Saturday, March 5, 2011

Crab Bibimbop and Crab Soybean Soup

꽃게된장찌게[kot-gye-dwen-jang-ji-gye]
Sorry for the delay with updating this blog. No excuse except that I just can't remember how the last two months flew by so quickly. As a Korean saying goes, it feels like all things happened in a blink of an eye. Since this is the first blog post for this year, I would like to send a belated wish to everyone a very happy new year! I am sure hearing new year's greeting at this time of the year would again make you think how time had simply jumped from the new year's day.

The weather in the San Francisco Bay Area has been very unpredictable for the past few weeks. We planned a weekend getaway to Monterey in anticipation of nice spring weather, but the weather forecast showed rain and windy so we had to cancel the trip. Then I woke up on Saturday morning only to find a bright sun light on my eyes. So, I was itching to make it a fun-filled weekend regardless of the weather, and decided to throw a house party with friends savoring our 10-legged crustacean friends that thrives in the northern California coast around this time of the year.



We invited about 10 guests and bought 11 Dungeness crabs, of which we dunked two into soybean soup and steamed the rest to make crab bibimbop. Both of them were big hits. To make crab bibimbop, you first steam crabs upside down (so that the juice stays in the back shell), crack open the shell, and add steamed rice, dry seaweed, a teaspoon of sesame oil and a pinch of sesame seeds into the shell, and then mix them together. This gets you an instant bibimbop right in the crab shell that is full of ocean flavor.

To complement the crab bibimbop, I also made crab soybean soup which is a popular delicacy in Korea. The combination of soybean paste and crabs is surprisingly delectable with a hint of fresh ocean aroma. Here is how you make it.

Ingredients for 4 servings

Stock:
anchovy (7-8, medium to large size)
dry kelp (3"x3")
water (10 cups)

Sauce:
soybean paste (1 tbl)
chili paste (1 tsp)
chili powder (1/2 tbl)
water (1/2 cup)
minced garlic (1 tbl)
ground ginger (1 tsp)
salt (1/2 tbl)
pepper (1/3 tsp)

Other:
Dungeness crab (1)
daikon radish (1/2)
kabocha (1/4)
zuchini (1/2)
Korean leek and or green onion (1 stalk)
green and red peppers to taste (2 each)

1.
Make anchovy stock by boiling dry anchovies and dry kelp (kombu) in water. Fish out kombu when the water starts boiling and anchovies about 5 minutes later.
2.
While the stock is underway on your stovetop, make a mixture of soybean and chili pastes, chili powsder and fresh ground ginger (see ingredients for sauce above).
3.
Add soybean/chili paste mixture from Step 3 to the anchovy stock from Step 1.
4.
Slice daikon radish into 1/8" thick and about 1/2" square.
5.
Add sliced daikon radish from Step 5 into soybean paste stock from Step 4 and boil for about 5 minutes until they are softened.
6.
Prepare other vegetables that usually go into soybean paste soup. I have kabocha and zuchini.
7.
Slice green and red peppers and some Korean leek/green onion for garnish.
8.
Add fresh crabs that are washed and cracked in 4 parts. Skim off the foam as it develops.
9.
Add remaining vegetables and boil for 5 and then add scallion and pepper to garnish and then boil for another 2 to 3 minutes. Be sure not to overcook it, otherwise the shells will get too soft.

5 comments:

Renee said...

My mouth is watering! That looks fabulous.

Hey Migi, do you mind if I ask you what kind of camera you use? I love your beautiful photos.

Rachel said...

I absolutely love your blog, and I love, love, love crab! I cannot wait to try out this recipe. Thank you for sharing!

Migi said...

@Renee, my husband uses Nikon D300 with 35mm lens to take the final picture, and I use small hand-held camera (Lumix DMC-FX30 by Panasonic) to get the pictures of each cooking step since SLR is too bulky to use while cooking.
@Rachel, thanks and you are welcome!

Wasa said...

Whoooa, I love Korean food so much! I wish I could eat it every day! I'd even cook it by myself! But I live in a non-sea country and we have very poor seafood choice in our stores. Only some kinds of fish. Shrimps, crabs, squids are expensive as hell. Even my job at Essayontime reviews doesn't help me to enjoy Korean dishes very often.

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