Search Results (54 found)
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Tired of the same old fried rice? Mix it up and make kimchi bokkeumbap, or kimchi fried rice, for dinner tonight!
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Get Blistered Green Beans with Spicy Chile Sauce Recipe from Food Network
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This is the perfect side dish for East meets West. The American classic gets a modern update by adding spicy chopped fermented cabbage and Korean chili paste.
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Simply delicious, fast, and easy, this spicy-sweet Korean shrimp recipe uses a homemade soy marinade that also creates a thick, shiny glaze.
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Recipe for Beef Bibimbap. For full recipe with step by step photos visit the downloadable recipe at: http://www.blueapron.com/recipes/beef-bibimbap
cooking.nytimes.com
In Korean cuisine, kimchi is not only a condiment or pickle; it is also used as an ingredient in many cooked dishes Kimchi soup, called Jjigae, is a satisfying example The fermented kimchi vegetables quickly provide deep flavor to the broth, so the soup can be produced in little more than half an hour
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This is an Americanized version of bang bang chicken, a popular Sichuan Chinese dish. The chicken is twice-fried and mixed with creamy bang bang sauce for a spectacular dish.
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Get Asian Oatmeal Breakfast Bowl Recipe from Food Network
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Sweet, spicy, crispy chicken wings with a Korean flair. The flavor combination reminds me of bulgogi but with chicken instead of beef.
cooking.nytimes.com
This is my simple, everyday take on a dish developed at Momofuku Ssam Bar in Manhattan many years ago by the chefs David Chang and Tien Ho and their band of collaborators It is almost literally a mashup: a meal that is kind of Korean, kind of Chinese, kind of Italian If you don’t like spicy food, use miso instead of the gochujang and don’t use Sichuan peppercorns, which add a numbing, tingly pop to the fire
cooking.nytimes.com
You can make this spicy pork in a 6- to 8-quart electric pressure cooker if you’re in a hurry, or in a slow cooker if you're not In either case, you’ll get tender bits of meat covered in a chile-flavored barbecue sauce that’s just slightly sweet (You can also make it in a stovetop pressure cooker, by trimming a few minutes off the cooking time
cooking.nytimes.com
Long before the Cheesecake Factory made this dish popular in the United States, it was made at Yardbird in Hong Kong by the Canadian chef Matt Abergel Food that is “Korean-fried” combines the thin, crisp crust of Japanese tempura with the fire of Korean gochujang, a spicy staple available in any Asian market The Yardbird version also includes tempura mix and red yuzu kosho, a tart Japanese condiment made of red chiles, yuzu and salt