🍺 Bar Snacks

🍺 Bar Snacks Recipes

Perfect pairings for beer, soju & wine

705 recipes. Page 24 of 30

In Korean drinking culture, anju (drinking snacks) are just as important as the drink itself. Beer goes with fried chicken, soju pairs with grilled pork belly and dubu-kimchi, and makgeolli calls for pajeon and bindaetteok. This tag gathers recipes designed to accompany a drink.

Great anju complements the beverage without overwhelming it. Salty, savory, and spicy options - prepare a few and you will be ready for any gathering.

Korean Grilled Dried Pollock
Drinks Easy

Korean Grilled Dried Pollock

Nogari-gui is a classic Korean bar snack in which semi-dried young pollock is cut into pieces with scissors, then cooked in a buttered pan over medium-low heat until golden and crisp on both sides. The low-and-slow approach matters: the thin fish needs time to dry out evenly into a chewy-crisp texture without scorching on the surface. Butter melts into the fibrous dried flesh with each pass over the heat, coating the fibers with richness that plain dry-frying cannot replicate. The dipping sauce is a deliberate combination of gochujang and mayonnaise, loosened with lemon juice, sweetened with a pinch of sugar, and sharpened with minced garlic, producing a sauce that is spicy, creamy, tangy, and savory all at once. That sauce against the salty, umami-concentrated pollock is the reason one piece is never enough. Cutting with scissors rather than a knife exposes more cross-section of the dried fibers, helping the sauce cling more effectively. The snack is closely associated with the pojangmacha stalls of Noryangjin and remains one of the most requested accompaniments to cold draft beer in Korea.

🍺 Bar Snacks ⚡ Quick
Prep 8min Cook 10min 2 servings
Korean Grilled Atka Mackerel
Grilled Easy

Korean Grilled Atka Mackerel

Atka mackerel is seasoned with salt and pepper, wiped down with diluted vinegar to settle the fishiness, then pan-grilled on both sides until golden. The fish is naturally high in fat, and as it cooks the oil renders from within and permeates the flesh, building a rich, savory depth without any sauce at all. Thicker sections benefit from a brief covered rest on medium heat, which carries heat evenly to the center before the surface can scorch. A wedge of lemon at the side cuts through the rendered fat with clean brightness, making this grilled fish equally good as a rice side or a drinking snack.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 10min Cook 12min 2 servings
Potato Au Gratin
Western Medium

Potato Au Gratin

Potato Au Gratin is a French baked potato dish where thinly sliced potatoes are layered with cream and Gruyere cheese, then baked until the top forms a deep golden crust. The potatoes must be sliced to a uniform two to three millimeters - a mandoline slicer ensures consistent thickness so every layer cooks at the same rate. A mixture of heavy cream and milk warmed gently with garlic is poured between each layer of potatoes, where it meets the potato starch and thickens into a binding sauce that holds the layers together. Gruyere is the classic cheese choice - it melts into long, stretchy strands and carries a nutty, slightly sweet flavor. It is distributed between the layers for internal richness and piled on top for the signature golden crust. After about fifty minutes at 180 degrees Celsius, the cream bubbles around the edges, the potatoes turn completely tender, and the surface cheese crisps into a crackling, browned cap.

🎉 Special Occasion 🍺 Bar Snacks
Prep 20min Cook 50min 4 servings
Korean Scorched Rice Latte
Drinks Easy

Korean Scorched Rice Latte

Nurungji-latte is a Korean grain latte built from scorched rice that is dry-toasted an extra minute in a pan to intensify its roasted aroma before being simmered in water to extract a deeply nutty infusion, which is then blended with milk. The toasting step caramelizes residual starch on the rice crust, generating a toasty depth that persists even after milk is added. Rice syrup provides sweetness with a rounder, more subdued quality than refined sugar, and a pinch of salt sharpens the overall flavor profile and brings the grain notes into focus. A small measure of vanilla extract weaves a subtle fragrance that complements rather than competes with the base. A brief pass with an immersion blender leaves fine rice particles suspended in the drink, giving it a slightly grainy texture that sets it apart from a conventional latte; blending longer produces a smoother, creamier result. A dusting of ground cinnamon over each cup adds a warm aromatic layer on top. The latte works equally well served warm in a mug or poured over ice for a chilled version.

🍺 Bar Snacks ⚡ Quick
Prep 8min Cook 12min 2 servings
Korean Sweet Soy Glazed Eel Grill
Grilled Medium

Korean Sweet Soy Glazed Eel Grill

Eel fillets are seared skin-side down first in a hot pan so the skin renders and releases some of its fat, then flipped and finished on the flesh side before the sauce goes in. The glaze is a mixture of soy sauce, rice syrup, cooking wine, and ground ginger, brushed or spooned over the eel repeatedly over low heat. Each application builds another layer of the glossy coating, with the sweetness of the rice syrup and the saltiness of the soy sauce penetrating the fatty flesh together. Wiping excess rendered fat from the pan before glazing is a key step: removing it keeps the finished dish balanced rather than greasy and lets the umami of the glaze come through clearly. Sesame seeds and diagonally sliced scallion finish the plating, adding fragrance and a little texture to the lacquered surface. Served over rice, the sauce soaks into the grains and turns the bowl into something closer to a meal than a side dish.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 18min Cook 14min 2 servings
Pulpo a la Gallega (Galician Boiled Octopus with Smoked Paprika)
Western Medium

Pulpo a la Gallega (Galician Boiled Octopus with Smoked Paprika)

Pulpo a la Gallega is a signature dish from Spain's Galicia region in which whole octopus is gently simmered, sliced into thick rounds, and served over boiled potatoes with a finish of olive oil, smoked paprika, and coarse sea salt. Dipping the octopus in and out of boiling water two to three times before simmering curls the tentacles into shape and helps achieve an even cook. After thirty-five to forty minutes at a low simmer followed by a ten-minute rest in the hot water, the octopus reaches a texture that is tender yet retains a satisfying bite. Smoked paprika lays a subtle smokiness over the clean marine flavor, and high-quality finishing olive oil ties every element together. The ingredient list is minimal, which means the quality of each component directly determines the result.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🎉 Special Occasion
Prep 15min Cook 50min 2 servings
Korean Mulberry Sparkling Ade
Drinks Easy

Korean Mulberry Sparkling Ade

Preparing a concentrated syrup from frozen mulberries involves simmering the fruit with sugar and water over low heat for six minutes. As the berries break down during this process, they release a dark purple liquid filled with natural sweetness. Adding fresh lemon juice immediately after removing the mixture from the heat provides a sharp acidity that balances the sugar and improves the overall profile. Passing the cooled syrup through a fine-mesh sieve removes small seeds and pulp, leaving a smooth liquid. To serve, pour this base into a glass filled with ice and slowly add chilled sparkling water down the side. This technique keeps the carbonation intact and creates a clear visual contrast between the heavy purple syrup at the bottom and the clear bubbles on top. Clapping apple mint leaves between the palms before placing them on the rim releases essential oils, providing an aromatic herbal scent before the first sip. This mulberry syrup stays fresh for up to one week when stored in a sealed container in the refrigerator. Using tonic water instead of regular sparkling water introduces a slight bitterness, resulting in a finish similar to a non-alcoholic cocktail. Since mulberries reach their peak in May and June, purchasing a large amount during this window and freezing them allows for year-round preparation.

🍺 Bar Snacks ⚡ Quick
Prep 12min Cook 8min 2 servings
Korean Grilled Eel (Soy Glazed Freshwater Eel BBQ)
Grilled Medium

Korean Grilled Eel (Soy Glazed Freshwater Eel BBQ)

Jangeo-gui is a grilled freshwater eel dish in which the cleaned eel is brushed repeatedly with a marinade of soy sauce, sugar, cooking wine, and minced garlic as it cooks over medium heat. The central technique is applying the glaze in two or three stages rather than all at once, allowing each coat to caramelize before the next is brushed on. This layered glazing builds a lacquered surface with concentrated flavor and a slight sweetness that the eel's rich fat absorbs. Before grilling, rubbing the eel with coarse salt removes the slippery mucus layer and eliminates any fishiness from the skin. Turning the eel requires care since the flesh is delicate and breaks easily under pressure. Charcoal grilling adds a smoky dimension as the dripping marinade hits hot coals and vaporizes, creating an aroma that is inseparable from the restaurant version of this dish. Eel is traditionally eaten in Korea during the hottest days of summer as a stamina food, valued for its fat content and dense protein.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 20min Cook 15min 2 servings
Rack of Lamb
Western Hard

Rack of Lamb

Rack of lamb is a French-style roast where the rack is seared hard in a hot pan for a deep crust, brushed with Dijon mustard, coated with a mixture of rosemary, thyme, parsley, garlic, and breadcrumbs, and then roasted at 200 degrees Celsius. The mustard acts as both adhesive for the herb crust and a flavor layer that tempers the lamb's gaminess. The breadcrumbs crisp up in the oven heat, locking in the herbal aroma. Resting the meat for ten minutes after roasting redistributes the juices within the muscle fibers so they stay inside when sliced. Cutting between the bones reveals a cross section of crispy golden crust encasing a pink, juicy interior - a visually striking main course.

🎉 Special Occasion 🍺 Bar Snacks
Prep 20min Cook 30min 2 servings
Korean Spicy Stir-fried Cartilage
Drinks Medium

Korean Spicy Stir-fried Cartilage

Odolppyeo-bokkeum is a fiery Korean stir-fry of chicken cartilage marinated in a sauce of gochujang, gochugaru, soy sauce, garlic, and sugar, then cooked at maximum heat for a short burst. The cartilage delivers a distinctive crunch-then-chew that no other cut can replicate, and thorough drying with paper towels before marinating ensures the sauce clings directly to the surface. After ten minutes of marinating, the cartilage hits a ripping-hot oiled pan to pick up smoky wok char, followed by onion, green onion, and hot green chilies that are tossed until all moisture evaporates and the glaze turns glossy. Keeping the total stir-fry time brief is critical, since prolonged cooking turns the cartilage from pleasantly crunchy to unpleasantly tough.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🌙 Late Night
Prep 15min Cook 12min 2 servings
Korean Butter-Grilled Abalone
Grilled Medium

Korean Butter-Grilled Abalone

Scored abalone is seared quickly in garlic butter, with the cooking time kept to two or three minutes so the flesh stays springy and firm rather than contracting into a tough, rubbery state. Minced garlic is added to the melted butter first, allowing its fragrance to bloom before the abalone goes in, so the shellfish absorbs the full depth of the butter. A small addition of soy sauce to the pan deepens the umami without masking the delicate sweetness of the abalone itself. For an extra layer of oceanic richness, the abalone liver can be minced and stirred directly into the butter sauce as it finishes; the liver melts in, contributing a briny, mineral depth that amplifies the sea flavor of the dish. The finished abalone is best served in the cleaned shells, which both keep the butter sauce pooled around the meat and make for an appealing natural presentation. A light squeeze of lemon juice just before serving cuts through the richness of the butter and brings out the natural sweetness of the shellfish.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🌙 Late Night
Prep 20min Cook 10min 2 servings
Reuben Sandwich
Western Easy

Reuben Sandwich

Reuben sandwich layers sliced corned beef, well-squeezed sauerkraut, and Swiss cheese between rye bread spread with mayonnaise, then griddled with butter on the outside until golden and crisp. Removing excess moisture from the sauerkraut is the most important step - residual water makes the bread soggy and prevents the cheese from melting properly. Cooking over medium-low heat for three to four minutes per side gives the bread time to turn deeply golden while the interior cheese melts fully, binding all the fillings together. Each bite combines the salty depth of corned beef, the fermented tang of sauerkraut, and the rich milkfat of Swiss cheese in a layered contrast of flavors.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 10min Cook 10min 2 servings
Korean Acanthopanax Herbal Tea
Drinks Medium

Korean Acanthopanax Herbal Tea

Ogapi-cha is a Korean herbal tea made by slow-decocting dried acanthopanax bark, astragalus root, jujubes, and fresh ginger in water for over 30 minutes on low heat. The bark and astragalus are briefly soaked in cold water to loosen surface dust, the jujubes are scored with a knife to release their sweetness more readily, and the ginger is thinly sliced to maximize surface area. After an initial boil, the heat drops to a gentle simmer that coaxes a woody, slightly earthy aroma from the bark while the astragalus contributes a mellow root-like depth and the jujubes round out the flavor with quiet sweetness. The strained tea receives a tiny pinch of salt to anchor the flavor, and honey stirred in just before drinking softens the herbal bitterness into a smooth, warming finish.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🥗 Light & Healthy
Prep 8min Cook 35min 4 servings
Korean Grilled Gizzard Shad
Grilled Easy

Korean Grilled Gizzard Shad

Jeoneo-gui is a grilled gizzard shad dish that captures the best of autumn, when this small fish is at peak fat content and flavor. The fish is scored on both sides with close, shallow cuts, rubbed with coarse salt, and left to rest for ten minutes before grilling. The resting time allows surface moisture to draw out, which reduces fishiness and creates the conditions for a properly crisp skin over a hot pan or grill. Gizzard shad has numerous fine, small bones that make the raw fish awkward to eat, but scoring densely and cooking over high heat softens the bones through heat, allowing the entire fish to be eaten without picking. A ginger soy dipping sauce - minced ginger, soy sauce, rice vinegar, and sliced cheongyang chili - accompanies the fish to cut through its notable oiliness, with the sharp ginger note neutralizing the fishy aroma. Autumn gizzard shad is so prized in Korea that the proverb says its grilling smell is enough to bring a daughter-in-law back home.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 15min Cook 12min 2 servings
Risotto alla Milanese
Western Medium

Risotto alla Milanese

Risotto alla Milanese is Milan's signature rice dish, made by toasting Arborio rice in olive oil and butter with onion, deglazing with white wine, and gradually stirring in saffron-infused chicken stock one ladle at a time. Toasting the rice first coats each grain in fat, which slows starch release and builds the characteristic creamy consistency. The white wine adds an acidity that balances the richness of butter and cheese underneath. Saffron must be steeped in warm stock beforehand so its golden color and floral aroma distribute evenly, and the stock should always be kept hot to avoid dropping the rice temperature mid-cook. Stirring in cold butter and grated Parmesan off the heat at the very end emulsifies them into the starch, producing the loose, flowing texture that defines a properly finished risotto.

🎉 Special Occasion 🍺 Bar Snacks
Prep 10min Cook 30min 2 servings
Korean Five-Grain Sweet Rice Punch
Drinks Medium

Korean Five-Grain Sweet Rice Punch

Ogok-sikhye is a traditional Korean grain punch made by saccharifying a mix of cooked sweet rice, barley, millet, and foxtail millet in barley malt extract at 60 to 65 degrees Celsius for one hour. The malt powder is soaked in lukewarm water for 20 minutes, kneaded by hand, and strained through a cloth to yield a clear, enzyme-rich liquid -- this is the working ingredient that converts the grain starches into natural sugars during the slow saccharification. Temperature control is central to the process: below 60 degrees the enzymes slow down, and above 70 degrees they denature and die, so maintaining the right range throughout the hour-long rest determines whether the conversion succeeds. As saccharification progresses, the rice grains hollow out and float to the surface; these are skimmed off, rinsed separately, and later floated back into the finished punch to add a soft, chewable element to each cup. After sweetening with sugar and chilling completely in the refrigerator, the drink is served cold with pine nuts floating on top. The combination of multiple grains produces a more layered, complex sweetness than single-grain sikhye, and the overnight rest in the refrigerator smooths the flavor into something more cohesive.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🎉 Special Occasion
Prep 20min Cook 70min 2 servings
Korean Horse Mackerel with Yuzu Soy Glaze
Grilled Easy

Korean Horse Mackerel with Yuzu Soy Glaze

Horse mackerel is marinated in a sauce of yuzu marmalade, soy sauce, cooking wine, and garlic, then grilled on a grill pan until the skin crisps and chars lightly. The citrus notes from the yuzu naturally suppress fishiness while harmonizing with the soy sauce saltiness. Brushing the remaining glaze in the final minute gives the skin a lacquered sheen. Sesame oil and sliced scallion complete the dish with a toasted, aromatic finish. The brevity of the ingredient list belies how decisively the yuzu transforms a grilled fish into something bright and fragrant.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 15min Cook 12min 2 servings
Herb Roasted Whole Chicken
Western Medium

Herb Roasted Whole Chicken

Herb roasted whole chicken is prepared by tucking herb butter - made with rosemary, thyme, and garlic - under the skin and stuffing the cavity with lemon and remaining herbs before roasting. Starting at 220 degrees Celsius for twenty minutes gives the skin an initial sear, then dropping to 180 degrees for sixty more minutes cooks the interior through while the skin crisps to a deep golden brown. The herb butter placed directly under the skin melts during roasting, basting the breast meat with fat and herb flavor from the inside, which prevents even the lean breast from drying out. Resting for fifteen minutes after roasting lets the juices redistribute into the muscle fibers so they stay inside when carved. The pan drippings left behind can be deglazed into a quick gravy that doubles the depth of flavor at the table.

🎉 Special Occasion 🍺 Bar Snacks
Prep 20min Cook 80min 4 servings
Korean Butter-Grilled Squid Beaks
Drinks Medium

Korean Butter-Grilled Squid Beaks

Ojingeo-ip-butter-gui is a Korean bar snack made by searing squid beaks in melted butter with minced garlic over high heat. Thoroughly patting the squid beaks dry with paper towels before they hit the pan is a non-negotiable step: any residual moisture causes violent splattering and prevents the butter from forming a direct, fragrant crust on the surface. Three minutes of rapid stir-frying over high heat keeps the texture springy and chewy rather than tough and rubbery, which is the line squid crosses the moment heat is applied too long. Adding soy sauce and cooking wine creates a savory glaze as the liquid rapidly evaporates and concentrates against the hot surface. A finish of red chili flakes and cracked black pepper introduces a clean, warm heat that lingers behind the buttery garlic aroma, rounding out every bite. The dish comes together in under five minutes, which makes it one of the most practical snacks to serve alongside drinks.

🍺 Bar Snacks
Prep 12min Cook 10min 2 servings
Korean Spicy Pork Bulgogi Grill
Grilled Medium

Korean Spicy Pork Bulgogi Grill

This Korean grilled pork dish is made by marinating pork shoulder in a spicy and sweet mixture. The marinade blends gochujang, soy sauce, sugar, minced garlic, ginger juice, and sesame oil. Coating each piece individually and pressing the meat flat ensures the seasoning penetrates deeply during a thirty-minute resting period. Cooking requires a preheated grill or a heavy pan set over high heat to sear the meat quickly. Spreading the slices in a single layer prevents them from steaming. The sugars from the gochujang and sugar caramelize under high heat, creating a deep brown, flavorful crust on the pork surface. Because this coating can scorch easily, adjusting the stove to medium-high prevents burning. Serving the hot grilled pork wrapped in fresh lettuce sheets balances the smoky, seasoned meat with a crisp and hydrating vegetable texture.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 30min Cook 15min 2 servings
Rosemary Focaccia
Western Medium

Rosemary Focaccia

Rosemary focaccia is an Italian olive-oil bread made from a high-hydration dough that is proofed twice, dimpled with fingertips, topped with rosemary, minced garlic, and flaky salt, and baked at 220 degrees Celsius. The wetter the dough, the better the signature open crumb and chewy interior develop, so resisting the urge to add extra flour during handling is important. A sixty-minute first proof followed by a thirty-minute second proof gives the yeast enough time to produce the gas that creates a light, airy structure. Generous olive oil pooled in the dimples essentially fries the surface during baking, creating crisp pockets across the top. Cooling for ten minutes after baking lets steam escape and sharpens the contrast between the crunchy crust and the moist, pillowy crumb inside.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🎉 Special Occasion
Prep 20min Cook 25min 4 servings
Korean Poached Squid Slices
Drinks Easy

Korean Poached Squid Slices

Ojingeo-sukhoe is a Korean poached squid dish where cleaned whole squid is blanched for two to three minutes in boiling water seasoned with salt, cooking wine, and green onion, then sliced into pieces and served alongside vinegared gochujang. The most important step is thorough preparation: the innards are removed completely, the skin is peeled away, and the body is rinsed under cold running water until there is no trace of sliminess or off-odor remaining. Cooking wine in the blanching water neutralizes any residual fishiness, and the green onion infuses a mild aromatic note into the flesh. The squid goes into water that is already at a full boil so the surface seizes immediately and the interior moisture stays locked in rather than leaching out into the pot. Pulling the squid out the moment the flesh turns opaque and letting it rest briefly prevents carryover heat from tightening the protein any further, preserving the elastic, springy bite that defines good sukhoe. Slicing after cooling also produces a cleaner cut than slicing while still hot. The dipping sauce of gochujang, vinegar, garlic, and sugar provides a sharp, tangy contrast that cuts through the mild squid and makes the dish far more dynamic than its simple method would suggest.

🍺 Bar Snacks ⚡ Quick
Prep 10min Cook 6min 2 servings
Korean Grilled Webfoot Octopus
Grilled Medium

Korean Grilled Webfoot Octopus

Cleaned webfoot octopus is tossed in a marinade of gochujang, chili flakes, soy sauce, and sugar for ten minutes, then seared on high heat for just three to four minutes. Webfoot octopus has thicker tentacles than nakji and a more resilient chew, which makes it particularly well suited to this type of spicy, high-heat preparation. The short cooking time is not a shortcut -- it is the point. Overcooking webfoot octopus makes it rubbery and dry, and the difference between three minutes and five minutes is the difference between tender-chewy and tough. High heat is equally important: the goal is to sear, not steam, so the pan must be very hot and the pieces should not be crowded. Where the glaze catches on the pan surface and scorches slightly, it leaves behind charred bits that coat the octopus with a smoky depth the marinade alone cannot provide. Green onion added in the final seconds cuts through the heat with a sharp, fresh note. Just before the main harvest season in spring, webfoot octopus carries roe that adds a rich, creamy nuttiness to each bite, and this is when Korean cooks consider the ingredient at its peak. The cooked pieces wrap well in perilla leaves and are also popular as a fried rice finisher.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🏠 Everyday
Prep 20min Cook 8min 2 servings
Scotch Egg
Western Medium

Scotch Egg

Scotch egg is a British dish in which a six-minute soft-boiled egg is wrapped in mustard-seasoned sausage meat, coated in flour, beaten egg, and breadcrumbs, then deep-fried or baked until crisp. Chilling the boiled egg in ice water immediately stops carryover cooking and preserves the runny yolk. Wrapping the meat in an even layer around each egg ensures it cooks uniformly during frying or baking. The breadcrumb crust crisps up in the heat and acts as a seal, keeping the sausage layer's juices locked inside. Cutting one open reveals three distinct layers - a crunchy golden shell, a savory ring of seasoned pork, and a soft yolk that runs when broken - each contributing a different texture and flavor. Scotch eggs can be served warm or cold, making them versatile for brunch, picnics, or snacking.

🍺 Bar Snacks 🍱 Lunchbox
Prep 20min Cook 20min 4 servings