Pantry & tools (buy once, use for all three)
Pantry: gochugaru (Korean red pepper flakes), gochujang (red pepper paste), soy sauce, sesame oil, sugar, rice vinegar, fish sauce, doenjang (soybean paste; optional), mirin (or cooking rice wine).
Fridge/fresh: napa cabbage, Korean radish (mu) or daikon, scallions, garlic, ginger, Asian pears (or ripe Bosc/Apple), beef (ribeye/top sirloin/flank), cylinder rice cakes (garae-tteok), eggs, mild mozzarella (for cheesy tteokbokki, optional).
Tools: digital scale, large bowl or tub, colander, gloves (for kimchi), skillet or grill pan, small saucepan, airtight jars/containers.
1) Kimchi 101 (Baechu Kimchi + 30-minute “Quickchi”)
A. Baechu Kimchi (Napa cabbage; classic fermentation)
Yield: ~2.5 kg (2 large jars) • Active: 45–60 min • Ferment: 1–3 days at room temp, then chill
Salt ratio: ~2% by cabbage weight
Ingredients
- 2 medium napa cabbages (~2.2–2.6 kg total)
- 60–65 g kosher/sea salt (not iodized) for salting + more for brine
- 1 Korean radish/daikon (~300 g), matchsticks
- 6 scallions, 4 garlic cloves, 20 g ginger
- 80–100 g gochugaru (choose heat level)
- 50 g sugar (or 3 tbsp)
- 60 ml fish sauce (or 2 tbsp fish sauce + 2 tbsp soy for milder)
- 1 small Asian pear or apple, grated (or 2 tbsp rice syrup)
- Rice paste (binder; optional but great): whisk 250 ml water + 20 g sweet rice flour over low heat until glossy; cool.
Method
- Salt the cabbage: Quarter lengthwise, remove cores, cut into 4–5 cm pieces. Toss with salt; add enough cool water to moisten. Weigh down with a plate. Soak 1½–2 hours until leaves bend without snapping.
- Rinse 2–3 times; drain 20 minutes.
- Make the seasoning: Blend garlic, ginger, pear, fish sauce, sugar to a paste; fold in gochugaru and cooled rice paste. Add radish and scallions. Taste—slightly salty/spicy/sweet.
- Glove up & mix: Gently work seasoning into cabbage until evenly coated.
- Pack & ferment: Pack tightly in clean jars, pressing out air pockets. Leave 2–3 cm headspace. Close loosely or use fermentation lids.
- Ferment: 24–72 hours at cool room temp (18–21°C). Burp if using standard lids. Start tasting at 24 hours: look for light fizz, tang, and aromas mellowing.
- Refrigerate: Tighten lids and chill. Flavor deepens for weeks; best between days 3–21.
Food-safety cues: Tangy smell, light bubbling, and sour-savory taste = good. Pink/black mold or fuzzy growth = discard. Always use clean utensils.
Use it: Straight from the jar, in grilled-cheese kimchi toasties, kimchi fried rice (kimchi-bokkeumbap), jjigae (stew), or pancakes (jeon).
B. 30-Minute “Quickchi” (Mak Kimchi—no wait)
When you need the vibe tonight.
- Toss 1 small napa (~1.2 kg) with 1 tbsp salt; massage 2–3 min, rest 15, squeeze out liquid.
- Mix 2 tbsp gochugaru + 1 tbsp sugar + 1 tbsp rice vinegar + 1 tbsp fish sauce + 1 tsp grated garlic + 1 tsp grated ginger + 2 sliced scallions.
- Coat cabbage; eat immediately or chill 30 min to soften and meld.
2) Bulgogi (Korean BBQ Beef, Pan or Grill)
Best cuts: ribeye, top sirloin, or flank—slice paper-thin against the grain (partially freeze 30–45 min for precision).
Marinade ratio (per 500 g beef):
- 3 tbsp soy sauce
- 1½ tbsp sugar (or 1 tbsp sugar + 1 tbsp pear purée for tenderness)
- 1 tbsp mirin or rice wine
- 1 tbsp sesame oil
- 2 tsp minced garlic
- 1 tsp minced ginger
- 2 tbsp grated Asian pear or apple (optional but classic)
- 1 tbsp neutral oil
- ¼ tsp black pepper
- 1 scallion, finely sliced
- Add-ins: ½ small onion and ½ carrot, very thinly sliced; handful mushrooms (optional)
Method
- Toss beef with marinade 30 minutes (room temp) or up to overnight (fridge).
- Heat a wide cast-iron or steel pan very hot. Film with a little oil.
- Cook in batches: spread a single layer, don’t crowd, 60–90 seconds until edges caramelize; flip once. You’re aiming for charred edges, still juicy.
- Finish with a sprinkle of sesame seeds and extra scallions.
Serve: Over steamed rice with kimchi; or make ssam (lettuce wraps) with perilla/lettuce leaves, rice, and a smear of ssamjang (mix 2 tbsp doenjang + 1 tbsp gochujang + 1 tbsp honey + 1 tsp sesame oil + splash water).
Pro tips
- Sugar + pear encourage browning—get the pan ripping hot.
- For grilling: use a mesh grate or a grill pan to prevent slipping through; 1–2 minutes total.
- Chicken bulgogi: swap beef for boneless thighs; add 1 tsp gochujang to the marinade.
3) Tteokbokki (Chewy Rice Cakes in Spicy-Sweet Sauce)
Style: street-food “gireum” (wok-ish) meets classic broth version—glossy, punchy, and balanced.
Serves: 3–4 as a snack / 2 as a meal
Base stock (best flavor, 10 minutes)
- Simmer 500 ml water with 1 piece kombu (8×8 cm) + 6–8 dried anchovies (heads/guts removed) for 8–10 minutes; remove solids.
(No anchovies? Use water with ½ tsp dashi powder or chicken stock—flavor will differ but still good.)
Sauce mix
- 2 tbsp gochujang
- 1–2 tbsp gochugaru (heat to taste)
- 1 tbsp soy sauce
- 1 tbsp sugar (or 2 tsp sugar + 2 tsp rice syrup)
- 1 tsp minced garlic
Main ingredients
- 450–500 g cylinder rice cakes (garae-tteok), fresh or frozen (soak frozen in warm water 10 min)
- 1 small onion, sliced; 1 scallion, cut 4 cm; a few fish cakes (eomuk), cut into strips (optional)
- Optional toppings: soft-boiled eggs, mozzarella for cheesy finish
Method
- Bring stock to a simmer; whisk in sauce mix.
- Add tteok, onion, and fish cake; simmer briskly 6–8 minutes, stirring, until the sauce reduces and turns glossy and the rice cakes are chewy-tender.
- Stir in scallions. For cheese tteokbokki, scatter mozzarella, cover 30–60 seconds to melt.
- Finish with a drizzle of sesame oil and a pinch of toasted sesame.
Texture cues: Sauce should cling, not soup. If too thin, simmer 1–2 more minutes; if too thick, add a splash of stock/water.
Variations
- Rabokki: Add a nest of cooked instant ramen in the last minute.
- Rose tteokbokki: Stir in 60–100 ml cream or evaporated milk for a soft-spicy, pink sauce.
- Veg-only: Skip fish cake; boost umami with ½ tsp doenjang in the sauce.
A smart 2-day plan (minimal stress, maximum payoff)
Day 1 (45–60 min): Make baechu kimchi (or quickchi), start fermenting. Slice and marinate bulgogi.
Day 2 (30–40 min): Cook bulgogi hot and fast; simmer tteokbokki; fry a couple of eggs; set rice and lettuce wraps. Dinner becomes an at-home pojangmacha (street stall).
Banchan & sides (easy wins)
- Sigeumchi-namul: Blanch spinach 30 sec; squeeze; dress with 1 tsp soy, 1 tsp sesame oil, pinch garlic, sesame seeds.
- Oi-muchim: Quick cucumber salad—salt slices 10 min; drain; toss with 1 tsp gochugaru, 1 tsp sugar, 1 tsp vinegar, 1 tsp sesame oil.
- Simple soup: Doenjang broth—boil water with a spoon of doenjang, tofu cubes, zucchini, and scallions.
Ingredient swaps & dietary tweaks
- Gluten-free: Use GF soy sauce/tamari; check gochujang brand (many contain wheat) or use 1 tbsp gochugaru + 1 tsp miso + 1 tsp honey as a quick sub in sauce.
- No fish sauce: Use extra soy + a pinch of salt; add ½ tsp kombu dashi granules for umami.
- Vegetarian bulgogi: Thin-slice king oyster mushrooms or extra-firm tofu; marinate and sear hard.
- Less heat: Reduce gochugaru/gochujang and balance with a touch more sugar and soy.
Troubleshooting quick hits
- Kimchi too salty? Rinse cabbage one more time next batch; for this one, mix with unsalted shredded carrot/pear to dilute.
- Kimchi soft/mushy: Over-salted or over-soaked; shorten soak or use crisper winter napa.
- Bulgogi watery, not seared: Pan too crowded or heat too low; cook in batches and don’t move the meat for the first minute.
- Tteokbokki bland: Add ½ tbsp more gochujang + a pinch of salt; finish with sesame oil.
- Rice cakes tough: Undercooked or old; simmer a bit longer and ensure they were soaked if frozen.
Shopping checklist
Napa cabbage, Korean/daikon radish, scallions, garlic, ginger, Asian pear (or apple), gochugaru, gochujang, soy sauce, sesame oil, fish sauce, sugar, mirin, rice vinegar, doenjang (optional), beef for bulgogi (ribeye/sirloin/flank), rice cakes (tteok), onions, lettuce/perilla, eggs, mozzarella (optional), kombu, dried anchovies, sesame seeds.
