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I love food. During my time in Korea, I have been collecting recipes and anecdotes about Korean food. I also have been working on survival techniques for westerners living in Korea.

In this journal are recipes for cooking Korean food in Korea or abroad and recipes for recreating western food with Korean ingredients.

But mostly, it's about enjoying life.

SUBJECT KEY
Christmas Chronicles - Trying to celebrate Christmas in Korea
Drink - Imbibe me
Event - Special events involving special Korean foods
FFF (Food for Foreigners) - Recipes for foreigners living in Korea
FP (Food Porn) - Pictures for stimulation
Fusion - A mixture -- or clash -- of cultures
Junk - Junk food
KFC (Korean Food Concept) - A blog entry explaining a type of Korean food
Kimchi - Something about kimchi
KR (Korean Recipe) - A recipe for Korean food, duh!
Miscellaneous - Stuff, stuff, and stuff
News - Korean food in the news
Out There - What others are saying
Rest (Restaurant) - An entry about a restaurant in Korea
Street Food - An entry about a street food concept or adventure
Tip - A survival tip for living or visiting Korea
Video - A summary of a video on the site
WTF - A feature on anything unusual that has to be investigated further

Sunday, June 25, 2006

New Digs. New Oven.



I haven't posted in a while because I've been in the middle of a major move. I've finished my contract and have started a new job. I'm still trying to get my last pay check and severance from my old boss (she somehow thinks such things are optional for her to do). I have moved to a nice new apartment pretty high in the sky. You can see the picks on the main site.

I'm so happy that after over two years I finally have an oven. We bought it ourselves at a great discount. I didn't realize before how much western food depends on the use of ovens. I was so excited when I first got it that I immediately made a roasted rosemary chicken (pictured top) and rosemary roasted potatoes and onions.



The oven comes with a broiler above the oven rather than below, like I'm used to seeing. It is marketed to Koreans as a fish grill.



Eun Jeong really likes that feature. She has grilled a fish in there already. I didn't try it because she ate all of it. I only saw a few bones as evidence.

It is safe to say that ovens are a new concept in Korean cuisine. It's very alien. Remember when woks were first being introduced in the '70s and '80s? I remember when we got our first wok, it came with a cookbook. The manufacturers rightly assumed that Americans who bought the wok wouldn't know what to do with it once they got it. Looking back, I can remember the recipes being very Americanized concepts of Asian foods.

The same is true with this oven. It also came with a cookbook.



I looked at it with curiosity and horror. It was basically your average Korean dishes but -- done in an OVEN! Very similar to old microwave oven cookbooks. Let's have a look.



First there are directions on how to measure...



and how to stir.

What about the recipes?



Japchae -- famous Korean garlicky stir-fried noodle dish. Now more oveney!



Tofu cooks well in the oven, I think.



As does mandu dumplings. But hold on here...



SALAD in the oven? The only time I've heard of salad in the oven was when my dad had one too many cocktails at a dinner party he was hosting.



Yeah, you could do kalbi jjim in the oven. That's one of the few Korean recipes that makes some sense in an oven.

What the freak is this? Meatloaf California Rolls? I'm there, dude!

Ooh, oven baked rice. If you have enough money to buy an oven in Korea, you obviously don't have any money left to buy a rice cooker.

And it seems we have an anomoly. A traditional Western roasted chicken. Looks good, though. But not Korean enough. We need more traditional Korean stuff to toss in our oven.



That's more like it. Traditional rice punch -- done in the oven.

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