice)

http://forums.egullet.org/index.php?...pic=36532&st=0

Tolsot pipim pap (hot stone bowl fried rice)

http://www.pbs.org/hiddenkorea/recipes.htm

Kimche stew

http://www.trifood.com/kimchichigae.html


My favorite Japanese:

Sukiyaki, we make this at home regularly

http://japanesefood.about.com/od/bee...utsukiyaki.htm

Yakiniku

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakiniku

Similar to Korean pulkogi but without the marinade and the lettuce wrap. Just fry up a bunch of meat, tofu, and assorted veggies, and dip into a Yakiniku sauce you buy at an Asian market with your rice

Other Japanese foods I love but don't make at home

Shabu Shabu (to die for)

http://www.globalgourmet.com/destina...habushabu.html

Yakisoba

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakisoba

I also make a delicious Koreanized curry dish--stewed carrots, onions, chicken/beef with thick brown curry.
Tonkatsu is also very easy to make. Eggs, flour, pork from Costco, a hammer wrapped in tin foil, panko and some oil, and you're set. Finding the tonkatsu sauce isn't that hard either, in most major cities.
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