Bibimbap. Korean ultimate crowd pleaser.

Like most of my culinary adventures, it all started accidentally with my Bibimbap as well.

I’ve realised that I bought not one but two portions of minced beef from my local butcher, and although I cook most of my meals in batches, the prospect of consuming a kilo of meat for one dish did not amuse me. at all. My resourceful instinct took over my braincells and one portion landed in the freezer. The other one landed in the bowl and has been soaked in a basic marinate of sweet soy sauce, honey, garlic, sesame oil. I also grated ginger which added that little extra warmth to the mixture!
I left it all overnight in the fridge which I am glad I did as the marinate did its bit and flavoured the meat so beautifully.

The good thing about this meal is that it is not possible to overdose any of the ingredients when preparing. If you either fry too much meat/veggies or perhaps cooked too much rice, you can always reuse it as a lunch-at-work option ( I do that quite regularly, hence my addiction to batch cooking, actually) or perhaps dinner the day after. Long live leftovers!

To make two portions you’ll need the following ingredients:

For the salad

One cucumber, halved and spiralized
2tbsp of rice vinegar
4 tbsp of sweet soy sauce
2 tbsp of sesame oil
1tbsp of finely grated ginger
a pinch of sugar, a pinch of sesame seeds – toasted

In a small bowl mix all the wet ingredients with grated ginger.
Once ready pour over divided and spiralized cucumber ans sprinkle with sesame seeds.
Place in the fridge for the time being.

For the bibimbap:

2 portions of Nishiki rice (its the best due to its consistency),
a handful of radishes – finely sliced and bathed in vinegar and pinch of sugar,
a handful of chestnut mushrooms – roughly sliced,
1 large carrot halved and cut lengthways into quarters,
2 eggs for frying or egg yolks only – up to your taste and decorating preferences, really.

Cook the rice according to the instructions. Meantime slice thinly the radishes, place them in the bowl and soak in the white or rice vinegar and sprinkle with a pinch of sugar. Mix gently and place in the fridge to cool.
On a heavy bottomed pan, with a glug of sesame oil, fry gently carrot and mushrooms until soften slightly, al dente ideally. Finish with salt and pepper and set aside.

In the same, unwashed pan, add a splash of olive oil and fry the meat stirring occasionally doing so on a low heat. Don’t try frying on a high heat as the marinated meat will more likely burn rather than caramelise, and the taste won’t be as delicious. Trust me, been there, done that 🙂

Once the rice is ready, cover bottom of each and then following the images below, place the carrot, mushroom and pickled radishes on one side and meat on another. Place an egg yolk gently in the middle and finish with either sriracha sauce or the proper Gochujang Korean sauce.

Take the cucumber salad out of the fridge, stir gently and enjoy your undoubtedly delicious Bibimbap!

umami+beetroot velouté

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I must admit that I have a love/hate relationship with beetroot.
Yes, I know that it’s sweet and healthy purposes are hard to ignore, but if like me, you were overfed it in every possible version ( juiced, pureed, caramelised, etc., etc. ) then it’s not so easy to appreciate it years later.

Having said that, here it is, my less than usual take on this underestimated veg – 
easy, delicious and yes, a bit of “once you try it”, well, you’re going to love it…again!

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This recipe, like many others published here, is very simple and require:

2 medium finely chopped shallot onions
6-8 baby potatoes, chopped (I am leaving them unpeeled)
1 liter of good vegetable stock
2 tbsp of umami paste
1 medium beetroot, sliced
a small bunch of lemon thyme
2 small apples, quartered
salt, pepper to season

In a heavy-bottomed pan sweat the onions on a low heat in 2 tbsp of olive oil, stirring occasionally. Add baby potatoes, and sweat for another 5 mins or so. Once gently fried, pour in vegetable sock mixed with umami paste and simmer until all is nicely combined. Then add lemon thyme and quartered apples. As they begin to soften (about 3-5 mins) add sliced beetroot and season it gently. Be careful not to overpower the meal with salt and pepper and lose the gentle flavour of umami and beetroot 🙂

Blend it all until creamy and serve with a scoop of crème fraîche and dill.

bon appétit !


Winter warmer anyone?

Festive season is behind us, and so is its food. But unlike Christmas, winter will stay with us for a while. I find winter warmers – like this Spiced Carrot&Sweet potato cream, I’m sharing here with you, are a perfect solution to the cold months. As usual I’ve made sure that the recipe is hassle free and the outcome filling, yet delicious.

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To make this easy meal you’ll need:
3 medium potatoes
3 medium carrots
1 brown onion
some fresh thyme, ginger  and a few garlic cloves – quantity to your own taste
smoked salt roasted almonds to garnish
a small chunk of freshly grated ginger
1 litre of vegetable stock

With a glug of olive oil, roast the onions in a large saucepan.
Once they soften, add grated garlic, following by the vegetable stock.
Boil the mixture for a few minutes then add chopped carrots and sweet potato and cook on a low heat for 10-15 mins until the carrots are al dente. Add the grated ginger.
The secret to the warming taste of this meal is to add the ginger at this moment (you could ad some chilli as well) so the gentle spiciness wont evaporate from the soup.
Once all the ingredients are cooked through, blend them gently to achieve a delicious cream.

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Serve garnished with smoked almonds thyme and pepper if you like.
A sprinkle of finely chopped chives is also a good option for this meal.