Gimbop
is considered one of the most popular and nutritious Korean meal. It
consists of rice and strips of vegetables, egg, and meat, rolled in
laver (dried seaweed) and then sliced. This is a popular snack or lunch
that can be made with infinite variety of ingredients using different
kinds of meat and/or vegetables. Popular ones include bulgogi, spinach, pickled radish, and eggs.
At first glance, gimbop often resembles a Japanese
maki or a sushi roll. However, there are a few differences between the
Japanese sushi roll and the Korean-style gimbop. The main difference is
that Japanese sushi rolls are rather minimal in ingredients. Sushi
rolls usually consists of just tuna or salmon within the roll whereas
gimbop contains a variety of ingredients as mentioned earlier. Also,
while the Japanese use raw fish (sashimi)
in their sushi rolls, Korean gimbop do not contain any raw fish.
Lastly, Japanese sushi is often dipped in wasabi while gimbop usually
has sesame oil.
Korean 101: Gim refers to the sheets of dried seaweed, and bop is the Korean word for cooked rice.
Recipe Ingredients |
|
Cooking Directions |
- Stir fry carrots with salt and pepper.
- Mix radish with vinegar and sugar.
- Mix rice with the sesame seeds and sesame oil.
- Place one seaweed sheet on a bamboo sheet. Put rice on half of the sheet and add 2 pieces of spinach, 1 carrot strip, 1 radish strip, 1 ham strip, 1 egg strip on top of rice. Roll in a log and squeeze tight. Use some rice to stick the seaweed together to keep it rolled.
- Place a little sesame oil in your hands and rub it on the seaweed roll.
- Put a little sesame oil on knife to cut roll.
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