Posts Tagged ‘chinese’

Joe DiStefano finds great Korean Chinese food in NYC

Korean Blogger Happy End goes to Pierre Gagnaire Seoul. I had heard that they didn’t allow pics.  Go figure.

Maangchi is featured on KBS

Seoul Eats gives and onslaught of Valentine’s Day restaurant options, so you have no excuse now

Thinking… what are good Valentine’s Day eateries or (from the perspective of a former food industry hack) is it worth the trouble going out?

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29
Oct

Public Service: Tainted Foods to Avoid

   Posted by: ZenKimchi    in News & Media

NOTE: I’m moving this post back to the top because more stuff is still being found.

I’m going to maintain a list on this post of imported Chinese foods in Korea that could possibly be tainted with melamine.

  • MiSarang snacks
  • Nabisco’s Ritz cracker cheese sandwiches
  • Cadbury Chocolate
  • Danyang Day Bright’s Tasty Rice Crackers
  • Non-dairy creamer imported from Hong Kong (includes instant coffee packs)
  • Lipton Milk Tea Powder
  • M&M’s milk chocolate snack
  • Snickers peanut Fun Size
  • Kit Kat Mini chocolate bars
  • Lotte’s Choudy
  • Powdered egg white, powdered egg yolk and liquefied egg yolk from Dalian Hanovo Foods and Dalian Greensnow Egg Products Development (This is a hard one to pin down because powdered egg is used in bottled salad dressings.)
  • Also avoid cookies that look like these [HT Korea Beat]

CJ has said that it has regularly inspected Chinese raw materials in its products since 2006. Nongshim and Haitai Confectionary are setting up inspection processes post-melamine scandal. Haitai is also taking legal action against Chinese OEM manufacturer Carnival.

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27
Feb

Grits in Korea

   Posted by: ZenKimchi    in Finds & Tips, Food For Foreigners

This is a blog supplement to my article appearing in The Korea Herald this week.

Wow, it’s taken me two and a half years to get around to sharing one of the finds that was one of the reasons for starting the Food Journal.

During the short stint where I tolerated–lived–in Seoul, I lived down the street from a great pizza place and a smattering of Chinese grocery stores. This was near Bongcheong Station on the Green Line. The pizza place is, unfortunately, gone. Yet the Chinese groceries are still there. I went by there recently to do research and picture taking for an upcoming SEOUL Magazine article.

The bigger store, which isn’t saying much, is a lot of fun. It’s like exploring the Asian markets back home. It has all the exotic stuff that makes you think, “Ahh… Asia!”

It has freezers with Chinese sausage and coolers with Chinese beer and fresh cilantro. The spice selection is great, as well as the bottled sauces and liquors. The big find, for me, was the dried corn in various forms. One of the forms is a course grind, similar to grits and polenta.

When I saw this in 2005, I picked it up. It was only 2,000 won. I cooked it like traditional Southern grits and–well, it worked!

If you can get your paws on these, this is how I cook them, based on The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook.

Garlic Cheese Grits (serves 2)

1 cup Milk
1 cup Water
1 clove Garlic, chopped
1/2 cup Ground Corn Meal (Grits)
Salt (to taste)
Black Pepper (to taste)
1/4 cup Cheese, grated (Cheddar, Monterey–any semi-hard cheese–not Parmesan, Brie or–geez–sliced cheese)
A Big Ole Hunk o’ Butter

1. Combine the Milk, Water and Garlic and bring to a boil.

2. Rinse the Ground Corn and add it to the pot with a healthy pinch of Salt.

3. Reduce heat to medium and STIR!!! Stir constantly for around five minutes, until it starts smelling, um, corny.

4. Reduce heat to simmer, like barely a flame. Let it sit for fifteen to twenty minutes. Stir every few minutes or so to keep it from sticking to the bottom of the pot.

5. Turn off the heat. Add the Cheese, Black Pepper and Butter.

6. Eat.

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