혹시 김치볶음밥 해 드실 분 있으면 전해드립니다. 꼭 돼지고기를 넣어서 드세요 훨씬 맛있습니다. 김치와 돼지고기를 같이 볶으면 풍미도 몇 배 맛있고 더 높은 단백질입니다. 꼭 추천드립니다. 돼지고기 말고도 햄, 참치, 소고기 등 다른 것을 넣어도 맛있습니다. 개인적으론 돼지고기가 진리
Korean kimchi fried rice tip: When cutting kimchi to the right size, use kitchen shears (scissors) to cut it into the desired size right inside the bowl. Wooden and plastic cutting boards are porous and can absorb the kimchi juice, forever altering its smell. 😀
Traditional korean food does not have chili pepper (includong gochujang). Original kimchi does not have chili pepper. So traditional korean food is NOT spicy at all.
One of the most awesome parts of kimchi fried rice is letting the rice cook.. no stirring.. and crisp up and caramelise the bottom layer. Adds texture and flavour!! The best part of the rice!!! All these rice dishes look awesome.. I luv the Japanese style garlic rice!! Just yum!! Keep going hard Mr ANdy!!
I actually like making my kimchi fried rice sometimes in a nonstick for this very reason. Let the entire bottom just crisp, then fold it in, let more fresh bottom crisp, it's almost like a kimchi fried rice hashbrown by the end and excellent
There is a reason why kimchi fried rice is so delicious. Traditionally, kimchi used in kimchi fried rice reaches the peak of lactic acid fermentation and begins to taste sour. Then, the salted fish used in making kimchi is broken down into amino acids and becomes natural MGS. The red pepper powder in kimchi mixes with oil and turns into red pepper oil, which has the best flavor. As a final climax, the sour taste of lactic acid fermentation neutralizes the oily taste of the fried rice and suppresses the spicy taste. That's why it's delicious.
I tried kimchi fried rice once, but did not like it. This may be because I never ate kimchi fried rice growing up, so my palate was not used to the taste.
@@chiensyang In the video, you can see that both Chinese-style fried rice and Japanese-style fried rice can easily replicate the same flavor. This is because the sauce from the brand featured in the video is the key to the taste, and the flavors of vegetables are quite similar worldwide. However, it's nearly impossible to recreate kimchi fried rice authentically. The reason is that the most crucial element in kimchi fried rice is the kimchi itself. Even within Korea, the taste of kimchi varies significantly depending on the region, type, fermentation time, and even family recipe. Additionally, kimchi made by brands from other countries often tastes very different from authentic Korean kimchi. If you use kimchi that doesn’t complement the dish or simply doesn’t taste good, then the kimchi fried rice won’t be delicious.
I love kimchi fried rice! I make my own kimchi from the garden and let it ferment for a month or more to get a real good funk on it. Toss in some diced pork belly in addition to the other ingredients and you've got a meal.
Try with margarine. I don't know if it is regional thing but I remember margarine being one of the key ingredients of Kimchi fried rice. AND SPAM for sure!
Most chefs in youtube just cook instead of understanding some of the key elements but this chef right here obviously studied and put in some effort trying to cook with some basic knowledge of each country’s dish. This man is a true chef
Rice cooker - Jasmine Rice: Water 1:1-1.2 ratio not knuckle deep (makes it too wet) cook the rice, open the lid, fluff the rice, repeat the open and fluff 1-2 more times and the rice is ready
The interesting thing is that for us Chinese folk, fried rice is almost always considered a full meal. It's our favourite way of cooking leftovers. So while there are specific dishes like Yang Zhou fried rice, Hokkien fried rice, or even just the typical Chinese takeaway fried rice, for us it is made differently every time depending on what's left in the fridge from yesterday's dinner. My personal favourites are Char Siu or Lap Cheong egg fried rice with a hint of chili oil.
I did just this for lunch the other day, used up leftover Char siu in Fried rice. However, what I do have is either lap cheong, Smokey bacon or Frankfurters as the "seasoner" to give it that salty umami hit 😋
I am from the Northeast part of China, and fried rice is not likely being considered as a full meal based on where I came from. But I would say the fried rice is being considered as a full meal in lots of other regions.
@@yangerlang9040 korean fried rice is also popular in NE china. The Korean (or korean Chinese?) food there is sweeter than Korean food in Korea. They put more sugar in kimchi fried rice, kimchi and cold noodles.
Nori in Korean is called Gim, thank you for your sensitivity in picking that up and wonder what it is called in Korean. Gim is actually how we pronounce Kim, which is the most common last name in Korean.
more like Kim, a korean family name "Kim" In the historical record, A guy named Kim Yeo-Ik started cultivating the seaweeds now called Kim after his family name.
@@magmagie7425it's "gim" actually but somehow foreigners think our "g" sound like "k" and "b" sound like "p" ...so "gim" became "kim" ..."bak" became "park"...etc. But 김(gim) and 킴(kim) are spelled differently in korea and the word we use for family name and nori is 김(gim)... So big thanks to mr. Andy for noticing it.
To be precise, until recently, seaweed was written as "haiyi" in Chinese on the Korean peninsula. It is pronounced "hei". After it was introduced in Korea, it was written as "nori" and pronounced "kim". The word "kim" referring to seaweed was created later and has become established. Incidentally, until the 1990s, the food now known as "kimbap" in Korea was commonly called "norimaki." The word "kim" or "gim" meaning "seaweed" is a fairly recent invention. The character and anecdotes of "Kim Yo-ik" are also recent inventions and were added later.
@@wintersince2016 Pronouciation wise, Gim is more correct. Sometimes, G & K, B & P are exchangble when position at first. My point is that Gim comes from family name "Kim(김)"
A chef that I can relate too! And his enthusiasm for lesser known foreign cuisine, esp Korean, is genuine. Thoroughly enjoy his snappy videos. What a legend!
Alas as a student I can only afford cookbooks second hand. Immediately checked it out when he said free shipping (I’m in the U.K.) and I’m very sad I still won’t be getting it. One day a copy will appear on WoB…
One of the few times I saw someone fry the kimchi first before adding to the fried rice. Critical step for both flavor (roasted kimchi is amazing) and texture (gets excess liquid out)
In case you are still wondering, seaweed in Korean is 'Gim' just like the word gim from gimbap (Seaweed Rice) from your other videos. Another great video mate!
In korean it is, but for anyone to pronounce it overseas, it can still be said as nori since Japan is still the place of the ingredient's origination. Not like Gim is different from Nori either, just softer texture and that's it. Like we don't call pasta "kuksu" or "noodles", do we
@@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKorea An astoundingly wrong take on both fronts; roasted seaweed in sheets was first done in Japan in the mid-18th century, whereas the same process was done in Korea approximately at least 100 years before that. Also no, we don't call pasta "kuksu" or "noodles" nor do we call kuksu pasta, what's your argument there?
@@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKoreafun fact: iirc one of the most popular exported goods from korea to japan is indeed gim. So there's definitely a difference between nori and gim. Gim to my knowledge is lightly roasted seaweed sheets with some sesame oil.
Native korean here, loved the video. But I think it is important to remember that there are many different recipes for fried rice in all three countries, and as you said, "They all have a place, and they're all absolutely delicious." People tend to generalize by mixing up all three countries with only very light understanding of the cultures, but you used authentic ingredients and approached each culture as carefully as possible, like correcting yourself even over small things like saying 'nori' while cooking the Korean dish. Such attitude is greatly appreciated here! Again I really loved the video, I can tell today's dinner will be fried rice haha.
As a Korean, I'm really proud of our country's winning! But fried rice from other countries is amazing as well. And my recommendation is to put sam-gyeop-sal (grilled pork belly), with it cut in a small pieces or add cheese. You will start loving this kind of variation experiment so much.
@@benj0Im assuming the fat from the egg yolk keeps the rice starch from sticking together, similar to how a little oil can keep cooked pasta from sticking together
@@benj0 Separate egg yolk from white. You will need a few depending on how much rice is cooked. For me, 6 egg yolks for 4 portions of rice. Mix into rice (make sure rice is at room temperature and not hot out of the cooker or it will cook the yolk). This will form a coat which you then wok fry the rice as per usual. You will end up with golden egg fried rice!
The one I grew up eating combines Chinese and Japanese and Korean 😂 We used Chinese sausage or sometimes shrimp and shrimp paste+ mushroom/mushroom powder, sesame oil, and soy sauce and fish sauce. Garlic, onion/shallots, peas and carrots. And egg.
I also enjoyed Chinese sausages when I was in the US. I was surprised it was slightly sweet. Cut that bad boy up and cooked it with the kimchi fried rice (because the sausage was sweet didn't need to add much sugar) and the result? it was beautiful.
Correct, no chili on traditional Cantonese fried rice because Cantonese people used to be highly "allergic" to chili. In fact traditionally the cuisine, is more on the blander side not as bland as some other cuisines because it's still quite flavorful. But lot's of dishes don't much spice. The standard seasoning salt, sugar, white pepper (depends on family), soya sauce (light and sometimes dark), and fermented bean pastes. But depending on the dish, spices are use generously, like roast pork belly. If you hear Cantonese people boasts about retaining original taste, because spices are not used often including chilies. But ginger is the god spice in Cantonese cooking. Uncle Roger's fried rice is the Malaysian Chinese style which does come from the Cantonese style but it's Southeast Asia so chilies are inevitable. So, what I meant by allergic to chilies. It's because of the concept of yeethai or hot air. Eat to much food that gives you hot air, you become sick. There is also cold air, same thing happens but with cold foods. Chilies are by far the number 1 enemy because it's spicy gives heat to your body. If you grew up with Canto parents you will hear them yelling "YEETHAI AH!" It's a complicated mess some foods you don't expect to have hot air has hot air an example, chocolate. So you will even see some families don't even use white pepper.
Andy is the only chef I get out of my way for to actually watch and cook after watching his videos. Like I watch other chefs and I either fast forward or skip to the next. But Andy just keeps making sure it’s simple cooking with simple instructions. Thanks a lot brother 👊🏽
I love all 3 versions but of course growing up in a Korean household…kimchi bokkeumbap has my heart! My mom used to make it with pork belly (or bacon) like in your Japanese rice here. Try it next time, so delicious!
as an asian kid who grew up eating all three types of fried rice you showcased, thank you for informing people there are different ways to make fried rice!
Korean flavors seem to vibe very well with chefs and people who cook for a living, because the flavors are very strong and bold and cuts through palette fatigue. Dishes with milder flavors are still delicious and may be the favorite of someone who doesn't taste things all day every day, but for a lot of cooks, they need that punch of spice/acid/fermentation Korean foods seem to have.
@@tony2shanks Pretty much. I used to be a line cook and I was constantly tasting things all day, palette fatigue hit me pretty hard and eventually everything I ate in my off days I had to add a ton of salt or drench in hot sauce.
Im seeing this a little late, but I still wanna say - Good on ya, Andy. Covering the shipping for that weekend was such a generous and kind thing to do. You're a man of the people and I think it really shows your appreciation for your subscribers and fans. Way to go, my man.
Hey, note about cooking with freshly done rice. You can totally do it, I've done it, it's talked about in "The Wok" from Kenji Lopez. In my experience as soon as the rice is done cooking you need to dump it out onto a tray straight away so a lot of that moisture steams off in the first couple of minutes. It sticks way less. Day old rice works better though, no question about it.
Yep. Been doing it like that with good result. Just boil an hour before using it. On a tray with some parchment paper and break it up and toss it about a few times, in the first 20 minutes. When it is cold, it is old enough. Day old works better. 'Frech' tastes better.
@@net_mo_re_3106 I am talking about the rice sticking to each other and becoming mushy. You don't want it to "not stick". Don't they use day old rice in Korean fried rice?
Told myself I'd skip to the end for your verdict... but you're so enjoyable to listen to that I watched the whole video! Unscripted, a little scattered and very genuine commentary as you cook! Fun stuff and thank you!
Thai fried rice is my favorite. It's such a light, sweet flavor, served with fresh lemon on top. Delicious! I need to try Japanese fried rice rice though. That looks amazing!
I actually don't like Thai fried rice as much...I used to live there for years and I always had issues with adding tomatoes to it (and too much sugar in the area I was living in at the time). Just a preference of course!
"Nori" is "Kim" in Korean; while Kim of "Kimchi" means "soaked" or "fermented," "Kim" is just Kim. came from the inventor's name around 17s century. btw your Kimchi Rice looks great! Such texture. I can imagine that sweet-soury heaven in my mouth already! Thank you for the video. +Maybe you could try Ssamjang next time. It hits quite different.
@@ladwenjang The etymology of the word is named after the last name of the person who grew seaweed(Kim), so I think Kim would be a more appropriate notation.
김치볶음밥에 고추장은 첨 보네요 ^^ 저도 한번 해봐야겠네요 그냥 고춧가루 살짝 넣어도 맛있음 ㅎㅎㅎ 베이컨과 버터로 해도 맛있고요! (참기름과 식용유가 없다면 버터로 김치 볶아서 해 보세요 김치랑 버터가 아주 잘 어울립니다 ) 그리고, 꼭 김치국물을 넣어야 하는건 아니에요 ㅎㅎㅎ 너무 눅눅해지는게 싫어서 저는 김치국물 거의 안넣어요 김치만으로 충분합니다 ^^ 그리고 가능하면 조미된 김이 훨씬 좋아요 왜냐면 모자란 간을 조미김이 해주거든요
Normally, when I cook kimchi fried rice I either use bacon or chopped pork belly. You can try to use German continental sausage or Spanish chorizo from Aldi as well. Anything with pork goes well with kimchi. Nice video Andy.
FYI, the whole Chili Crunch issue with David Chang is no longer an issue as him and his company are no longer trying to trademark "chili Crunch" since there was a LOT of complaints.
His brand name is not only massively impacted by this but he also being threatened to be sued by the Japanese netizens because he used the trademark name of Momofuku Ando without permission.
This was a great watch. I grew up on Cantonese and Japanese style (I'm biracially Japanese and Filipino, and I grew up in a town in New Jersey with a large Chinese population). Korean style is new to me, but probably my favorite now too. BTW, "nori" is Japanese. The Korean version is called "gim."
excellent video. It's impressive that you added details to the material to bring out the local characteristics. tips for better kimchi fried rice 1) try butter or margarine instead of oli. oil is classic. they are also good choice 2) just put kimchi without gochujang. for simple cooking, we dont use it sometime. the taste is still good. 3) pork, chicken, shrimp is good option. 4) add sesame oil only what you are going to eat, if you made a lot of fried rice. it become tasteless, if you left the oil for a long time.
Andy, I always watched your videos with happiness, and joy. Korean Kimchi Fried rice(김치볶음밥) looked great, and very luxurious, cause most Kimchi Fried Rice(you might already know) is very humble and non-formal food and mostly raised Mom's touch. Always thank you for your marvelous cooking and the the foods I've watched.
As a korean here are some final tips for the fried rice: 1. use a scissor to cut the nori 2. use salted und roasted nori, it's called "gim" (김) 3. the fried rice should be roasted on a pan to finish. there has to be a sticky, roasted, almost brown/black bottom. that's how korean cook and enjoy a common fired rice 👍
In China, Fried Rice is usually used to make use of the leftover rice, so we usually use some ingredients that are often used at home. Eggs and ham are often found at home! Carrots are the highlight of Fried Rice! Generally, Chinese families don't cook Fried Rice specially! My mother is like this! Personally, I think Fried Rice is a little greasy!
Thank you explaining about the garlic. People do not understand how something like garlic could have a sweet profile. Especially people that overcook it. I find it challenging, it’s kinda like welding aluminum. The moment where it becomes liquid is so fast, and welding. It is so hard because of that. You don’t want to blow out a hole. With garlic, with of breath, it can change to overcooked and bitter.
Andy, your Egg Fried Rice changed my life since you drop a short. So tasty. Can’t stop having it. Your videos are so so good. Teaching me massively! Thank you! ❤️
Some ingredients that can always give a boost to your fried rice game up a bit: Oyster Sauce, Ginger, and even Sesame oil added when finishing. Those can also be used to add to any instant ramen.
As a Korean, I only use Kimchi and rice to make Kimchi fried rice. I don't add anything but the fried egg. What you really need is only well fermented tasty Kimchi.
1. I love his YT videos since years, but just saw this video now, and I am sad that he would not take over the shipping costs any more ㅠㅠ 2. I love his cooking style, because he really understands the main ingrediants (meaning the reason why certain cuisines use those ingredients specifically) and cooking styles of every single country 3. therefore: no wonder he is approved by uncle Roger, but so would he be by any other chef or "cooking pro" from ANY country in the world!!! 4. please go on with your style of cooking and equally your style of content in the future!!!❤
a general rule of thumb for chinese cooking (and perhaps other asian or even western cooking), you put stuff with aroma and spice into the wok/pan first, like shallot/spring onion/garlic etc. if you put unseasoned main ingrediants in first like you did in this video, they won't have as much flavour penetration no matter how much you season them afterwards.
I agree. I watch a Channel called Aaron and Claire, check it out if you don't know it, and Aaron has taught me what you're saying. I now start off any fried rice with a decent amount of oil that you season with the spring onion whites and (in my case), a touch of garlic. It goes so fast too, but the rest of your dish is then seasoned with an oil that has garlic and onion flavours throughout it and it is a game changer.
@Ballacha I cook on electric which slow to get hot but also to cool down. How do I prevent the aromatics from burning and the garlic getting bitter while still having enough heat to cook the rest of the dish?
@@randysem completely remove the pot from the heat source between adding ingredients and rather keep it at a medium high heat so you don't waste too much time
i was watching a ton of your videos and checked if i was subriced as you said it. i wasnt. now i am. keep on doing what you are doing, you guys are great fun and im learning a lot. greetings from germany.
As Chinese from Sichuan Province of China I'd like to say that the Cantonese style fried rice in your video is not necessarily typical around China because many restaurants all over China usually serve the fried rice which doesn't contain or just contain a little bit of soybean sauce, and yes the taste is closer to the Japanese version(without garlic) in your video. The Korean version in your video seems to taste like Bibimbap
There used to be a Chinese restaurant near me that did make fried rice that's was a meal because it had BBQ pork, shrimp and chicken in it. It was delicious, still miss that place 20 years later.
i'm not a fan of kimchi, but man you made that last fried rice look so good, i'd eat it. it's color, the garnish, the fluff and the saucy crackle, egg, plating. that's fried rice level 100. all three look good of course, but the kimchi one surprised me because i don't like it but now i want that fried rice the most. blew my stomach lmaoooo uncle Andy, the legend. fuiyyooh
I think there’s a big difference in taste if you eat just plain kimchi (as banchan), or fried/cooked in a dish like this (or kimchi jjigae, kimchijeon, creamy kimchi pasta, or even in gimbap or ssam)
@@andrecanis4894 probably. as most things that get cooked end up with a different taste. i don't like Kimchi as a topping, a side or straight up like that. pasta sounds next level so does the kimchijeon, it looks perfect and i'd give it a try.
Fired rice of almost every type is delicious. Thai fried rice is also amazing. The Malaysian one is awesome as well. Using lard instead of other oil is always a better choice, especially for the Kimchi fried rice. Thank you very much for your wonderful presentation of world food!
There is no such thing as too much garlic. I'm gonna try making the Japanese rice cause that looks amazing. The kimchi fried rice is always a hit can't go wrong.
In korea. Usually kimchi fried rice is dessert of korean barbecue on the stone pan. We usually frying it with left pieces of meat and the grease from the pork fat. Ofcourse we also eat homemade or fastfood style kimchi fried rice like you made. But I hope you try the dessert version.
Depends on where you are in the world of course but here in Germany getting some actual Gojujang was a much bigger problem than acquiring Kimchi... I just made it myself, but you can also buy this as a "healthy trend food". It often isn't fermented then, though, just kinda pickled. I'll try that Kimchi fried rice though, sounds delicious and I love spicy food!
All of them are good and it depends on what you are in the mood for on a different day. The kimchi fried rice has the edge with a running yolk and sesame oil.
The trick to making delicious fried rice is to remove the moisture from the rice, but he was completely unable to do that. Korean fried rice is sticky because of the moisture from the kimchi. Regular Japanese fried rice doesn't use garlic or pork belly, and even if it does, it doesn't use that much. The finished shape is also different. If three countries people saw these fried rice, they would probably wonder, "What is this?"
I'm korean and I have never heard of putting gochujang in kimchi fried rice in my life. Kimchi fried rice usually tastes light, while using gochujang gives little bit of heavy flavor and sweetness. But there is no absolute rules for every recipe. I will definitely try Andy's style. Thank you for your recipe!
I'm Korean and there are times when I feel like the kimchi doesn't have enough flavor I put a tiny bit of gochujang or I have homemade soondubu paste that I add just a small tablespoon of when making it and it's soooo gooooood. You should try it :))))
Love all your version of fried rice pretty on point on every version for korean one you can melt shredded mozzarella on top too. Cooked kimchi and mozzarella pairs surprisingly well. There is another version of fried rice in dak-galbi(spicy stir fry chicken) restaurant, at the end of the meal they fry rice with left over chicken with spicy sauce, little bit of kimchi, seaweed, sesame oil, and melted mozzarella on top. It pretty amazing.
I grew up in Europe as a Chinese person, and my parents often took me to Chinese restaurants. I don’t remember ever having fried rice with beans and corn, which I believe is a practice in American Chinese cuisine.
Simply grilling kimchi in oil releases an incredibly delicious aroma. Without even adding it as a fried rice ingredient, you can just grill it in the oil that comes from barbecuing meat, and you'll have a salty and flavorful side dish. When making kimchi fried rice, instead of using sugar, try seasoning with salt-it’s savory and delicious. If you prefer savory over sweet, I recommend this method.
My favorite is the Japanese fried rice because it has all the ingredients that I like and there is no sugar. I don't like sugar in food unless I am baking or the tomato sauce is too acidity, which is rare for me. I love your cooking and your explaining and tips, that is why I subscribed . Always great!
I'm Korean, but Chinese Yangzhou fried rice is the best. It's incredibly delicious with simple ingredients like eggs and green onions. Of course, I know that one of the secrets is adding a lot of MSG.
this is not true! The authentic and expensive one don’t use a lot of MSG! The secret to its deliciousness lies in the rich broth made from chicken and sea cucumber used to make the fried rice, which gives the dish a savory flavor. It’s not the result of unhealthy MSG.
@@Jwjjbwn I have never had such authentic fried rice. The cheap fried rice I have had is the best fried rice I have ever had. And MSG is used a lot in Korea too. No offense intended.
@@StomachTerrorist I apologize for my misunderstanding. Welcome to China and try the authentic one in Yangzhou city. Even though it is very expensive for most people in China but according to my knowledge about the average income level of South Korea, it may not be very expensive (and maybe even cheap) for you to have a try.
I cook Japanese fried rice often. A tip for those starting to learn to cook with short grain rice: while it's still warm, mix a raw egg through it and a little Kewpie mayo before you put it in the wok. It helps to keep the grains separate.
Im Korean, but when talking fried rice, I really love the Vietnamese fried rice. Also, personally, i perfer bibimbob rather than the fried rice. Not too much oil, alot of vegetables with eggs and meat with pepper paste and a bit of rich sesami oil and just mix em up with cooked rice. Much more healthier too.
Kimchi fried rice with pork belly is THE best!! I put a bit of gochujang and a little bit of sugar to balance out the sourness of kimchi.
Damn thats fancy
Its usually spam for me
Ditch the sugar
for me, bacon kimch fried rice is the best! prok belly souds good too
굴소스 넣어도 맛있음
as a korean i can confirm this. kimchi is the best when its cooked with pork fat!
혹시 김치볶음밥 해 드실 분 있으면 전해드립니다.
꼭 돼지고기를 넣어서 드세요 훨씬 맛있습니다.
김치와 돼지고기를 같이 볶으면 풍미도 몇 배 맛있고 더 높은 단백질입니다. 꼭 추천드립니다.
돼지고기 말고도 햄, 참치, 소고기 등 다른 것을 넣어도 맛있습니다. 개인적으론 돼지고기가 진리
고기대신 스팸 넣어도 맛있어요!
왜냐면 라드 때문에 그럼
한국 스팸만 돼지고기 함량 높습니다 다른 나라껀 맛없어요
김치볶음밥엔 햄이 좋다고 생각합니다.
@@_inmm 프로세스푸드를 멀리하셔요. 건강에 나빠요.
Korean kimchi fried rice tip: When cutting kimchi to the right size, use kitchen shears (scissors) to cut it into the desired size right inside the bowl. Wooden and plastic cutting boards are porous and can absorb the kimchi juice, forever altering its smell. 😀
Excellent tip!
Great TIPS! That's why the Koreans are have a two cutting boards.
People who have never tasted real food will say Korean food taste good
@@tak3509What's the 'real food' tho?
🇯🇵「Something is wrong...」
🇨🇳「Something is wrong...」
🇰🇷「Something is wrong...」
exactry
haha..
Almost wrong...
Thank you. I think we all agree on
何かがおかしい😊 あんなにニンニク入れないですね。入れたとしてもちょっと
You can stir-fry the minced pork first before stir-frying the kimchi, it will taste better.
pork + kimchi = 😇
Traditional korean food does not have chili pepper (includong gochujang). Original kimchi does not have chili pepper. So traditional korean food is NOT spicy at all.
@@starlee-k6l Its the same thing as saying traditional Italian food doesn't have noodles or tomatoes...
@@starlee-k6l 한국에 고추가 들어간 음식이 생긴것은 임진왜란 이후인 1600년이고 지금은 2024년이므로 400년동안의 음식문화가 전통이 아니면 뭔가요😊
@@starlee-k6l Definitely not
Andy, always demonstrating his ability to maintain his Uncle status
100% 😅❤
@@agingerbeard honestly fried rice is just a simple dish in Asian,you can put random shit in it,except broken tofu and splash of water xD
@@akagenius I don't judge food on complexity, it's all about taste and feel for me 🤷♂️
@@akagenius and *shudders* chili jam
He knows what is important😑😊😊
One of the most awesome parts of kimchi fried rice is letting the rice cook.. no stirring.. and crisp up and caramelise the bottom layer. Adds texture and flavour!! The best part of the rice!!! All these rice dishes look awesome.. I luv the Japanese style garlic rice!! Just yum!! Keep going hard Mr ANdy!!
I actually like making my kimchi fried rice sometimes in a nonstick for this very reason. Let the entire bottom just crisp, then fold it in, let more fresh bottom crisp, it's almost like a kimchi fried rice hashbrown by the end and excellent
@@mkoo7000 kind of like a bibimbap when ur serverd in those clay pots and the rice underneath has crisped up! delicious
@@afscrew123 Dolsot Bibimbap.
Kimchi fried rice is always one pick. Can eat every day.
The crispy part is the best! That's what people fight over when they eat paella.
There is a reason why kimchi fried rice is so delicious. Traditionally, kimchi used in kimchi fried rice reaches the peak of lactic acid fermentation and begins to taste sour. Then, the salted fish used in making kimchi is broken down into amino acids and becomes natural MGS.
The red pepper powder in kimchi mixes with oil and turns into red pepper oil, which has the best flavor. As a final climax, the sour taste of lactic acid fermentation neutralizes the oily taste of the fried rice and suppresses the spicy taste.
That's why it's delicious.
Ah, natural Metal Gear Solid. A true prescious.
I tried kimchi fried rice once, but did not like it. This may be because I never ate kimchi fried rice growing up, so my palate was not used to the taste.
@@chiensyang김치의 신 맛에 익숙하지 않다면 충분히 그럴 수 있다 생각합니다. 김치볶음밥의 맛은 신 김치의 발효된 맛과 매운 맛에서 주로 나니까요.
@@chiensyang
In the video, you can see that both Chinese-style fried rice and Japanese-style fried rice can easily replicate the same flavor. This is because the sauce from the brand featured in the video is the key to the taste, and the flavors of vegetables are quite similar worldwide.
However, it's nearly impossible to recreate kimchi fried rice authentically. The reason is that the most crucial element in kimchi fried rice is the kimchi itself. Even within Korea, the taste of kimchi varies significantly depending on the region, type, fermentation time, and even family recipe. Additionally, kimchi made by brands from other countries often tastes very different from authentic Korean kimchi. If you use kimchi that doesn’t complement the dish or simply doesn’t taste good, then the kimchi fried rice won’t be delicious.
I love kimchi fried rice! I make my own kimchi from the garden and let it ferment for a month or more to get a real good funk on it. Toss in some diced pork belly in addition to the other ingredients and you've got a meal.
한국인인 저도 김치 만들기는 엄두도 잘 못내는 일인데 대단하십니다 허허
これ日本ではガーリックライス garlic rice と呼ばれる料理に近いです。いわゆる日本のチャーハン fried riceとはちょっと違います。一般的にガーリックライスには卵が入っておらず、鉄板焼屋さんやステーキハウス、焼肉屋、居酒屋などで提供されているメニューです。一方、チャーハンにはニンニクは入っておらず、中華料理屋かラーメン屋で提供されています。Andyのはこの2つの間のようなレシピですね。
おれチャーハン作る時ニンニク入れてたわ
あれチャーハン時なかったのか
@@gg7992 ガーリックチャーハン、ニンニクチャーハン、みたいにニンニクが入っていることを示して提供されることはありますよね。レタスが入ったチャーハンは「レタスチャーハン」、鰹出汁の入ったものは「和風チャーハン」として提供されるように、generalなチャーハンとの差異がその名前の中で示されるわけです。
일본인들 귀여워 😊
これってラーメン屋の中華風卵チャーハンじゃないっすか?
ラーメンは明らかに日本化したラーメンがあるけど、炒飯は別に日本アレンジはなく中華料理として敬意を払って食べてたわ😮
you can also use some protein in kimchi fried rice as well, chopped pork, chicken, spam, or beef, or even ham.
pork belly left over from kbbq or spam
Canned tuna.. 참치김치볶음밥도 껴주세요 ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ
Or you choose to skip the animal's body parts in there :)
I use butter in my kimchi fried rice. Try it. It’s a game changer.
as a Korean myself, me as well use butter in my kimchi fried rice sometimes. approved.
이분 아시는분이네
버터는 사랑..
완전 별로던데
Try with margarine. I don't know if it is regional thing but I remember margarine being one of the key ingredients of Kimchi fried rice. AND SPAM for sure!
Most chefs in youtube just cook instead of understanding some of the key elements but this chef right here obviously studied and put in some effort trying to cook with some basic knowledge of each country’s dish. This man is a true chef
Not at all...🤷♀️どのチャーハンも材料から作り方まで、めちゃくちゃだよ…
日本のチャーハンには、酒とニンニクは入っていないよ。
あと、卵液をフライパンに入れたら、すぐに温かいご飯を入れて、急いで卵液とご飯をお玉(ladle)で混ぜる。
理由は、日本のお米は粘り気があるため、卵液とご飯を混ぜて加熱し、お玉をうまく使いながら卵だけ固まらないようにご飯をパラパラにするんです。
あと、料理が苦手な人は、あらかじめボウルに卵液と温かいご飯を混ぜて、フライパンでパラパラに炒める方法もあります。
お米一粒一粒に卵がコーティングされるので、簡単に調理ができます。
お酒は入れるとこはいれてるかな
特に家庭は入れるレシピありますね
ニンニクは入れない!🧄
肉は生肉じゃなくてチャーシューだよね…
今時いくらでも調べられるのに
どこでこんなレシピ見たんだろ…
マジか、炒飯と言えばニンニク炒飯でしょ
ここ一ヶ月で5回くらい色んな店の炒飯食べたけどニンニク入ってないの一つもなかったぞ
@@cbx3323 炒飯のレシピ検索したけど、ニンニク入ってないのがほとんどだったよ。
Parapara? De nanidesuka?
@@I-am-not-human-being普通のチャーハンにニンニクは入っていないけど、ニンニクチャーハンは最近はメジャーではあると思う。
Props for frying the kimchi first...can even add a bit of sesame oil and a little butter when lightly frying the kimchi. Amazing demonstration
Rice cooker - Jasmine Rice: Water 1:1-1.2 ratio not knuckle deep (makes it too wet)
cook the rice, open the lid, fluff the rice, repeat the open and fluff 1-2 more times
and the rice is ready
The interesting thing is that for us Chinese folk, fried rice is almost always considered a full meal. It's our favourite way of cooking leftovers. So while there are specific dishes like Yang Zhou fried rice, Hokkien fried rice, or even just the typical Chinese takeaway fried rice, for us it is made differently every time depending on what's left in the fridge from yesterday's dinner. My personal favourites are Char Siu or Lap Cheong egg fried rice with a hint of chili oil.
Fried rice with an egg is a great breakfast choice.
I did just this for lunch the other day, used up leftover Char siu in Fried rice. However, what I do have is either lap cheong, Smokey bacon or Frankfurters as the "seasoner" to give it that salty umami hit 😋
I am from the Northeast part of China, and fried rice is not likely being considered as a full meal based on where I came from. But I would say the fried rice is being considered as a full meal in lots of other regions.
@@jasonyau1536 I know right? All types of salted or processed meats work great in fried rice!
@@yangerlang9040 korean fried rice is also popular in NE china. The Korean (or korean Chinese?) food there is sweeter than Korean food in Korea. They put more sugar in kimchi fried rice, kimchi and cold noodles.
Nori in Korean is called Gim, thank you for your sensitivity in picking that up and wonder what it is called in Korean. Gim is actually how we pronounce Kim, which is the most common last name in Korean.
more like Kim, a korean family name "Kim"
In the historical record, A guy named Kim Yeo-Ik started cultivating the seaweeds now called Kim after his family name.
@@magmagie7425it's "gim" actually but somehow foreigners think our "g" sound like "k" and "b" sound like "p"
...so "gim" became "kim"
..."bak" became "park"...etc.
But 김(gim) and 킴(kim) are spelled differently in korea
and the word we use for family name and nori is 김(gim)...
So big thanks to mr. Andy for noticing it.
@@wintersince2016this is spot on, bravo. foreigners think it is k because of korean to roman transcription rules.
To be precise, until recently, seaweed was written as "haiyi" in Chinese on the Korean peninsula. It is pronounced "hei". After it was introduced in Korea, it was written as "nori" and pronounced "kim". The word "kim" referring to seaweed was created later and has become established.
Incidentally, until the 1990s, the food now known as "kimbap" in Korea was commonly called "norimaki." The word "kim" or "gim" meaning "seaweed" is a fairly recent invention.
The character and anecdotes of "Kim Yo-ik" are also recent inventions and were added later.
@@wintersince2016 Pronouciation wise, Gim is more correct. Sometimes, G & K, B & P are exchangble when position at first. My point is that Gim comes from family name "Kim(김)"
김치볶음밥에 튀기든 조리한 계란후라이. 크....... 정말 맛있어보여요.
계란후라이 빼고 기름범벅 김치볶음밥
@@oncemore588 저 3가지 중 기름이 가장 적게 들어가는데 무슨
A chef that I can relate too! And his enthusiasm for lesser known foreign cuisine, esp Korean, is genuine. Thoroughly enjoy his snappy videos. What a legend!
Folks, do yourself a favor and buy Andy's cookbook! It is great!
Are there meals in there great for meal prepping for the week?
thanks legend!
Alas as a student I can only afford cookbooks second hand. Immediately checked it out when he said free shipping (I’m in the U.K.) and I’m very sad I still won’t be getting it. One day a copy will appear on WoB…
I would but cook videos, actually. 😊 I will check out the cook book. Love Andy.
This and Vincent Price's cookbooks are what I want on my shelf
One of the few times I saw someone fry the kimchi first before adding to the fried rice. Critical step for both flavor (roasted kimchi is amazing) and texture (gets excess liquid out)
you mean most people who do this on the internet put the kimchi and rice in together??
Yep. Tragedy. Haha
김치랑 돼지고기를 같이 볶으면 훨씬 맛있다
Korean have so many style of Kimchi fried rice.
This style is very normal and standard.😢
영상처럼 김치를먼저볶는게 일반적임~밥과 김치를 같이볶으면 밥이 질어지고 생김치의 맛이 더많이남~그냥 기름보단 돼지고기와 김치를 같이볶아주다 밥을넣어주는게 젤 맛이있음!!
In case you are still wondering, seaweed in Korean is 'Gim' just like the word gim from gimbap (Seaweed Rice) from your other videos. Another great video mate!
In korean it is, but for anyone to pronounce it overseas, it can still be said as nori since Japan is still the place of the ingredient's origination. Not like Gim is different from Nori either, just softer texture and that's it. Like we don't call pasta "kuksu" or "noodles", do we
All three countries ate gim from the start but Korea is the first country ever to farm the gim. @@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKorea
@@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKorea An astoundingly wrong take on both fronts; roasted seaweed in sheets was first done in Japan in the mid-18th century, whereas the same process was done in Korea approximately at least 100 years before that. Also no, we don't call pasta "kuksu" or "noodles" nor do we call kuksu pasta, what's your argument there?
@@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKoreafun fact: iirc one of the most popular exported goods from korea to japan is indeed gim. So there's definitely a difference between nori and gim. Gim to my knowledge is lightly roasted seaweed sheets with some sesame oil.
@@Anti-FreedomD.P.R.ofSouthKorea Please watch the video before saying some strong opinion. In 12:59, he looks curios what the Korean word for nori.
Native korean here, loved the video. But I think it is important to remember that there are many different recipes for fried rice in all three countries, and as you said, "They all have a place, and they're all absolutely delicious."
People tend to generalize by mixing up all three countries with only very light understanding of the cultures, but you used authentic ingredients and approached each culture as carefully as possible, like correcting yourself even over small things like saying 'nori' while cooking the Korean dish. Such attitude is greatly appreciated here! Again I really loved the video, I can tell today's dinner will be fried rice haha.
As a Korean, I'm really proud of our country's winning! But fried rice from other countries is amazing as well.
And my recommendation is to put sam-gyeop-sal (grilled pork belly), with it cut in a small pieces or add cheese.
You will start loving this kind of variation experiment so much.
For freshly cooked rice, you can add an egg yolk into the rice and mix it well. It keeps rice from sticking together
Can you elaborate a bit a on this? I heard this recently for the first time, supposedly magic
@@benj0Im assuming the fat from the egg yolk keeps the rice starch from sticking together, similar to how a little oil can keep cooked pasta from sticking together
@@benj0 Separate egg yolk from white. You will need a few depending on how much rice is cooked. For me, 6 egg yolks for 4 portions of rice. Mix into rice (make sure rice is at room temperature and not hot out of the cooker or it will cook the yolk). This will form a coat which you then wok fry the rice as per usual. You will end up with golden egg fried rice!
Thats called golden fried rice.
Just let cooked rice cool down for an hour and break apart lumps without breaking grains, it’s not hard
Andy knowing the drama behind chilli crunch and David Chang made my day.
What’s the drama?
@@PassiveAgressive319 he tried to trademark the name "Chili Crunch"
That's like trying to copyright brown mustard
So funny! But David finally backed down I believe so he can say it now 😂
Aaaand turned out his restaurant’s name is in trademark violation against the Japanese guy who invented the first cup of instant ramen… karma guys
The one I grew up eating combines Chinese and Japanese and Korean 😂
We used Chinese sausage or sometimes shrimp and shrimp paste+ mushroom/mushroom powder, sesame oil, and soy sauce and fish sauce. Garlic, onion/shallots, peas and carrots. And egg.
I also enjoyed Chinese sausages when I was in the US. I was surprised it was slightly sweet. Cut that bad boy up and cooked it with the kimchi fried rice (because the sausage was sweet didn't need to add much sugar) and the result? it was beautiful.
The spicy Chinese sausage in fried rice is soo good
在台灣,我們說『包手的廚師』煮的菜最好吃!包手的意思是:「手臂充滿了刺青」,這只是大眾的觀念~
正好chef Andy也是雙手有著刺青!更加感受到Andy煮飯很好吃!哈哈
You can always add protein on the kimchi fried rice
Pork belly or bacon is nice choice
Correct, no chili on traditional Cantonese fried rice because Cantonese people used to be highly "allergic" to chili. In fact traditionally the cuisine, is more on the blander side not as bland as some other cuisines because it's still quite flavorful. But lot's of dishes don't much spice. The standard seasoning salt, sugar, white pepper (depends on family), soya sauce (light and sometimes dark), and fermented bean pastes.
But depending on the dish, spices are use generously, like roast pork belly. If you hear Cantonese people boasts about retaining original taste, because spices are not used often including chilies. But ginger is the god spice in Cantonese cooking. Uncle Roger's fried rice is the Malaysian Chinese style which does come from the Cantonese style but it's Southeast Asia so chilies are inevitable.
So, what I meant by allergic to chilies. It's because of the concept of yeethai or hot air. Eat to much food that gives you hot air, you become sick. There is also cold air, same thing happens but with cold foods. Chilies are by far the number 1 enemy because it's spicy gives heat to your body. If you grew up with Canto parents you will hear them yelling "YEETHAI AH!" It's a complicated mess some foods you don't expect to have hot air has hot air an example, chocolate. So you will even see some families don't even use white pepper.
I have a Cantonese mom and this person is right. Cantonese food is originally quite bland actually.
Andy is the only chef I get out of my way for to actually watch and cook after watching his videos.
Like I watch other chefs and I either fast forward or skip to the next.
But Andy just keeps making sure it’s simple cooking with simple instructions.
Thanks a lot brother 👊🏽
You can’t go wrong with any of the 3, but there is just something about kimchi fried rice that has a special place in my heart…..and stomach.
I need to cook kimchi fried rice w spam tonight after watching this....oh man....this vid made me salivating
That’s my go to breakfast of champions there - kimchi fried rice with Spam and a fried egg on top.
I love all 3 versions but of course growing up in a Korean household…kimchi bokkeumbap has my heart! My mom used to make it with pork belly (or bacon) like in your Japanese rice here. Try it next time, so delicious!
as an asian kid who grew up eating all three types of fried rice you showcased, thank you for informing people there are different ways to make fried rice!
But the absolute best fried rice is the whichever one I'm eating right now.
As an Asian, guy, we never put a corn in fried rice. It might be interesting but I'm not a fan of dessert.
@@chanonwisanmongkol2254 you put corn in dessert?
@@AdamFloro YES, corn, coconut, taro, etc.
@@AdamFloro Yes. Corn is dessert.
Korean flavors seem to vibe very well with chefs and people who cook for a living, because the flavors are very strong and bold and cuts through palette fatigue. Dishes with milder flavors are still delicious and may be the favorite of someone who doesn't taste things all day every day, but for a lot of cooks, they need that punch of spice/acid/fermentation Korean foods seem to have.
palette fatigue... so that's why foods taste better after a break? lmao. TIL.
@@tony2shanks Pretty much. I used to be a line cook and I was constantly tasting things all day, palette fatigue hit me pretty hard and eventually everything I ate in my off days I had to add a ton of salt or drench in hot sauce.
Yeah, Fried kimchi with fried rice is like da Perfect match. I can tell you that.
12:58 Nori is the Japanese word, and Koreans call it “gim”. Great job, Andy! You deserve Uncle status for sure. Manseh!! (Korean for fuiyoh / hooray!)
To help some folks out, phonetically it’s pronounced “gh-eem”
만세!!🇰🇷
Thank you for correcting Andy and the viewers.👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@@Daniel-kl7sj Also, it is has the same spelling as the Korean last name Kim. So Kim Jong Un and Kim Kardashian are Nori Jung Un and Nori Kardashian.
맛습니다
日本人ですが、このレシピの炒飯は食べた事がありません。中国の炒飯も全く違います。卵炒飯が一般的、あとは長ネギ、にんにくくらい。日本の炒飯は、ラーメンと同様、在日中国人から伝わり、日本で独自のアレンジがされます。無数のアレンジがあります。一般的には、叉焼のみじん切り、にんにくのみじん切り、なるとのみじん切り、長ネギのみじん切り。胡椒、塩、中華スープで味付けします。蟹やレタス、エビ、様々な具材を使います。味の好みは人それぞれ、優劣はナンセンスかと思います。いちど本格的な中華料理店の炒飯、日本の町中華を試してください。インドネシアにはナシゴレン、という美味しい炒飯もあります。あなたの作る炒飯はどれも食べたいとはおもいません。シェフとしてのプライドがあるならば、現地で食べ歩きする事をおすすめします。
Totally agree with your opinions! To be honest, none of the fried rice he made truly represent the authentic style of each!
Im seeing this a little late, but I still wanna say - Good on ya, Andy. Covering the shipping for that weekend was such a generous and kind thing to do. You're a man of the people and I think it really shows your appreciation for your subscribers and fans. Way to go, my man.
Hey, note about cooking with freshly done rice. You can totally do it, I've done it, it's talked about in "The Wok" from Kenji Lopez. In my experience as soon as the rice is done cooking you need to dump it out onto a tray straight away so a lot of that moisture steams off in the first couple of minutes.
It sticks way less. Day old rice works better though, no question about it.
Yep. Been doing it like that with good result.
Just boil an hour before using it.
On a tray with some parchment paper and break it up and toss it about a few times, in the first 20 minutes.
When it is cold, it is old enough.
Day old works better.
'Frech' tastes better.
Korean fried rice actually kinda needs the ‘stuck to the pan burnt fried rice’ flavor
Its pretty essential actually.
@@net_mo_re_3106 I am talking about the rice sticking to each other and becoming mushy.
You don't want it to "not stick". Don't they use day old rice in Korean fried rice?
Told myself I'd skip to the end for your verdict... but you're so enjoyable to listen to that I watched the whole video! Unscripted, a little scattered and very genuine commentary as you cook! Fun stuff and thank you!
Me too actually. I clicked with every intent to skip most of it but I didn't end up doing that. That's how you know its a good video
Thai fried rice is my favorite. It's such a light, sweet flavor, served with fresh lemon on top. Delicious! I need to try Japanese fried rice rice though. That looks amazing!
I actually don't like Thai fried rice as much...I used to live there for years and I always had issues with adding tomatoes to it (and too much sugar in the area I was living in at the time). Just a preference of course!
I agree. Chinese fried rice is too bland. Thai is the best. Second best is mine made from leftovers.
삼겹살은 일본이 아니라 한국이 주로 먹습니다! 삼겹살은 꼭 한식에 넣어주세요!! 일본식은 주로 가라아게같은 닭고기& 계란이 유명하며 부타동은 대패삼겹살 즉 얇은 삼겹살을 이용합니다!😊
"Nori" is "Kim" in Korean;
while Kim of "Kimchi" means "soaked" or "fermented,"
"Kim" is just Kim. came from the inventor's name around 17s century.
btw your Kimchi Rice looks great!
Such texture. I can imagine that sweet-soury heaven in my mouth already! Thank you for the video.
+Maybe you could try Ssamjang next time. It hits quite different.
I think 'Gim' is a little bit closer to Korean pronunciation.
@@ladwenjang That is a bit too mild.
Somewhere between them, I suppose
@@ladwenjang The etymology of the word is named after the last name of the person who grew seaweed(Kim), so I think Kim would be a more appropriate notation.
HAWAIIAN!!! Spam and pineapple fried and added to onion, peas, carrots, bean sprouts, green onions, egg, MAGGI sauce, fried rice!!! Bomb
Surprisingly, there is pineapple fried rice in Thailand.
김치볶음밥에 고추장은 첨 보네요 ^^ 저도 한번 해봐야겠네요
그냥 고춧가루 살짝 넣어도 맛있음 ㅎㅎㅎ
베이컨과 버터로 해도 맛있고요! (참기름과 식용유가 없다면 버터로 김치 볶아서 해 보세요 김치랑 버터가 아주 잘 어울립니다 ) 그리고, 꼭 김치국물을 넣어야 하는건 아니에요 ㅎㅎㅎ 너무 눅눅해지는게 싫어서 저는 김치국물 거의 안넣어요 김치만으로 충분합니다 ^^
그리고 가능하면 조미된 김이 훨씬 좋아요 왜냐면 모자란 간을 조미김이 해주거든요
저는 처음에 김치 볶을 때부터 고추장 약간 넣고 김치국물 그대로 해서 볶아요. 고추장이 약간 들어가면 맛이 좀더 강해져요.
12:27 No...... No. Korean cuisines NEVER contain jasmine rice. Short grain rice is mandatory. Jasmine rice in Kimchi fried rice is "Fusion Cuisine"!
THANK YOU.
Normally, when I cook kimchi fried rice I either use bacon or chopped pork belly. You can try to use German continental sausage or Spanish chorizo from Aldi as well. Anything with pork goes well with kimchi. Nice video Andy.
참치캔을 넣어도 맛있어요 ㅋ
ガーリックライスとチャーハンの融合
FYI, the whole Chili Crunch issue with David Chang is no longer an issue as him and his company are no longer trying to trademark "chili Crunch" since there was a LOT of complaints.
Yep, it was a marketing fuck up that one
Of course it was David Chang... 🤡
His brand name is not only massively impacted by this but he also being threatened to be sued by the Japanese netizens because he used the trademark name of Momofuku Ando without permission.
Someone should trademark his name if he hasn't yet....
more like he was gonna get canceled by the ENTIRE APPI community.
I recommend a large spoon for frying rice, it will be very powerful and easy to stir-fry
This was a great watch. I grew up on Cantonese and Japanese style (I'm biracially Japanese and Filipino, and I grew up in a town in New Jersey with a large Chinese population). Korean style is new to me, but probably my favorite now too.
BTW, "nori" is Japanese. The Korean version is called "gim."
excellent video. It's impressive that you added details to the material to bring out the local characteristics.
tips for better kimchi fried rice
1) try butter or margarine instead of oli. oil is classic. they are also good choice
2) just put kimchi without gochujang. for simple cooking, we dont use it sometime. the taste is still good.
3) pork, chicken, shrimp is good option.
4) add sesame oil only what you are going to eat, if you made a lot of fried rice. it become tasteless, if you left the oil for a long time.
Andy, I always watched your videos with happiness, and joy. Korean Kimchi Fried rice(김치볶음밥) looked great, and very luxurious, cause most Kimchi Fried Rice(you might already know) is very humble and non-formal food and mostly raised Mom's touch. Always thank you for your marvelous cooking and the the foods I've watched.
As a korean here are some final tips for the fried rice:
1. use a scissor to cut the nori
2. use salted und roasted nori, it's called "gim" (김)
3. the fried rice should be roasted on a pan to finish. there has to be a sticky, roasted, almost brown/black bottom.
that's how korean cook and enjoy a common fired rice 👍
actually, nori is gim(kim) in korean, whether it’s roasted or not.
yes and don't use jasmine rice lol
@@Jj-ih7ou뭐래 저거 한국에서 대중적으로 쓰이는 방법 맞음 니가 한국인이 아니겠지
@@Jj-ih7ouIf you're really Korean then say some Korean. You weird.
@@Jj-ih7oujin ji Zou Chinese. Period.
Andy as a 90's kid from America that Eminem reference you made was an instant like for this video lol.
Same here, but I think Andy was paying homage to the great Chef John from Foodwishes Dot Com. who does that exact bit all the time
😆
As an 80's kid, it was a Malcolm McLaren reference for me... Buffalo Girls... where Eminem sampled it from...
@@jameschoi900570s kid agrees
I just got to that part as I read it lol.
You gotta have a layer of charred rice on he bottom for the korean fried rice, adds another layer of texture and tastes amazing!
In China, Fried Rice is usually used to make use of the leftover rice, so we usually use some ingredients that are often used at home. Eggs and ham are often found at home! Carrots are the highlight of Fried Rice! Generally, Chinese families don't cook Fried Rice specially! My mother is like this! Personally, I think Fried Rice is a little greasy!
Thank you explaining about the garlic. People do not understand how something like garlic could have a sweet profile. Especially people that overcook it. I find it challenging, it’s kinda like welding aluminum. The moment where it becomes liquid is so fast, and welding. It is so hard because of that. You don’t want to blow out a hole. With garlic, with of breath, it can change to overcooked and bitter.
This may be one of your best videos yet! Incredible knowledge and execution.
Andy, your Egg Fried Rice changed my life since you drop a short. So tasty. Can’t stop having it. Your videos are so so good. Teaching me massively! Thank you! ❤️
Some ingredients that can always give a boost to your fried rice game up a bit: Oyster Sauce, Ginger, and even Sesame oil added when finishing. Those can also be used to add to any instant ramen.
Japanese style no garlic or added salt..looks great!
As a Korean, I only use Kimchi and rice to make Kimchi fried rice. I don't add anything but the fried egg. What you really need is only well fermented tasty Kimchi.
햄도 좀 넣지
@@철산-f3y ㅎㅎ 그러게요
I would love the Japanese fried rice.❤
Another great video Andy! I always look forward to your uploads. Thanks for shouting the postage, your cook book has been ordered.
돼지고기 삼겹살이나 목살에 볶아먹는건 일본식이 아닌 한국식인거같은데.. 돼지기름에 김치볶는건 한국 기본 레시피에요 😊😊
맞아요. 저거 내가 매일 해 먹는 방식인데, 일본식이라고 나오는 거 보고 이상하다 했어요.
1. I love his YT videos since years, but just saw this video now, and I am sad that he would not take over the shipping costs any more ㅠㅠ
2. I love his cooking style, because he really understands the main ingrediants (meaning the reason why certain cuisines use those ingredients specifically) and cooking styles of every single country
3. therefore: no wonder he is approved by uncle Roger, but so would he be by any other chef or "cooking pro" from ANY country in the world!!!
4. please go on with your style of cooking and equally your style of content in the future!!!❤
I'm Chinese Indonesian and I ensure you, I too, put an unholy amount of garlic in my friedrice.It's the best thing in the fried rice ngl.
Japanese and Thai fried rice is delicious.
a general rule of thumb for chinese cooking (and perhaps other asian or even western cooking), you put stuff with aroma and spice into the wok/pan first, like shallot/spring onion/garlic etc. if you put unseasoned main ingrediants in first like you did in this video, they won't have as much flavour penetration no matter how much you season them afterwards.
I agree. I watch a Channel called Aaron and Claire, check it out if you don't know it, and Aaron has taught me what you're saying. I now start off any fried rice with a decent amount of oil that you season with the spring onion whites and (in my case), a touch of garlic. It goes so fast too, but the rest of your dish is then seasoned with an oil that has garlic and onion flavours throughout it and it is a game changer.
@Ballacha I cook on electric which slow to get hot but also to cool down. How do I prevent the aromatics from burning and the garlic getting bitter while still having enough heat to cook the rest of the dish?
@@randysem completely remove the pot from the heat source between adding ingredients and rather keep it at a medium high heat so you don't waste too much time
@@spill1t Thanks!
i was watching a ton of your videos and checked if i was subriced as you said it. i wasnt. now i am. keep on doing what you are doing, you guys are great fun and im learning a lot. greetings from germany.
thanks legend!
Same by me
As Chinese from Sichuan Province of China I'd like to say that the Cantonese style fried rice in your video is not necessarily typical around China because many restaurants all over China usually serve the fried rice which doesn't contain or just contain a little bit of soybean sauce, and yes the taste is closer to the Japanese version(without garlic) in your video. The Korean version in your video seems to taste like Bibimbap
Yangzhou Fried rice is the symbol of Chinese fried rice culture.
@@Jwjjbwn That makes more sense but ordinary egg fried rice is very typical around China as well.
There used to be a Chinese restaurant near me that did make fried rice that's was a meal because it had BBQ pork, shrimp and chicken in it. It was delicious, still miss that place 20 years later.
i'm not a fan of kimchi, but man you made that last fried rice look so good, i'd eat it. it's color, the garnish, the fluff and the saucy crackle, egg, plating. that's fried rice level 100. all three look good of course, but the kimchi one surprised me because i don't like it but now i want that fried rice the most. blew my stomach lmaoooo
uncle Andy, the legend. fuiyyooh
I think there’s a big difference in taste if you eat just plain kimchi (as banchan), or fried/cooked in a dish like this (or kimchi jjigae, kimchijeon, creamy kimchi pasta, or even in gimbap or ssam)
@@andrecanis4894 probably. as most things that get cooked end up with a different taste. i don't like Kimchi as a topping, a side or straight up like that.
pasta sounds next level so does the kimchijeon, it looks perfect and i'd give it a try.
Just grabbed the cookbook, thank you for the free delivery! ❤
チャーハンは中国の料理です。
ここにいるコメントでも言われてますが、中国、日本、韓国とで分けるものじゃないです。
日本でもチャーハンは中華料理のカテゴリーなのでこの比較はナンセンスです。
非常同意,可能视频制作者的目的就是想要看中国人,日本人, 韩国人在评论区吵架,这样他们可以获得更多观看。
Fired rice of almost every type is delicious. Thai fried rice is also amazing. The Malaysian one is awesome as well. Using lard instead of other oil is always a better choice, especially for the Kimchi fried rice. Thank you very much for your wonderful presentation of world food!
There is no such thing as too much garlic. I'm gonna try making the Japanese rice cause that looks amazing. The kimchi fried rice is always a hit can't go wrong.
In korea. Usually kimchi fried rice is dessert of korean barbecue on the stone pan.
We usually frying it with left pieces of meat and the grease from the pork fat. Ofcourse we also eat homemade or fastfood style kimchi fried rice like you made. But I hope you try the dessert version.
Depends on where you are in the world of course but here in Germany getting some actual Gojujang was a much bigger problem than acquiring Kimchi... I just made it myself, but you can also buy this as a "healthy trend food". It often isn't fermented then, though, just kinda pickled.
I'll try that Kimchi fried rice though, sounds delicious and I love spicy food!
wow! you made Gochujang yourself? that's awesome!
@@babooticable No, it was Kimchi that I made myself. My sentence was a bit unclear though, I have to admit. ;-)
Well, adding Gochujang in fried rice is kinda rare thing in Korea.
Tbh, Gochujang to Kimchi fried rice is a big no to me. I only use soy sauce and Gochugaru (Red pepper powder) to make the color red.
김치 주스로 볶음밥을 만드는 것은 몰랐네요
멋진 방식으로 요리해줘서 감사합니다 😊
i love how you used authentic ingredients for each versions! i also love japanese style fried rice
All of them are good and it depends on what you are in the mood for on a different day. The kimchi fried rice has the edge with a running yolk and sesame oil.
The trick to making delicious fried rice is to remove the moisture from the rice, but he was completely unable to do that. Korean fried rice is sticky because of the moisture from the kimchi. Regular Japanese fried rice doesn't use garlic or pork belly, and even if it does, it doesn't use that much. The finished shape is also different. If three countries people saw these fried rice, they would probably wonder, "What is this?"
Yes
I'm korean and I have never heard of putting gochujang in kimchi fried rice in my life.
Kimchi fried rice usually tastes light, while using gochujang gives little bit of heavy flavor and sweetness.
But there is no absolute rules for every recipe.
I will definitely try Andy's style.
Thank you for your recipe!
I'm Korean and there are times when I feel like the kimchi doesn't have enough flavor I put a tiny bit of gochujang or I have homemade soondubu paste that I add just a small tablespoon of when making it and it's soooo gooooood. You should try it :))))
고추장 넣는 곳도 많음
저는 넣어 먹습니다.
고추장 넣는데
고추장 넣는데 무슨 절대 안넣는 것처럼 써놨네
고추장넣는게 더 맛있는데
Andy, I absolutely love your reference to chef John with your “around the outside, around the outside”!!
I thought it was an Eminem Reference
Love all your version of fried rice pretty on point on every version for korean one you can melt shredded mozzarella on top too. Cooked kimchi and mozzarella pairs surprisingly well. There is another version of fried rice in dak-galbi(spicy stir fry chicken) restaurant, at the end of the meal they fry rice with left over chicken with spicy sauce, little bit of kimchi, seaweed, sesame oil, and melted mozzarella on top. It pretty amazing.
I grew up in Europe as a Chinese person, and my parents often took me to Chinese restaurants. I don’t remember ever having fried rice with beans and corn, which I believe is a practice in American Chinese cuisine.
김치볶음밥에 고추장 안넣어요
김치를 잘게 다져서 넣고 스팸, 햄, 베이컨, 돼지고기 잘게다진거 이중 골라서 넣어도 되요 참치캔 참치 넣어도 되구요. 당근, 양파 다진거 넣어도 되고. 고추장 안넣습니다.
간장은 넣는사람 좀 봣어도 고추장은 음...
고추장 넣으면 맛있습니다. 한국 요리 유튜브에도 고추장 넣는 김치볶음밥 레시피 꽤나 있어요
고추장을 넣는 사람도 있겠지만 대부분 고추장보다는 김치 본연의 맛, 간장 그리고 넣고 싶은 토핑으로 맛을 내는 거 같아요~ 아 배고파라ㅠㅠㅠ
고추장 넣은 사람들도 있더라구요
넣는 사람도 있고 안 넣는 사람도 있고 자유임. 한식은 메뉴가 강박적으로 정해져 있지 않아서 맛있으면 다른 레시피라도 문제 없음
Here from. Alaska USA. I'm half korean we call nori, Kim.
作り方違いすぎて驚愕した、卵と米はほぼ同時に入れて卵で米をコーティングしてパラパラにするんだよあと味付けは塩と味の素醤油は香りと色付けだからほんとにちょっとでいいニンニクも多すぎだし日本ではほぼ入れない
そう、それにもっと鍋を激しく振ってほしかったよね
Parapara??? What is parapara??
@@user-qi3ur2gm1jIt’s an onomatopoeia for sprinkle-sprinkle. The opposite would I guess be, sticky-sticky?
@@milkdromeda1531 Thanks for explaining ❤
にんにくどころか、酒もいれないですね。私お醤油も入れない。塩胡椒だけだわ。作り方もどこで学んだだろう。
Simply grilling kimchi in oil releases an incredibly delicious aroma. Without even adding it as a fried rice ingredient, you can just grill it in the oil that comes from barbecuing meat, and you'll have a salty and flavorful side dish. When making kimchi fried rice, instead of using sugar, try seasoning with salt-it’s savory and delicious. If you prefer savory over sweet, I recommend this method.
My favorite is the Japanese fried rice because it has all the ingredients that I like and there is no sugar. I don't like sugar in food unless I am baking or the tomato sauce is too acidity, which is rare for me. I love your cooking and your explaining and tips, that is why I subscribed . Always great!
Thanks for the tip with the cookbook, just ordered mine
I'm Korean, but Chinese Yangzhou fried rice is the best. It's incredibly delicious with simple ingredients like eggs and green onions. Of course, I know that one of the secrets is adding a lot of MSG.
Thanks to the Korean brothers for recognizing the Chinese Yangzhou fried rice🤝
this is not true! The authentic and expensive one don’t use a lot of MSG! The secret to its deliciousness lies in the rich broth made from chicken and sea cucumber used to make the fried rice, which gives the dish a savory flavor. It’s not the result of unhealthy MSG.
@@DavidGamersChannel没看出他其实多多少少有点在反讽吗…要说真不健康还得是韩国料理,一堆的盐和辣椒,经常吃重盐的汤饭反而很容易肾衰竭。不少中餐厅确实是会用一堆味精来调味增香,但实际上这种中餐馆一般都是属于比较中低档且出餐快的。如果要吃正宗的扬州炒饭得去扬州当地,有家饭馆的厨师会直接在你面前一边解说一边炒,会发现调味料除了盐以外其实什么都没有,扬州炒饭那么鲜美其实真的是用鲜鸡汤和海参的炖汤拿去炒,当然这样下来价格也就比较贵了,一般很少人会经常去吃,所以在中国,正宗的炒饭做法就没什么人在做。
@@Jwjjbwn I have never had such authentic fried rice. The cheap fried rice I have had is the best fried rice I have ever had. And MSG is used a lot in Korea too. No offense intended.
@@StomachTerrorist I apologize for my misunderstanding. Welcome to China and try the authentic one in Yangzhou city. Even though it is very expensive for most people in China but according to my knowledge about the average income level of South Korea, it may not be very expensive (and maybe even cheap) for you to have a try.
Kimchi fried rice ❤. I love when Korea fried rice is crisped on the bottom. So good!
I cook Japanese fried rice often. A tip for those starting to learn to cook with short grain rice: while it's still warm, mix a raw egg through it and a little Kewpie mayo before you put it in the wok. It helps to keep the grains separate.
Im Korean, but when talking fried rice, I really love the Vietnamese fried rice.
Also, personally, i perfer bibimbob rather than the fried rice. Not too much oil, alot of vegetables with eggs and meat with pepper paste and a bit of rich sesami oil and just mix em up with cooked rice.
Much more healthier too.