Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Tteokbokki - Korean Street Food You Can Make At Home

I love traditional fall and winter foods as much as the next girl - once the weather starts to cool down, I'm all about roasted meats and veggies, slow cooked soups, and more carbs and cheese than you can shake a stick at. Sometimes, though, you just need a palette cleanser, something to shock your taste buds back to life after months of comfort food.
Last week, I mentioned that I have a weakness for Asian junk food. That's accurate, but I also just love Asian food in general. I've never met a cuisine from that continent that I didn't love, and I've tried a lot of them: Indian, Thai, various regional styles of Chinese, Nepalese, Vietnamese, Korean. When I was in New York, I even took a ferry to Staten Island to try Sri Lanken food, and it was totally worth it.
I always felt a little intimidated about actually cooking these dishes for myself. I'm used to thinking of these kinds of food as restaurant food, something that you have to be a specialist to know how to prepare. That's certainly true of some dishes, but if you can get your hands on the ingredients, there are plenty of Asian dishes that are no harder to prepare than a good spaghetti.
Every time I go to the Korean spa, I have to get a plate of tteokbokki (also spelled ddukbokki). Have to. It's a deliciously spicy dish made with chewy Korean rice cakes and a fermented red pepper paste called gochujang, and it tastes like heaven when you've sweated your last three meals out through your pores in the insanely hot King Sauna. I was having a serious craving for it even after I left (probably fueled by the tteokbokki flavored chips I bought), so I actually looked up a recipe. Surprise - if you have access to the ingredients, it's pretty easy to make.
Ttekbokki Recipe via Serious Eats
Serves 4 hungry people
Sauce
3 Cups Water
3 Tablespoons Gochujang
1 Tablespoon Chili Pepper Flakes
1 Tablespoon Sugar
1 Tablespoon Soy Sauce

1 lb. rice cakes (tteok)
5 oz. fish cakes, sliced into triangles
5 oz. napa cabbage (about 1/3 of a head), sliced thin
5 cloves garlic, chopped fine (or to taste)
1 teaspoon sesame oil

Combine all ingredients for sauce in a large pan, whisking until gochujang paste is dissolved. Bring to a boil.
Add rice cakes, and reduce heat to medium. Boil, covered, for 7-10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until rice cakes are soft.
Add cabbage, fish cakes, and garlic. Reduce heat to a low simmer until sauce beings to thicken, approximately 10-15 minutes. Continue to stir occasionally to keep rice cakes from sticking.
Add sesame oil if desired, and serve.

IMG_20141220_122214_229
I made a thing!

See? Wasn't that easy?
If you don't live somewhere where these ingredients are easily available and don't want to order them online, there are a few substitutions you can make. There isn't really anything you can sub in for the gochujang, but if you only want to order one thing, that's easy to get and will last you just this side of forever. Instead of rice cakes, throw in a couple of bricks of ramen, although you'd want to add them after you've simmered the sauce for a while and added the other ingredients. I ate a couple of pieces of the fish cake while I was cooking the dish, and it actually tastes really similar to imitation crab meat. If you sub out both of the main ingredients, obviously the dish will have a very different texture, but the flavor profile should be very similar.
If you are on a restricted diet, it's pretty easy to customize it to suit your needs. Vegetarian or vegan? Use tofu that you've frozen and thawed (it'll give it a denser, chewier texture) instead of the fish cake, and add a little nori to give it some of that fishy flavor. Gluten free? Skip the soy sauce and check the label on your fish cakes to make sure they're ok for you.

Has anyone else ever tried cooking traditional Asian dishes before? What did you think of the process? Would you ever try this dish?

6 comments:

  1. Asian dishes have always scared me. I can do a basic fried rice and a stir-fry, but that's about it. I'm not a fan of the spicier dishes, but this looks like something my man would love. I just may have to try it. I totally agree about fall/winter comfort foods. I've made a soup/stew at least once a week for the last 2 months. My new obsession has been squash based, Indian inspired stews. Happy Holidays!!

    She Knits in Pearls

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    1. I love squash soups. I've made a pureed acorn squash soup a couple of times this year, and it was so, so good. But definitely give this a try, it's actually super easy to do!

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  2. Yum!!! I love a filling, but not uber heavy dish like this for winter, too. Though from a vastly different part of the world, Italian minestrone soup (the homemade or good restaurant kind) has always fallen into that same camp for me.

    There are GF soy sauces out there (yippee!!!), but they're harder to find. Here in Canada the mainstream Asian sauce brand VH has a clear labeling policy and will, to the best of my knowledge, always declare any gluten in their products. Their soy sauce is GF and I've been eating it safely for years. There are other brands out there, too, but this is the best one I've tried so far.

    Super happy Christmas Eve, Eve wishes, my dear friend!
    ♥ Jessica

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    1. That's awesome that there's an easy GF soy sauce out there for you. I don't know a whole lot about gluten intolerance, but that's one of the things that I see mentioned as a hidden "gotcha" here and there.

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  3. merry christmas dear jessica!!!!

    yum, this sound pretty great! :)

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