Korean American Food that tastes like home

Eric Kim

Book - 2022

"An homage to what it means to be Korean American with more than 85 delectable recipes that explore how new culinary traditions can be forged to honor both your past and your present. New York Times staff writer Eric Kim grew up in Atlanta, the son of two Korean immigrants. Food has always been central to his story, from Friday-night Korean barbecue with his family to hybridized Korean-ish meals for one--like Gochujang-Buttered Radish Toast and his Kimchi Fried Rice--that he makes in his tiny New York City apartment. In this book, Eric shares these recipes alongside insightful, touching stories and stunning images shot by photographer Jenny Huang. Playful, poignant, and informative, Korean American: A Cookbook also includes essays rang...ing from the life-changing act of leaving home and coming back, to what Thanksgiving means to a first-generation family both conceptually and culinarily--all the while teaching readers about the Korean pantry, the history of Korean immigration in America, and the importance of white rice in Korean cuisine. Recipes like Sheet-Pan Bibimbap with Roasted Fall Vegetables and Caramelized-Kimchi Baked Potatoes demonstrate Eric's prowess at introducing Korean flavors to comforting American classics, while a dish such as Meatloaf-Glazed Kalbi with Gamja Salad does the opposite by making a traditional Korean dish immediately more familiar through the addition of a beloved American flavor profile. In this book of recipes and thoughtful insights, especially about his mother, Jean, Eric divulges not only what it means to be Korean American but how, through food and cooking, he found acceptance, strength, and the confidence to own his story"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Eric Kim (author)
Other Authors
Jenny (Photographer) Huang (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
286 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780593233498
  • Introduction
  • The Tiger and the Hand
  • What Is Korean American Cooking?
  • That Boring Pantry Section in Every Cookbook, but More Fun
  • TV Dinners
  • Fast foods to eat on the couch
  • Pan-Seared Rib Eye with Gochujang Butter
  • Three Dinner Toasts: Gochujang-Buttered Radish Toast, Soft-Scrambled Egg Toast, and Roasted-Seaweed Avocado Toast
  • The Quiet Power of Gim
  • Creamy Bucatini with Roasted Seaweed
  • Gochugaru Shrimp and Roasted-Seaweed Grits
  • Maple-Candied Spam
  • Jalapeño-Marinated Chicken Tacos with Watermelon Muchim
  • A Lot of Cabbage with Curried Chicken Cutlets
  • Salt-and-Pepper Pork Chops with Vinegared Scallions
  • Cheesy Corn and Ranch Pizza with Black-Pepper Honey
  • Meatloaf-Glazed Kalbi with Gamja Salad
  • Kimchi Is a Verb
  • On time capsules and pantry cooking
  • Kimchi Is a Time Capsule
  • Jean's Perfect Jar of Kimchi
  • Baek Kimchi with Beet
  • Bitter (in a Good Way) Green Cabbage Kimchi
  • Seolleongtang-Restaurant Radish Kimchi
  • Naengmyeon Kimchi
  • Perilla Kimchi
  • Oi Sobagi
  • Spam, Kimchi, and Cabbage Stir-Fry
  • Kimchi Sandwiches
  • Kimchi Bibimguksu with Grape Tomatoes
  • Bacon-Fat Kimchi Jeon with Herbs
  • Caramelized-Kimchi Baked Potatoes
  • Kimchi-Braised Short Ribs with Pasta
  • S Is for Stew
  • The Korean art of gentle boiling
  • A Very Good Kimchi Jjigae
  • Budae Jjigae
  • The King of Scallions (and Other Negotiables)
  • Doenjang Jjigae with Silken Tofu and Raw Zucchini
  • Cornish Game Hen Soup with Fried-Shallot Oil
  • Dakdoritang
  • Sunday-Night Chicken Sujebi
  • On Soaking and Blanching Meat
  • Pork Spare Rib Soup in the Style of Gamjatang
  • Seolleongtang Noodles with Scallion Gremolata
  • Mountain Kalbitang with All of the Herbs
  • Kalbijjim with Root Vegetables and Beef-Fat Croutons
  • Rice Cuisine
  • Jipbap means "home food"
  • Perfect White Rice
  • Gyeranbap with Roasted Seaweed and Capers
  • Tomato-y Omelet Rice
  • Nest
  • Eric's Kimchi Fried Rice with Egg Yolk
  • Spam and Perilla Kimbap
  • Cheeseburger Kimbap
  • Jjajangbap with Cabbage and Peas
  • Weeknight Curry Rice with Eggplant, Spinach, and Lotus Root
  • Scorched Skillet Rice with Raw Spring Vegetables
  • Summer Albap with Perilla and Salted Garden Vegetables
  • Sheet-Pan Bibimbap with Roasted Fall Vegetables
  • Winter Squash Risotto with Chewy Rice Cakes
  • Korea Is a Peninsula
  • The fish chapter
  • Salting Fish and Why It Rocks
  • Pan-Fried Yellow Croaker
  • Salted Salmon Steaks with Celery and Mushrooms
  • Crispy Trout with White Wine and Lemon Butter
  • Maeuntang
  • Old Bay Shrimp Cocktail with Wasabi Chojang
  • Roasted Lobster Tails with Lemony Green Salad
  • Ganjang Gejang
  • Garden of Jean
  • The vegetable chapter
  • Oi Naengguk with Heirloom Cherry Tomatoes
  • Chicken Radishes
  • One Dressing, a Thousand Fruit Muchims
  • Raw Brussels Sprout Muchim
  • Garlicky Creamed Spinach Namul
  • Gem Lettuce Salad with Roasted-Seaweed Vinaigrette
  • Smashed Potatoes with Roast ed-Seaweed Sour Cream Dip
  • Crudités with Roasted-Seaweed Sour Cream Dip
  • Grilled Trumpet Mushrooms with Ssamjang
  • Crispy Yangnyeom Chickpeas with Caramelized Honey
  • Charred Cauliflower with Magic Gochugaru Dust
  • Gochujang-Glazed Zucchini with Fried Scallions
  • Feasts
  • Menus and ruminations on living
  • A Korean American Thanksgiving
  • Yangnyeom Roast Chicken
  • Cheesy Scallion Stuffing with Sesame Seeds
  • Sesame-Soy Deviled Eggs
  • Aunt Anne's Broccoli-Cheese Rice Casserole
  • Mac-and-Corn-Cheese with Jalapeño Bread Crumbs
  • Honey-Buttered Goguma Casserole with Turmeric
  • Judy's Empanadas
  • Lasagna with Gochugaru Oil
  • Roasted Bo Ssam with Coffee, Garlic, and Bay Leaves
  • Sheet-Pan Japchae with Roasted Wild Mushrooms
  • Sheet-Pan LA Kalbi with Sprite
  • Salt-and-Pepper Ribs with Fresh Mint Sauce
  • Microwave Gyeranjjim with Chicken Broth
  • Aunt Georgia's Soy Sauce Fried Chicken with Jalapeños
  • Crispy Lemon-Pepper Bulgogi with Quick-Pickled Shallots
  • Two Soju Cocktails: Somaek and Clementine 50/50
  • Korean Bakery
  • Baked weekend projects
  • Milk Bread with Maple Syrup
  • A Proper Grilled Cheese
  • Honeyed Biscuits with Strawberry Refrigerator Jam
  • Korean Pear Galette with Salted Cinnamon Whipped Cream
  • No-Churn Ice Cream with Dalgona Butterscotch Sauce
  • Honeydew Semifreddo
  • Gochujang Chocolate Lava Cakes
  • Chewy Black Sesame Rice Cake
  • Whipped Cream Snacking Cake with Fresh Fruit
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Drawing heavily from his Atlanta family's culinary heritage, New York Times food writer Kim maps out the intersection of Korean and American fare in this bold and delicious debut. The two cuisines merge in dishes like cheeseburger kimbap--invented by Kim when he was 13--and his Aunt Georgia's soy sauce fried chicken with jalapenos. Spam, widely adored in Korea, is the star of such sweet offerings as maple-candied Spam, as well as tangy dishes, including a Spam, kimchi, and cabbage stir-fry. Described as "the bedrock of Korean cuisine," kimchi gets its due in a chapter that boasts a classic version perfected by Kim's mother, as well as variations including naengmyeon kimchi made with Korean radish and "large red apple." Meanwhile, rice forms the foundation for scrumptious and filling bowls such as jjajangbap with cabbage and peas mixed with fermented black bean sauce. While there's no shortage of meat and fish recipes on offer, vegetables--especially those grown in Kim's mother's garden--reign, serving as the inspiration for a chapter of diverse delights, including gochujang-glazed zucchini with fried scallions. Elsewhere, a sprawling Thanksgiving menu ("the ultimate Korean American feast") substitutes yangnyeom roast chicken for turkey and employs Korean sweet potatoes in a honey-buttered goguma casserole. Old traditions lead to delicious new flavor combinations in this heartfelt collection. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction When I was seventeen years old, I ran away from home. College acceptance letters had just come in, and my mother, Jean, had torn into all of mine before I could come home from school that afternoon. I was so angry with her for opening my mail that I packed a bag in the middle of the night, took the car with the GPS, and drove from our house in Atlanta (where this story begins and ends) to Nashville (where my cousin Semi lived, four hours northwest). In the morning, when Jean saw that my bed was empty and my toothbrush gone, she called me, over and over. In my very first act of rebellion as her son, I didn't pick up. I remember that trip to Nashville distinctly because Semi and I cooked coq au vin together. By then, as an avid watcher of the Food Network, I had tried my hand at a variety of non-Korean dishes, mostly flash fries and quick pan sauces, but never a proper braise. It was liberating to braise chicken with red wine on Semi's tiny stove, not least because that just wasn't how we cooked back in Georgia. My mother's Korean soups and stews were vociferously boiled, the meat made fall-apart tender in stainless-steel stock pots or burbling earthenware called ttukbaegi. Slow-cooked dishes in general were a whole new frontier for me and wouldn't become a fixture in my home cooking until years later in New York, where I would eventually go to college, take an internship at the Cooking Channel, and buy a yellow Dutch oven with my first paycheck. But for now, at seventeen, tucked away in Semi's Tennessee bachelorette pad, I tasted freedom for the first time in my life. A vast world of pleasures had opened up to me, pleasures that had, until then, been reserved for adults who get to cook whatever they want, however they want, in kitchens that aren't ruled by their parents. When I came home a few days later, Jean brushed it off, pretended it was a nonissue that I had run away. But she did bring it up at dinner that night: "So, did you have a good trip?" Even then I could tell that she was practicing her loosened grip on me, her second son, the one who never got into trouble. Over a plate of her kimchi fried rice, which she had made for my homecoming (and would continue to make for many homecomings to come), I told her how I had been feeling, paralyzed at that great nexus between childhood and adulthood. I ran away because I needed some space, I explained. Though I didn't say it at the time, she knew what I really meant: I ran away because I needed some space from her . This hurt my mother greatly, I could tell. But she smiled and nodded and listened anyway. Seeing that effort--and the hidden worry in her face--was enough to thaw my cold, ungrateful heart. I burst into tears and apologized. In many ways, I feel that I've been running away from home my whole life. I'm only just now, as an adult, starting to slow down and find my way back to Atlanta, where I was born and raised, to understand its role in my overall story. After a lifetime of running around, I've come to appreciate the stillness of rootedness. It took spending more time, too, in the kitchen as a food writer and journalist, first as an editor for publications like Food Network online and Saveur , and now as a columnist for The New York Times , to make me realize that we can never really run away from who we are. Not easily, anyway. This lesson was expounded for me during the pandemic, when I moved back home for one year to work on this cookbook with my mother. I wanted to write down her recipes, but as I got deeper and deeper into the project, I came to the conclusion that my recipes are an evolution of her recipes, and the way I cook now is and will forever be influenced by the way she cooks. This book, then, tells the constantly mutating story of how I have come to understand my identity not just as Jean's son, but also as someone who has always had to straddle two nations: the United States (where I'm from) and South Korea (where my mother is from). Too often I have felt the pangs of this tug of war: Am I Korean or am I American? Only recently have I been able to fully embrace that I am at once both and neither, and something else entirely: I am Korean American. As is often the case with cooking, there are many answers to be found in the kitchen. The recipes in here explore that tension, and the ultimate harmony, between the Korean in me as well as the American in me, through the food my family grew up eating and the food I cook for myself now. At the end of the day, this is all, for me, food that tastes like home, from the Very Good Kimchi Jjigae (page 98) that fuels my weary soul to the Crispy Lemon-Pepper Bulgogi (page 240) that feeds my friends when they come over, or the Gochugaru Shrimp and Roasted-Seaweed Grits (page 40) I make for myself whenever I'm feeling especially homesick for Georgia, and for my mom. This book navigates not only what it means to be Korean American but how, through food and cooking, I was able to find some semblance of strength, acceptance, and confidence to own my own story. This story is mine to be sure, and my family's. But it's also a story about the Korean American experience, one that in the history of this country is often never at the center. It's about all the beautiful things that come with being different, and all the hard things that come with that, too. My hope is that in reading this book, you'll see yourself in it, whether you're Korean, Korean American, or neither, whether your family immigrated to Atlanta, Los Angeles, or Little Rock. Because at the heart of this book is really a story about what happens when a family bands together to migrate and cross oceans in search of a new home. It's about what happens when, after so much traveling and fighting and hard work, you finally arrive. There's a pivotal moment that occurs whenever I'm on a long drive home from somewhere distant. The blurry picture starts to come into focus. I can let down my guard and turn off my GPS. The roads are familiar again. I don't need a robot telling me about my own city, my own street, my own hometown. But sometimes, after that long drive, I'll forget to turn off the GPS because my mind is wandering, or maybe I'm listening to a really good song or an especially juicy podcast. And as I roll into my mother's driveway, eager to walk through those doors and crash into my old bed, it'll talk back to me. "Welcome home." Excerpted from Korean American: Food That Tastes Like Home by Eric Kim All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.