Kimchi in Korea is considered the main dish, without which no feast can do. I suggest you try kimchi daikon (lobi) – a Japanese radish. Unlike kimchi from Peking cabbage, it can not be eaten immediately after cooking, because the radish will be very bitter. The secret of making delicious daikon kimchi lies in a special way of its fermentation.
In order for the first vegetables, greens to appear, and our body will take fresh vitamins with pleasure, help him by preparing such a salad snack. Don’t be afraid to add young currant leaves and primroses to it, it’s delicious.
Well, what Korean cuisine can do without kimchi. As a rule, this is not a specific dish, but a way of marinating vegetables. In this case, today we will use Beijing kimchi cabbage. But with him we cook a spicy soup. Welcome to the table!
We love spicy dishes. And so I cook cabbage often. And that’s why this salad is absolutely necessary for the New Year! Vitamins, juiciness, bright taste. In addition, according to a budget recipe, you can prepare a salad 2-3 days before the holiday – it will simply taste better!
A long time ago, when I was just starting to get sick with Asia, I dug up a recipe for quick kimchi somewhere. Once I tried to cook for dinner, and my family quickly tasted this snack. In general, it is fast, tasty and spicy.
This is a popular Korean snack served as an addition to the main course. Moderately spicy, a little piquant and very pleasant to the taste — such cucumber kimchi is prepared quickly, can be used for food immediately after cooking, a worthy replacement for pickled cucumbers. The recipe is not quite traditional, usually greens are used in the filling, not onions.
Kimchi (spicy Korean cabbage) There are more than 100 varieties of kimchi, which differ not only in ingredients, cooking region, but also in the time of salting, as well as cooking technology. For the preparation of kimchi, not only garlic and red pepper are used, but also other products: from the most common to exotic. For example, some Korean chefs add ginger, sesame seeds, carrots, pine nuts, pears, chestnuts, seaweed and even salted small shrimp and oysters to kimchi.