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My Rice Bowl
My Rice Bowl: Deliciously Improbable Korean Recipes from an Unlikely American Chef | Jess Thomson, Rachel Yang
5 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
From James Beard Best Chef-nominee Rachel Yang, My Rice Bowl is a cookbook with 75 recipes based on her deeply comforting Korean fusion cuisine, inspired by cultures from around the world. As co-owner of the popular Seattle restaurants, Joule, Trove, and Revel, and Portland's Revelry, chef Rachel Yang delights with her unique Korean fusion--think noodles, dumplings, pickles, pancakes, and barbecue. Along with her husband, Seif Chirchi, Yang serves food that exemplifies cross-cultural cooking at its most gratifying. In the cookbook you'll find the restaurants' kimchi recipe, of course, but there's so much more--seaweed noodles with crab and cr?me fra?che, tahini-garlic grilled pork belly, fried cauliflower with miso bagna cauda, chipotle-spiked pad thai, Korean-taco pickles, and the ultimate Korean fried chicken (served with peanut brittle shards for extra crunch). There are rice bowls too--with everything from lamb curry to charred shiitake mushrooms--but this book goes way beyond bibimbap. In many ways, the book, like Yang's restaurants, is analogous to a rice bowl; underpinning everything is Yang's strict childhood in Korea and the food memories it engrained in her. But on top you'll taste a mosaic of flavors from across the globe, plus a dash of her culinary alma maters, Per Se and Alain Ducasse. This is the authentic, cutting-edge fusion food of a Korean immigrant who tried everything she could to become an American, but only became one when she realized that her culture--among many--is what makes America so delicious today.
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Lindy
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Leftover cake with marscapone for breakfast (upside down apricot mochi cake from the tagged cookbook) and then I am ready to tackle reading. I read one short story yesterday, the first since getting a concussion 3 days ago, but couldn‘t grasp the sense of it. I will give it another go. 🧠

Sace Looks delicious! 4y
Cathythoughts That‘s my kind of breakfast 👍🏻❤️ I love cake for breakfast 4y
Lindy @Sace Yes, indeed. Not too sweet; it was perfect. 4y
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Lindy @Cathythoughts One of the things I loved about Portugal was cake on every breakfast table. 😊 4y
batsy Yum! Such an inviting photo 4y
cariashley Yikes, a concussion! Feel better! 4y
Lindy @batsy 😊😘 4y
Lindy @cariashley Thank you. Being able to read again, even if only for short periods, makes me feel more like myself. 4y
38 likes8 comments
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Lindy
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I made the Upside-Down Fig Mochi Cake from the tagged #cookbook and it was a gluten-free hit at our monthly literary salon last night. 🍰

TrishB Looks scrummy 😁 5y
Lindy @TrishB 😘 5y
saresmoore That‘s quite the spread! 5y
Lindy @saresmoore We know not to eat supper before we go. 😉 5y
34 likes4 comments
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Lindy
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Pickpick

There‘s a preponderance of meat and seafood in these recipes, but I loved reading this #cookbook anyway because of Korean American chef Rachel Yang‘s innovative approach to fusion cuisine. Also because she tells us right from the start to “embrace your own adaptations.” I‘ve made the spicy peanut brittle twice (with seeds instead of peanuts—see my photo). Recipes are complex but worthwhile. Yet to try: some of the pickles & gluten-free desserts.

LeahBergen I love Korean food. I‘ll have to check this one out. 5y
Lindy @LeahBergen Yes, do have a look. Yang puts a Korean flair on everything she makes. 5y
49 likes2 comments
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Lindy
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Pure white rice was reserved for birthdays and holidays. In Korea, it connotes purity, abundance and celebration. There‘s deep symbolism in serving it, even. The top of every pot always goes to the most esteemed guests, which often means your parents.

audraelizabeth I love white rice warm with milk and sugar like cereal. 5y
49 likes2 comments
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Lindy
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Breakfast: my version of Taro Pancakes from the tagged cookbook. Although I didn‘t have taro root and yucca root on hand, so I substituted sweet potato. I like the extensive header notes in this book, explaining, for example, that you need to peel away the barky exterior of taro and to use a sharp knife to cut off the tough waxy edges of yucca. Also, if the yucca “smells like mothballs, it‘s going bad.”

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