Kimchi is popular in New England…
Transcription
Kimchi is popular in New England…
This article originally appeared in the January 15, 2015 edition of The Lakeville Journal. © 2015 The Lakeville Journal Company, LLC. Hosted/Reprinted with Permission. Kimchi is popular in New England as well as Korea FOOD FOR HEALTH CYNTHIA HOCHSWENDER I t would seem that there is no escaping kimchi, the ubiquitous and fragrant Korean specialty food. And I’m not just saying it’s ubiquitous in Korea (where it’s apparently eaten at three meals a day); it also seems to be inescapable even here in New England. Whoever still thinks of this as a Yankee pot roast and white bread region is wrong. I am not a big fan of kimchi. I think it’s smelly and kind of, well, red. I became intimate with it Medicine. There is a long and when my daughter was a board- pretty impressive list of health ing student at the Marvelwood benefits that come from eating School in Kent. There are many kimchi: “Health functionality of wonderful and talented Korean kimchi, based upon our research students who attend the school. and that of others, includes They fill the dorm refrigerator anticancer, antiobesity, antiwith kimchi, and heat it up constipation, colorectal health in the dorm microwave. They promotion, probiotic properties, leave their unwashed bowls, cholesterol reduction, fibrolytic red-stained and glistening with effect, antioxidative and antioil, in piles in the bathroom. It aging properties, brain health promotion, immune promotion, is unattractive. But this is a food that is more and skin health promotion.” Hard to argue with all that. beloved than any other food I can think of, other than perhaps Normally this column includes white rice or white bread, which a recipe, but I wouldn’t dare to are essentially the culinary oppo- post a kimchi recipe; it seems like sites of kimchi. They are highly one of those foods where every anonymous. You could probably family has its own favorite way of making and eat them three eating it. The times a day No doubt it is an ch ef D av i d and not even Chang of Monotice it. acquired taste, somemofuku fame Not so thing you love deeply has a recipe with kimchi. you can find There is no if you grow up eating it online that he way that you (three times a day). adapted from had kimchi one his mothfor breakfast er developed; but didn’t reit includes the soft drink 7Up. alize it. Chang also has a recipe for In spite of my prejudice against kimchi, I have to ac- quickie kimchi cucumbers that knowledge that any food that is he shared with my friend Dana that popular has to have some- Cowin, editor in chief of Food & Wine magazine, for her new thing going for it. No doubt it is an acquired cookbook, “Mastering My Mistaste, something you love deeply takes in the Kitchen.” She and if you grow up eating it (three Chang offered one pro tip for making kimchi: Don’t use too times a day). It’s also so healthy that the much fish sauce. “Used sparingly, fish sauce National Institutes of Health has an article about it posted online adds an umami flavor. Overused, at the U.S. National Library of it leads directly to the trash” (as PHOTO BY PATRICK L. SULLIVAN Cowin learned while trying to prepare this dish for a summer lunch party). The cucumber recipe, adapted, is below. You can find fish sauce at most area gourmet shops and at stores with a good Asian foods section such as the Sharon Farm Market. I’ve followed Cowin’s advice from the text of her cookbook and have substituted sriracha sauce (also available at most gourmet stores) for Korean red chile flakes. This isn’t the real and nutri- tionally beneficial kimchi, which is made of cabbage mixed with hot chili flakes and then fermented (sometimes, according to legend, it is buried underground while it cures). If you want real kimchi, Hosta Hill farm in Stockbridge, Mass., makes an award-winning version that it sells online (www. hostahill.com). You can also order it at The Stagecoach restaurant in Sheffield, where chef Kyle Pezzano adds it to swordfish tacos. Quickest Cucumber Kimchi Adapted from “Mastering My Mistakes in the Kitchen” Serves eight 2 1/2 teaspoons of kosher salt; 2 tablespoons of sugar; 2 pounds of Kirby or other cucumbers with small seeds and delicate skin; one small carrot, peeled and thinly sliced; half of a small shallot, peeled and thinly sliced; a 1-inch knob of fresh ginger, peeled and either chopped or grated; 2 garlic cloves; 2 scallions, cut into 1-inch pieces (use the green part as well as the white; throw out the roots); 1 tablespoon of fish sauce (Chang instructs Cowin in the cookbook that all fish sauces are basically alike); 1 tablespoon of soy sauce; 1 tablespoon of sriracha sauce. Stir together the salt and 2 teaspoons of the sugar in a small bowl. Combine the carrots, cucumbers and shallot on a large, rimmed baking sheet and toss them with the salt-sugar mixture. In a food processor, combine the rest of the sugar with the ginger, garlic, scallions, fish sauce and soy sauce and puree them into a paste. Taste it; you can add more sugar or salt if you think you need to. Toss the vegetables together with the paste and add the sriracha sauce. As with most pickled foods, this is a dish that will get more interesting and develop a deeper flavor if you leave it in the refrigerator overnight.