Thursday, 14 January 2010
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Recipe: Ddukbokki – Momofuku Style
This is a guest post from Ambitious Delicious(ness).
I went to Momofuku Noodle Bar a while back and sat at the bar, watching the chefs at work. As dinner went on, I noticed that one of the chefs was grilling three pieces of dduk(rice cake) on the grill. Then I watched, as they added the sauce to make ddukbokki, which looked very similar to my version.
At that point, I really wanted to order it but didn’t want to spend $9 for such a small plate. Plus, I was already full from the other yummy noodles. But my curiosity was aroused. Why did he cook the dduk that way? Then I got my answer in David Chang’s new cookbook. He explained that grilling the dduk was something he learned from his grandfather, who used to live in Japan. Awesome! I now had this great opportunity to recreate one of my favorite recipes of all time with a different technique.
The combination of spices used in this recipe is pretty standard: red pepper paste, sugar, and some kind of meat flavoring for the broth. But the addition of dwenjang (bean paste) added a brand new depth of flavor that I didn’t expect. And the rice cakes become a completely new ingredient when grilled, not boiled. I loved this version and will continue to use this method from now on (sorry mom!). Below is David Chang’s recipe, with minor tweaks on my part.
Recipe: roasted rice cakes (ddukbokki)
From Momofuku cookbookIngredients:
- 12 rice cakes
- ½ cup of Korean Red Dragon Sauce
- ¼ cup of mirin
- ¼ cup of bacon dashi (I used kelp and anchovy broth)
- ¼ cup of roasted onions
- 2 tablespoons of canola oil
- 1 tablespoon of sesame seeds
- ½ cup sliced green onions

Combine mirin and bacon dashi in a saucepan big enough to hold the rice cakes later. Boil to reduce until lightly thickened, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the Korean Red Dragon Sauce, turn the heat down to medium and reduce the sauce to a glossy consistency, 6 to 7 minutes. Stir in the roasted onions. Cover and keep warm until rice cakes are ready.

While the sauce is reducing, heat a very clean cast-iron skillet over medium heat until hot[my cast iron skillet is not very clean. oh well]. Add the oil to the pan and when it just starts to smoke, add the rice cakes. Sear the rice cakes for about 3 minutes per side until they’re light golden brown. [I think 3 minutes is too long; I would do about 2 minutes on each side.]
Bring the sauce back up to a a boil and toss the rice cakes in for a few seconds until they’re evenly coated. Add sesame seeds and toss again. Transfer to a serving platter and garnish with green onions.

Korean Red Dragon Sauce
½ cup water
½ cup sugar
¾ cup ssamjang (combined gochujang and dwenjang, about 1:3 ratio)
2 tablespoons light soy sauce
1 teaspoon sherry vinegar
1 teaspoon sesame oilBring water and sugar to a boil in a small saucepan, stirring until sugar dissolves. Remove from the heat and let cool for a few minutes, then stir in the ssamjang to dissolve it. Stir in the soy sauce, vinegar, and sesame oil. Taste the sauce; no one flavor should stand out, but all should be present and accounted for. Adjust as necessary.
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Comments (14)
thankz..i really wanna try this!
mmmm...so good.
It's kinda gummy right? I think I've had it at a Korean restaurant.
MMMMMM. Give me more!!!!!!
OMG momofuku milk bar = <3333
Thing is, I've had that at the ssam bar, and at ssam bar, the pieces of dduk are much smaller. And I swear, they're very very lightly battered and deep fried. Obviously though, it's freaking delicious.
I'm hungry now
Grilling dduk in Korea is not very uncommon. I don't see what a grampa in living in Japan has anything to do with that.
Yum! My mom is amazing at making dduk-bok-ki :)
<3 It's the best when you get it from Korean street vendors!
its not korean red dragon sauce..
its korean red pepper pasteggochujanghonestly i just clicked on this because it said momoFUK.U :P
but it does look really good .
can i forgo the onions..?
what a easy recipe, but I have to Buy Generic Viagra to do this recipe, you know to add some more spicy flavor to the recipe, this wil be the dinner for tomorrow, you see tomorrow my wife back to home after me, so it's turn to cook something special for her.