Korean Street Food

Kimbap are rice and seaweed rolls that look like sushi. The BBQ box looks to me like the most “authentic” option, based on my somewhat limited experience. That’s what I’d recommend trying.

I’ve tried the silkworm! It was weird, and I have no desire to try it again, but I won’t call it “disgusting.”

I sort of happened upon a Korean-American festival in the parking lot of a now-defunct K-mart. Wandering around the stalls, I came across a slow cooker filled to the brim with this strange stuff. I asked the vendor what it was, and she said she didn’t know how to describe it in English, but offered me a taste.

I had my suspicions that it was some kind of insect, but thought, what the heck, expand my experience. It was crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside. Not my favorite combination of textures, but it was tolerable. It didn’t taste terrible, but the more I thought about what I was eating, the more I kind of felt weird. Swallowed the remainder down with a bunch of Sprite.

Asking around later, I found out it was silkworm.

The only thing I can add that I don’t think has been mentioned is what I call “walnut cakes” in English.

The best street food is found in tents and carts in the big cities. But we buy it more often at the expressway stops, especially where the buslines do transfers. Things are set up for getting pre-prepared hot food quick and reasonably priced. Personally, I always go for the o-ddeng; eat the fishcakes quickly, then slowly sip the broth while travelling.

Kimbap is great. It’s the “traditional” outing food. It doesn’t spoil quickly and doesn’t require utensils to eat. Where Americans would pack a sandwich for later in the day, Koreans pack kimbap. We make it regularly at home, more than any other Korean food. I think of it as a type sushi, but in the Japanese sense of “preserved rice”, not the American sense of “raw seafood”. (And some googling reveals kimbap is the Korean version of the Japanese norimaki, first borrowed during the occupation.)

I would seriously maim a bulgogi burrito. In the Very Spicy option. With lots of kimchi, either on the burrito or as a side.

I fell in love with Korean food in, of all places, Anchorage, Alaska back in the late 70s. There was a place on Fireweed Ln. that had the most amazing food. My roommate and I were often the only round-eyes in the place, and we’d always get kimchi to go when we finished eating. Great stuff for camping food - the smell oozing out of your pores keeps the mosquitoes and bears away!

Man, I am craving some kimbop and Korean twice-fried chicken right now. Drool …

In Korea, nobody “slowly sips” the broth; they slurp it quite loudly.

Inspired by this thread, last week I went for Korean carryout twice.

The first time it was twice-fried chicken.

The second time it was kimbap, which I learned about in this thread. More rice than I should eat, but pretty tasty. It came with a delicious miso-type soup.

I’m thinking I’m going to try this place out this weekend. I’ve been trying to get over there, but just hasn’t worked. Hmm soup sounds tasty.

The Vaderling will probably hate it on concept alone, nevermind actually seeing smelling touching tasting anything. Thats ok, less to spend and more for me

Ok, so it took me a bit longer than I thought it would, but I finally got over there.

I tried the original kimbap. It was nice. I had them make it spicey for me.

So the rolls were about 1 1/2 or 2 inches across and about 3/4 or an inch thick. They were firm and held together nicely when picked up with chop sticks.
And they tasted exactly like what they were made from. The spicey was a sauce drizzled over the top. Maybe slightly sweet, but not really, it wasn’t hot right away. It took about 5 or so seconds after eating the first piece for the heat to build slowly. It was not an overwhelming heat by any means unless you have a very sensitive palate. I personally wouldn’t have minded, and was actually expecting a bit more heat.

For a beverage I had two bottles of ginger beer, different brands, that I had picked up elsewhere earlier in the day. That was awful. Ginger beer is not a beverage I like, but my sister enjoyed them very much. Sisters are weird.

Over all, not bad in my book. I will be eating there again.

For the record, sushi isn’t necessarily raw fish, either. Sushi is to sashimi as sandwiches are to cold cuts: Cold cuts are a common choice of filling for a sandwich, but you’d never call just cold cuts by themselves on a plate a “sandwich”, and an egg salad sandwich or a grilled cheese sandwich are both unambiguously sandwiches despite lacking cold cuts.

And a bulgogi burrito sounds amazing, especially if you can get it with a non-cabbage kimchi.

Indeed. One of the most famous forms of sushi, one that is often used to test a sushi chef’s skills, is tamago (made with cooked egg; kind of an omelet). Unagi is quite popular too – cooked eel and cucumber with a sauce. Ebi is usually lightly steamed butterfly shrimp (there is a raw version, too.) Tako (octopus) is cooked. Then when we get to rolls we have a number of them: , there’s kappa-maki (cucumber), shinko-maki (pickled daikon radish), California rolls use cooked imitation crab, there’s rolls made with tempura shrimp, some rolls use smoked salmon, etc.

The common factor in sushi is the vinegared sushi rice (which is also seasoned with sugar and salt, and sometimes cooked with kelp in the cooking water.) This particularly separates it from kimbap/gimbap, where the rice is flavored with sesame oil.

Report #2
Korean BBQ Box, spicey version.
I will start off by saying that ginger tea, cold with ice and sold by the proprietors of this food stand is not nearly as vile as ginger beer. In fact it added a surprisingly pleasant yet discordant note to the meal, not one I’m planning on repeating. I don’t like ginger tea.

The entree, hooooo boy! The spicey this time around was way hotter, and instant. Must be something about rice that mitigates a LOT of the heat of whatever they put in their mixture. The bits of beef were just the right size for me and everything in the entree itself was delicious, but the heat. Wow, it wasn’t overwhelming for me, but it was a close thing. Very filling, and the spicey heat made it even more so.

The kimchi. I dunno if its just that I haven’t had kimchi in so long, or the way they make their kimchi, or what. I didn’t really care for it. It wasn’t terrible, but not for me.

The pickled yellow radish. Now, this was interesting. I’d never had pickled yellow radish before. I found it to be quite delightful. A slightly sweet flavor with lemon-like hints of citrus and cucumber. The half rounds were sliced about an eighth of an inch thick. The color was a pleasing yellow, somewhere between lemon and orange. These were a pleasing and refreshing, cool counter point the the main dish with its spicey heat.

At some point I will try this meal again, in the non-spicey version and if possible, substitute the radish for the kimchi. Mom can have the tea, she really likes it