The Meatwave

Daeji Bulgogi

Daeji Bulgogi View Recipe

At the very end of October, I made my pre-Thanksgiving meal, where I tested out a slew of new holiday recipes, leaving me eating turkey, stuffing, and cranberry sauce for a few weeks. Then came the actual Thanksgiving, which infused another wave of turkey, stuffing, and cranberry sauce into my diet. After a solid month of this, I'm ready for something completely different, so why not some Korean barbecue in the form of my favorite Asian spicy pork—daeji bulgogi.

Daeji Bulgogi

To be honest, the first time I experienced Korean barbecue after years of people talking it up to me, I wasn't totally impressed. We started with some rather bland pork belly, continued on to an under-seasoned beef bulgogi, but then when the daeji bulgogi hit my plate, I was floored—the immense spicy flavor of this thinly sliced and grilled pork was so great and different than anything I had before. Turns out this is thanks mainly to gochujang, a fermented chili and soybean paste, whose pungent flavor is so distinct that once you've tried it, you'll probably never forget it (and never want to live without it ever again).

Daeji Bulgogi

To make the marinade for daeji bulgogi, gochujang is mixed with soy sauce, garlic, brown sugar, mirin, sesame oil, ginger, red pepper flakes, and onions (green and regular). This mixture is incredibly full-flavor, and for my taste buds that like meats pushed to the extreme, it's a powerful and awesome marinade.

Daeji Bulgogi

On my first attempt at daeji bulgogi, I tried this marinade out on pork tenderloin (pictured). This was good, but since then, I've switched to the more traditional pork shoulder. I get my shoulder at a Korean market that already has it cut very thin, just as it should be for bulgogi. You can try to slice it up at home, but I've never been able to get it as thin as it comes from the grocery with just firmed meat and a knife.

Daeji Bulgogi

I've also tried varying times of marinade. You get fairly decent results with just an hour, but I opt for overnight, which really imbeds the meat throughly with all the flavor of the marinade.

Daeji Bulgogi

While everything so far is on a course to deliciousness, the grill is what puts the icing on the cake. The high heat of the grill cooks these thin slices of meat in mere minutes with beautiful caramelized bits all over, which heightens the flavor by adding super-concentrated pockets of sweet and spicy marinade.

Daeji Bulgogi

I can't get enough of these little pieces of meaty excellence. The spiciness is distinct and layered, but overall the pork is simple and uncomplicated. It's great on its own, but this also makes it perfect for the addition of more flavor. I like putting my daeji bulgogi in lettuce wraps with different kimchis or quick pickled diakons and carrots, which add a contrasting acidity to the spicy meat. To me, the play between spicy, sweet, and tangy is part of the hallmark of great barbecue (used in the looser sense of the word), and daeji bulgogi delivers on all of that.

Print Recipe

Daeji Bulgogi

  • Yield 4 servings
  • Prep 15 Minutes
  • Inactive 1 Hour
  • Cook 5 Minutes
  • Total 1 Hour 20 Minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 lb boneless pork shoulder
  •  
  • For the marinade
  • 1/4 cup soy sauce
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tablespoons light brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons gochujang
  • 2 tablespoons mirin
  • 2 tablespoons sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon crushed ginger root
  • 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 2 green onions, minced
  • 1 small onion, thinly sliced
  •  
  • For serving
  • Bibb lettuce
  • Kimchi
  • Daikon and carrot quick pickles

Procedure

  1. Place the pork in the freezer until it firms up, about 1 hour. While the pork is in the freezer, combine the soy sauce, garlic, brown sugar, gochujang , mirin, sesame oil, ginger, red pepper flakes, and green onions in a small bowl to make the marinades.
  2. Remove the pork from the freezer and slice into pieces 1/8 inch thick. Place the pork and sliced onion in a large Ziploc bag, pour in the marinade and seal. Toss to evenly distribute the marinade, then open and reseal the bag, removing as much air as possible. Place in the refrigerator and let marinate for at least one hour to overnight.
  3. Light one chimney full of charcoal. When all the charcoal is lit and covered with gray ash, pour out and spread the coals evenly over the charcoal grate. Set cooking grate in place, cover grill and allow to preheat for 5 minutes. Clean and oil the grilling grate. Place the pork slices on grill and cook until meat is seared on both sides and cooked through, about 1 minute per side. Remove from the grill and serve immediately with bibb lettuce, kimchi, and quick pickles.

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Comments

  1. Chris You just inspired me, Josh! Never had pork bulgogi, but I will soon!

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