A fundamental condiment in Korean cooking, gochujang is basically a sweet and spicy red chili paste made of chili powder, glutinous rice, meju powder and salt. You'll find that it is an indispensable ...
Gochujang is on fire right now. The spicy red chili paste is nothing new in Asian cooking, but it’s been breaking into the mainstream. There is serious heat in just a teaspoon. A little bit goes a ...
For good eating in under half an hour, our gochujang eggs with rice are both perfect and sure to bring the best Korean cuisine to your plate.
If using wood or bamboo skewers, soak in water at least 10 minutes. In a medium bowl, combine gochujang, oil, honey, vinegar and garlic powder. Cut each chicken thigh into 9-12 bite-size pieces. Toss ...
There’s nothing better than a good sweet and spicy combo—a mug of Mexican hot chocolate, a dab of hot honey on a cheese board or a platter of sticky Korean fried chicken. Is your mouth watering yet?
4 chicken legs, Frenched (ask your butcher to cut the meat from the bone so the leg looks like a big lollipop) Instructions: Combine salt, pepper and togarashi in a small bowl. Season chicken with ¼ ...
If you’ve ever been to a Korean restaurant, you’ve undoubtedly encountered gochujang. It adds the heat to bibimbap, lends the rich red color you see in tteokbokki, stir-fried rice cakes, and forms the ...