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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

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

(FFF #25, Fusion #3) Cheese Ravioli in Soju Sauce



This is the ideal entry for the ZenKimchi Food Journal. In fact, part of this dish was the inspiration for the journal itself. It's about creating Western food using ingredients found in Korea (the ravioli). It's about easily making from scratch something you used to just buy at home (the cheese). It's about combining, dare a say, fusing, Korean and Western foods.

This started out from my first months in Korea where I was craving my brother's (an up-and-coming Italian and Spanish chef in Atlanta) vodka sauce. I didn't have vodka on hand at the time, but I did have lots of soju -- 1,000 ($1) a bottle, may I add. I said, "Why not," and made a dish that actually rivaled any vodka sauce I've ever had in the past.

This brings me to another tangent. It is traditional in so many cultures to cook with alcohol. I have yet to find this application used much in Korea. The only place I've seen soju used in cooking was at the chitlin' restaurant in Ansan. I personally sneak a shot or two of soju in my kimchi jjigae when Eun Jeong's not looking. If so many cultures successfully use alcohol in their cuisine, there have to be applications in Korean cuisine. Yet that's another road I have hardly traveled.

If you live in Korea, I think this is the ultimate dish to impress your significant other--or someone whom you'd like to be your significant other. Maybe I should have waited until Valentine's to post, but I've been waiting long enough. This gives you enough time to plan.

The Filling


Remember the easy mock ricotta you can make at home? Get a good bit of that in a bowl and blend it with an egg, some finely chopped parsley, and a little bit of salt and pepper.

The Wrappers


The wrappers are basic mandu wrappers. In this case, I used some dyed with green tea.


See? These little things are in the freezer section of any little mini ajossi mart.


Flour a surface. These buggers are sticky. Place a small--a small--dollop of cheese filling in the center of the wrapper.


Wet your index finger in a bowl of water and rub it around the edges of the wrapper.


Put another wrapper on top. Now it's time to make it look more like ravioli.


What I did was cut off the rounded bits so that it looked more square like.


I then pressed down the sides with a fork to give them that ravioli cutter look. This also helped seal them.


It takes a while, but it's worth the work. Remember--only a dollop of cheese filling. You can see a few of mine had spewed out.


A quick one minute bath in some lightly boiling salted water, and they're ready. These guys get sticky, so rinse them in cold water immediately, put them in a sauce immediately, or place them separate from each other.

In the meantime, I had put together the sauce.

The Sauce


Vodka sauces are creamy, tomatoey and garlicky. I sweated a lot of garlic in some olive oil with some chopped onions.

Now, you can make your own homemade tomato sauce if you want to. Me? There are some times I just cut corners. I'm just that lazy. Besides, I'd already made homemade cheese and ravioli. If I can get any of those premade, I would do it quickly. But, hey, I can get spaghetti sauce at the store, so let's save ourselves the trouble of having to make something else from scratch. I love food, but I'm not a monk.


To the onions and garlic, I added a jar of spaghetti sauce along with half a bottle of soju. I let this simmer for a while--until the soju had a bit of the bite cooked out of it and had time to mingle with the sauce.


I then stirred in some heavy cream until it had a bit of an orange color. I let it cook through on medium low heat for another five minutes.


After garnishing with some fresh Romano cheese, I had a classic dish. Of course, you can use the soju sauce on other pastas. Really, this one is worth it.

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