So I finally bit the bullet and made the seasoned perilla leaves this afternoon. I've been having severe headaches the last few days, so standing in the kitchen wasn't something I wanted to do but the thought of letting all these leaves go to waste got my butt into action.
Here goes! This is one of the MR's favorite dishes and it's a lot easier to make than you might think. =)
The first step is to wash and let dry all your perilla leaves. It took seriously forever washing them one by one. After I was done washing them, I was tired so I left them sit in the colander while I took a long nap. By the time I got up, all the leaves were nice and dry. I bought 3 bags of leaves.......I would say this is well over 100 leaves.
In a separate bowl, mix together the following:
Have questions about any of the ingredients? Check out Korean Cooking 101!
I had some buchoo left over from the yulmoo kimchi I made earlier in the week, so I decided to throw those in there as well.
Add some chopped green onions...
Mix it around really well and you're ready to begin~
Lay one leaf down into a deep container and add a little bit of the sauce mixture.
Keep going until you use ALL the leaves.......ONE at a time. Yep, this takes time and patience! =P
If you feel like you're gonna run out of sauce, just use the sauce that has now dripped into the bottom of the container. I just scoop from the bottom and keep going.
Before you know it, you'll have used all the leaves up. What seemed like way too many leaves will condense and fit nicely inside your container.
Use your fingers and push all the leaves down firmly into the sauce mixture. Every few days, I'll take the bottom half of the leaves and bring them up to the top. After about a day or two, you're ready to eat! Enjoy~~~
P.S. This is a side dish you eat with rice. Most people take a leaf and wrap it around their rice. It's much too salty to eat alone!
피드 구독하기:
댓글 (Atom)
Categories-
- Anti-Cancer Foods (2)
- Beef (9)
- Chicken (8)
- Food and Drink (108)
- hicken (1)
- Korea Life (1)
- Main Dish (21)
- My Life (1)
- non-Korean (6)
- Noodles (6)
- on-Korean (1)
- Pork (5)
- Random (2)
- Restaurant Reviews (1)
- Rice (15)
- Seafood (15)
- Side Dishes (Banchans) (32)
- Soups - Beef Broth (7)
- Soups - Chicken Broth (2)
- Soups - Fish Broth (10)
- Soups - Pork Broth (1)
- Vegetarian (25)
-
I started this recipe a couple weeks ago, but never had the time to finish up the post. I’ll attempt to finish it now from my memory. =P ...
-
A couple of weeks ago, nine women met up for some dak galbi at Choong Chun Dak Galbi in K-town. I know this place has been around for som...
-
I finally went ahead and made boo-dae jjigae today. Needed: 1/2 can spam 3 sausages 1 cup dduk 1 green pepper and 1 red pepper 1/2 small sq...
-
Don't you just love how there are so many ways to cook the same dish? =P You can make my mom's 경상도 style mook gook or you can make ...
-
I apologize about the sporadic updates. One of my New Year's resolutions was to spend more time on this blog and hopefully make a mini...
-
A reader informed me that I forgot to mention that I used red pepper powder. Oops. Yes, I did use red pepper powder and apparently forgo...
-
Our lives have been so busy these last two weeks now that Munchkin is officially a Kindergartener. I know it’s such a cliché, but it seri...
-
It’s that time of the year again. =/ I’m sitting here on the eve of yet another scan. This is the time where I learn if I get to live...
-
Hello everyone! I know I’ve been MIA forever and ever. This blog is always in the back of my mind and I often think, “This is the week w...
-
I make a batch of these jalapenos for whenever we grill gogi at home. It's a great dipping sauce for various meats. First wash and clea...
Powered by Blogger.
0 개의 댓글:
댓글 쓰기