This stew is pretty dependent on the age of your kimchee. If it's fresh then the stew will need a little help from some Korean chilli paste. If it's been in the fridge for yonks then it should require less help. Pork shanks are ideal for this if you haven't got any good quality pork stock as the bone simmering away in the stew will give it flavour and depth. Tender meat falling off the bone in a red broth was supplemented with slippery glass noodles - you can also eat it with rice.
Pork Shank & Kimchee Stew
Serves 2
1 pork shank
3 tbsp kimchee, plus juices
4 cloves of garlic
1 tbsp sesame oil
1 tbsp Korean chilli sauce (Gochujang)
A handful of glass noodles
1 tbsp light soy sauce
1 spring onion
1 tsp sugar
A small handful of coriander (optional)
Heat a stone pot or a clay pot on the stove and add the sesame oil. Mince the garlic finely and add to the oil. Fry until fragrant, then add the pork shank and the kimchee. Add the chilli sauce and sugar and cover with water. Cover and simmer for two to three hours, topping up with more water if needed. Taste and if it's not spicy enough add more chilli paste. Add the soy sauce and the glass noodles and simmer for another ten minutes. To serve, garnish with the spring onion sliced diagonally and the coriander.
9 comments:
Want. Never mind Ready Brek - this is central heating for kids.
Sounds amazing. I've done a pork shank with lentils, but it needed something else. I think you've found it!
Love it. Korean Choucroute, anyone?
Ah, that totally looks like the type of thing I want to eat in this weather. And I bet the glass noodles were great so slurp on.
Looks lush, Ham Shank is a fantastic bit of pig to cook with. Where's the best place to get Kimchee? I've never used it before.
This looks great Lizzie - where do you recommend for stone pots or clay pots? Seems like kimchee is the flavour of the month at the moment!
That is just such a brilliant idea. I want. You make for me? please please please please please please please
You've just sparked a major kimchee craving! If it ever stops snowing I'll treck to Belleville (Paris' Chinatown) and buy some to try this. Haven't got a clay/stone pot but the trusty Le Creuset should work I guess?
I like the word "shank". I'm going to use it more often in everyday conversation.
"What would you like for dinner tonight?"
"Shank, please! And make it a porky one!"
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