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12.282 Blåbärade

Cycle 12 – Cycle 280

14 (Thu) October 2021

Blåbärade

3.5

by me

at home

-Changgok, Sujeong, Seongnam, Gyeonggi, Republic of Korea-

with DJ, IZ

Korean-Swedish Culinary Exchange (18) (see all posts on KSCX)

At the conclusion of our prior exchange, I’d pledged to make ribbestek, while GK would make jeyuk bokkeum.  I have yet to fulfill my end.  Stay tuned.

BY ME

In the meantime, I present something else entirely.

A lot of Swedish words for food look, to my eyes, kinda cutesy on paper (e.g., blåbär, ribbestek, raggmunk, pytt i panna), though I’m not sure what they sound like aloud.

At a recent visit to IKEA, I was pleased to discover blueberry drink concentrate for sale (also lingonberry, more on that in a future post).  According to the website: “Blueberries grow in many ancient forests throughout the Northern hemisphere. Mix with water (1:4) as a table drink, or use as the base in different drinks.”  We use it to make blueberryade: 2 tablespoons of concentrate + 1 bottle of sparkling water + 1 bottle of lemon-lime soda (e.g., Sprite).

Here, I garnished the drink with a few kyoho grapes, which remind me of big blueberries.

BY GK

[The comments below are GK’s own words, with minor typographical edits from me.]

I made kimchi yesterday.   As per your suggestion the last time I made kimchi, I made it with tongbaechu (통배추) (whole cabbage) this time.

I had first planned to follow your recipe, but there was no further explanation for the following steps, as well as no suggestion how much cabbage would fit how much paste, so I instead used Maangchi’s recipe.  I did add some beef bouillon powder as suggested by your recipe.

I did go a little overboard with the amount of cabbage though. I bought 7 kilograms of cabbage.  With all the other stuff added it should add up to about 8 kg of kimchi.

With all the other stuff added, it should add up to about 8 kg of kimchi.  I used up all my glass jars and even had to use two plastic containers in the end to hold the finished kimchi.  I will go buy a new big glass container (identical to the one in the upper right corner) next week.

The jar in the bottom right corner is how kimchi used to be sold at Korean markets in the US, when I was young.

Overall it went well.  Let’s see how the kimchi turns out.  I had some fresh kimchi with rice yesterday and that tasted good.

CONCLUSIONS

A few comments on GK’s effort:

NEXT STEPS

Before I get to ribbestek, I’ll make pogi kimchi.

(See also GLOBAL FOOD GLOSSARY)

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