I love bulgogi. It’s kinda sweet and kinda hot. You know, like me. (HAHAHAHAHA. Ahem.) I eat bulgogi a lot when the hubby and I go to his favorite sushi restaurant, because I don’t like sushi. And it looks pretty darn simple to make at home.
On to the battle. In the first corner, we have our prepacked creation:
We found it at the Asian market. It looked fun. And I have nothing against prepackaged foods, as long as they’re tasty and the ingredients are generally recognizable. This marinade includes 100% recognizable ingredients and no preservatives. You slice the steak and marinate it for an hour, then stir-fry or grill.
In the second corner, we have Korean-style beef bulgogi, courtesy of Cuisine at Home. The sauce is boiled until thick, and the beef is grilled and then tossed with the sauce after cooking.
We took one large steak and cut it in half, so we could get an accurate test of the two concoctions. We garnished each the same, as well, so appearances wouldn’t sway our opinions. Then we swallowed our potstickers, cleansed our palates with some milk, and dove in.
Let’s take another look at our contenders, Jim.
Packaged marinade:
Homemade sauce:
The results?
The marinated bulgogi was very tender, tasty, and the sweetness and soy really came through.
The bulgogi with the homemade sauce was chewier, but the sauce was fantastic – sweet, sour, and spicy. (It almost tasted like a General Tso’s sauce.)
The bulgogi with the homemade sauce was declared the winner, but it wasn’t a complete landslide. We decided to use the same sauce next time, but marinate the beef first. Because we really dig us some tender beef.
Korean-Style Beef Bulgogi
Serves 2-3
¾ lb. steak, cut in ¼” strips
½ c. soy sauce
Salt and pepper
Sauce
¼ c. brown sugar
¼ c. rice wine vinegar
2 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. fresh ginger, grated
1 Tbsp. garlic, minced or grated
2 tsp. toasted sesame oil
2 tsp. sambal oelek
1 Tbsp. water
1 tsp. cornstarch
1. Combine beef and soy sauce in a bowl and marinate, refrigerated, for 1 hour.
2. Sprinkle beef with salt and pepper and grill until cooked to desired doneness.
3. In a small saucepan, heat sugar, vinegar, soy sauce, ginger, garlic, sesame oil, and sambal oelek over high heat until mixture comes to a boil. Combine water and cornstarch into a slurry and whisk into sauce mixture. Bring mixture back to a boil and cook 1 minute.
4. Remove sauce from heat. Combine steak strips with about half the sauce, and use the remainder for dipping.
Dang, girl! Your recipes look so yummy but easy. I just don't know where to start! I even dreamed of granola last night. I don't recommend your blog as bed time reading. No offense! Do you deliver? There will be a new sushi/Korean restaurant opening. Not sure if you guys noticed.
ReplyDeleteI currently only deliver to our basement, but I am considering an expansion of my services.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip! Any idea when and where the new place will be?
Your food looks really good, Melissa.
ReplyDeleteYour food looks way better than your husband does, Alyssa.
ReplyDeleteIt will be in the old Palace. There is a temporary sign up. Cross your digits that it's good and stays open.
ReplyDelete