🍱 Lunchbox Recipes
Dishes that taste great packed and cold
723 recipes. Page 27 of 31
The best lunchbox dishes hold up well at room temperature. This tag features make-ahead sides and full lunchbox recipes you can pack in the morning without stress - sausage stir-fry, rolled omelet, stir-fried anchovies, and soy-braised beef are all lunchbox staples.
The key to a great packed lunch is choosing dishes with low moisture content and arranging contrasting colors. A sprinkle of sesame seeds or furikake over the rice adds a finishing touch that looks as good as it tastes.
Korean Lotus Root Kimchi (Crunchy Spiced Root Kimchi)
Starting with sliced lotus root boiled in vinegar water helps remove bitterness while keeping the vegetable pale and crisp. The seasoning combines gochugaru, minced garlic, and anchovy fish sauce with the addition of fresh pear juice. This pear juice provides natural sugars and necessary moisture so the chili paste coats each slice evenly without becoming dry or clumping. Even after the fermentation process begins, the lotus root maintains its signature firm and crunchy texture. Sliced scallions are tossed in to add a fresh aromatic quality that balances the spicy garlic paste. One full day of refrigeration allows the flavors to settle into the flesh before serving. Because the seasoning gets trapped inside the characteristic holes of the root, the paste should remain thick rather than watery to ensure consistent flavor. When left to ferment for a few more days, the developing acidity helps cut through the richness of grilled meats or fried dishes. A light addition of sesame oil and toasted sesame seeds at the end brings a toasted scent to every bite.
Korean Soybean Sprout Cold Salad
Kongnamul-naengchae is a chilled Korean salad of boiled soybean sprouts and vegetables tossed in mustard dressing - conceptually distinct from regular kongnamul-muchim because it is designed to be served cold. The mustard sauce defines the dish: mustard powder (or tube mustard) mixed with vinegar, sugar, and salt creates a sharp, nose-tingling heat alongside a sweet-sour brightness. Prepared mustard needs five to ten minutes of resting after hydration for the allyl isothiocyanate compound to fully develop its pungency. Julienned cucumber and carrot release moisture, so they should be briefly salted or patted dry to prevent diluting the sauce. Chilling for at least ten minutes before serving maximizes the refreshing effect, and cold temperatures actually sharpen the mustard's bite. This banchan excels as a palate cleanser alongside fatty main dishes like samgyeopsal or bulgogi.
Korean Stir-fried Radish Greens with Perilla
Siraegi deulkkae-bokkeum is a Korean stir-fry of pre-boiled dried radish greens seasoned with soup soy sauce and garlic, then cooked in perilla oil and finished with generous perilla powder. The greens are first tossed in the seasoning to let the flavors penetrate, stir-fried for three minutes, then simmered briefly with water and perilla powder until a thick, nutty sauce coats every strand. Green onion added at the end provides a fresh aromatic lift. Compared to the doenjang-based siraegi jorim, this version leans lighter and more distinctly nutty from the perilla.
Korean Soy-Marinated Soybean Leaves
Kongnip-jangajji is soybean leaves preserved in a seasoned soy brine - one of the two major leaf jangajji traditions alongside perilla leaf (kkaennip) jangajji. Soybean leaves are larger and thicker than perilla leaves, taking longer to absorb the pickling liquid but offering a more substantial chew, with each leaf large enough to wrap around a spoonful of rice. The brine - soy sauce, water, vinegar, and sugar boiled together - must cool completely before pouring over the leaves; hot liquid softens them into a limp state, destroying the desired texture. Garlic cloves, cheongyang chili, and onion slices added to the jar infuse the brine with aromatic complexity during the curing process, producing a more layered flavor than plain soy. A minimum of two days of refrigerated aging is needed for the seasoning to reach the leaf interior, and flipping the layers once daily ensures even penetration. The most common way to eat it is draped over hot steamed rice, ssam-style.
Korean Braised Dried Radish Greens
Siraegi jorim is a traditional Korean braise of boiled dried radish greens seasoned with doenjang, soup soy sauce, and garlic, then simmered in perilla oil and water over low heat for twenty minutes. The doenjang slowly permeates the tough, fibrous greens, infusing them with deep fermented soybean flavor while the perilla oil adds a smooth richness. The longer the dish simmers, the more pronounced the earthy, malty depth becomes. Scallion stirred in at the end brightens the otherwise dense, savory profile of this slow-cooked banchan.
Korean Macaroni Salad (Sweet Mayo Pasta from Retro Diners)
Korean macaroni salad is a retro banchan that became a fixture of bunsikjip snack bars and gyeongyangsik Western-style restaurants during the 1970s and 80s, and it has remained a nostalgic staple ever since. The Korean version differs from its Western counterpart in two notable ways: sugar is added to the dressing, making the whole salad distinctly sweeter, and sweet corn kernels replace the mustard or herbs common in American recipes, contributing a pop of juicy sweetness with each bite. The pasta is boiled for eight minutes or longer, well past al dente, because softer noodles tangle more effectively with the mayonnaise and hold the dressing inside rather than letting it slide off. Cucumber must be salted and then squeezed firmly to extract moisture before it goes into the salad; skipping this step causes the dressing to thin and puddle at the bottom over time. Carrot is blanched for exactly one minute to preserve its crunch, and crushed hard-boiled egg stirred into the dressing gives the salad a richer, denser body. The finished salad needs at least twenty minutes in the refrigerator for the mayonnaise to firm up and adhere to the pasta so it holds its shape on the plate. This salad is a standard side at gyeongyangsik restaurants alongside donkatsu and hamburger steak, and it appears regularly as a complimentary banchan at gimbap shops. A dusting of paprika powder or chopped parsley adds color to the otherwise pale presentation.
Korean Spicy Beef Stir-Fry
Sogogi gochujang-bokkeum marinates thin-sliced beef in a paste of gochujang, soy sauce, sugar, and minced garlic, then stir-fries it over high heat. The chili paste's spiciness and the sugar caramelize together on the meat's surface, building a dark, sticky glaze with layered heat. Onion cooked alongside the beef releases moisture that helps the seasoning distribute evenly across every slice. A finish of sesame oil adds a roasted nuttiness on top of the bold, spicy-sweet profile -- intensely flavored enough that a small portion carries a full bowl of rice.
Korean Pickled Garlic (Soy-Vinegar Aged Whole Cloves)
Maneul-jangajji is whole garlic cloves pickled in a soy-vinegar brine, a traditional Korean preserved banchan that sits near-permanently in the kimchi refrigerator alongside kimjang kimchi. The customary practice is to make it during the June fresh garlic harvest and eat it throughout the year, replenishing the supply annually. After three or more months submerged in the brine, every trace of the raw garlic's sharp, pungent bite disappears, leaving behind a clove that has become almost translucent, with a jelly-firm texture and a clean salty-sweet flavor with no heat at all. The baseline ratio for the brine is two parts soy sauce to one part vinegar. Increasing the vinegar beyond that ratio tips the flavor too far toward sourness, making the pickles difficult to eat alongside rice as a general banchan. The brine must be brought to a full boil and cooled completely before it is poured over the garlic - never hot, which would partially cook the cloves. Repeating the cycle of draining the brine, reboiling it, cooling it, and returning it to the jar every three days for three complete cycles significantly extends shelf life and builds a more layered depth of flavor than a single pouring achieves. Skipping this process results in a noticeably flatter pickle. After three days at room temperature to initiate fermentation, the jar moves to the refrigerator, where the lower temperature slows the process and preserves the characteristic crunch for months. The finished pickles are eaten one clove at a time alongside grilled pork belly or short ribs, where their acidity cuts through the fat. Minced finely and stirred into fried rice, they contribute a concentrated umami that is difficult to replicate with raw garlic.
Korean Stir-fried Sausage
Sosegi-bokkeum is a Korean sausage stir-fry where scored Vienna sausages are dry-fried until golden, then tossed with onion in a sauce of ketchup, gochujang, oligosaccharide syrup, and soy sauce. Scoring the sausages lets the sweet-spicy glaze seep into every cut, so the flavor is consistent from edge to center. The sauce caramelizes quickly -- just two minutes of tossing coats the sausages in a glossy, clingy layer. Finished with sesame seeds and sliced green onion, it is a staple banchan that packs well in lunchboxes.
Korean Stir-Fried Garlic Scapes
Maneuljjong-bokkeum is stir-fried garlic scapes, the curling flower stalks cut from garlic plants before they bloom, seasoned with soy sauce and oligosaccharide syrup. Where garlic bulbs deliver a sharp, nose-clearing bite, scapes carry a gentler, almost sweet garlic flavor that works even for people who find raw garlic too aggressive. Cutting the scapes into 4 to 5 cm lengths and blanching them for thirty seconds loosens the fibrous outer skin while preserving the snap inside. Skipping the blanch and going directly to the pan produces an uneven result: the outside turns tough and leathery before the inside has cooked through. Blanched scapes go into a lightly oiled pan over high heat for one minute, then soy sauce, oligosaccharide, minced garlic, and a pinch of gochugaru are added and the whole thing stir-fries for another two minutes. The syrup and soy sauce build a sweet-salty glaze that clings to every piece, and sesame oil is stirred in only after the heat is off to protect its fragrance from burning off. Made once, this banchan keeps refrigerated for five days or more, making it one of the most practical side dishes to prepare on a weekend and draw from throughout the week. Spring through early summer is peak garlic scape season, when the stalks are at their most tender.
Korean Spicy Braised Tofu
Spicy dubu-jorim pan-sears firm tofu slabs cut 1.5 centimeters thick until golden on both sides, then braises them in a sauce of soy sauce, gochugaru, garlic, and sugar. Searing first firms the tofu so it holds its shape through the eight-minute simmer, during which onion and green onion cook alongside in the reducing liquid. The chili flakes deliver a direct, persistent heat that penetrates the tofu as the sauce thickens, balanced by the sugar's sweetness. A final circle of sesame oil ties the flavors together with a roasted, nutty aroma.
Korean Pickled Garlic Scapes
Maneuljjong-jangajji is a preserved side dish of garlic scapes pickled in a boiled soy sauce, vinegar, and sugar brine. The preservation principle is identical to that of whole garlic jangajji, but the scape, meaning the flowering stalk of the garlic plant, is used instead of the bulb, and there is one crucial technique difference. The scapes are cut into 4 cm lengths, packed tightly into glass jars, and covered with the brine immediately while it is still boiling hot. The heat partially cooks the outer layer of each scape, which creates a clean, crisp snap when the scape is bitten, unlike the soft texture that results from the cold-pour method used for whole garlic. Whole black peppercorns included in the jar release their warmth and spicy aroma slowly into the liquid during the aging period, adding a dimension beyond the straightforward salt-and-acid base. The pickles are ready after a single day, but day three is when seasoning has penetrated to the center while the scapes still push back satisfyingly under the teeth. The brine can be drained, reboiled, and poured back over the scapes once during storage, which significantly extends shelf life by suppressing bacterial growth. On the Korean table, these sharp, vinegary pickles serve as a natural counterbalance to fatty meat dishes, cutting through richness and clearing the palate between bites.
Korean Beef & Lettuce Cabbage Stir-fry
Ssamchu soegogi-bokkeum stir-fries soy-and-pear-juice-marinated beef over high heat, then folds in ssamchu (Korean leafy cabbage) just long enough to barely wilt. Pear juice tenderizes the beef and lends a subtle sweetness, while soy sauce, garlic, and sesame oil form a glossy glaze as they hit the hot pan. The ssamchu stems go in a minute before the leaves and Cheongyang chili, preserving a mix of crunchy and soft textures in the finished dish. A final drizzle of sesame oil off the heat locks in the fragrance, making this a lightly spicy beef-and-greens stir-fry with clear, clean flavors.
Korean Garlic Scape Salad
Maneuljong-muchim dresses briefly blanched garlic scapes in a cold gochujang and vinegar dressing, setting it apart from maneuljjong-bokkeum, which uses a soy-based sauce and relies on direct heat in a pan. The names maneuljong and maneuljjong describe the same part of the garlic plant, the slender flowering stalk that emerges in spring, but the two terms divide along regional dialect lines: speakers in Seoul and Gyeonggi province tend to say maneuljong while those in other parts of the country often use maneuljjong. Blanching must be kept well under thirty seconds to lock in the bright green color and crisp snap; beyond one minute the scapes soften and the color dulls noticeably. The gochujang dressing hits sweet, sour, and spicy in equal measure, and the vinegar component plays off the scapes' grassy, pungent aroma in a way that reads as distinctly springlike on the palate. Peak availability runs from April through May, when garlic plants push up their stalks before the heads are harvested, and vendors at traditional markets sell them bundled by the handful. Because no oil is involved and the sauce is relatively light, this preparation is considerably lower in calories than the stir-fried version, which is part of why it appears frequently in everyday Korean meal sets as a reliable, refreshing side.
Korean Stir-fried Crown Daisy and Mushrooms
Ssukgat-beoseot-bokkeum is a quick stir-fry of oyster mushrooms and crown daisy (ssukgat) cooked in a garlic-infused pan. The mushrooms are seared over high heat to drive off moisture and develop a chewy bite, while the crown daisy stems and leaves go in at staggered intervals to preserve their crunch and aroma. Soy sauce and cooking wine provide the seasoning base, finished with sesame oil and toasted sesame seeds. The slightly bitter, herbal character of the crown daisy plays off the mild earthiness of the mushrooms for a clean, well-defined flavor.
Korean Seasoned Butterbur Stems
Meoui-namul-muchim is a seasonal spring namul made by blanching butterbur stems and dressing them with doenjang and ground perilla seeds. Butterbur grows wild along hillsides and stream banks throughout Korea. The stems are the edible part; the leaves contain pyrrolizidine alkaloids and are generally not consumed. Peeling the tough outer skin from each stem before cooking is a required preparation step, since unpeeled stems leave unchewable fibers in the mouth even after blanching. The blanching process drives off about half of the plant's inherent bitterness, leaving a subtle astringent quality that creates a layered interplay between the earthy savoriness of doenjang and the nutty richness of perilla seed powder. Adding perilla generously softens the bitter edge and makes the dish more approachable. March through April is peak season, when fresh butterbur appears briefly at Korean markets. Dried butterbur rehydrated in water is available year-round as a substitute but cannot replicate the fragrance and texture of the fresh spring harvest. The faint bitterness and herbal aroma typical of spring greens make this namul a classic palate-awakening side dish.
Korean Pork & Crown Daisy Stir-fry
Ssukgat-dwaeji-doenjang-bokkeum is a Korean stir-fry of pork shoulder marinated in doenjang (fermented soybean paste) and gochujang, cooked with onion and scallion before crown daisy is tossed in at the end. The doenjang penetrates the pork during marination, producing a deep, salty fermented savoriness once seared. Crown daisy is added briefly to keep its herbal fragrance and gentle bitterness intact, which cuts through the richness of the pork fat. The contrast between the heavy, umami-laden meat and the bright green aromatics keeps each bite balanced.
Korean Stir-fried Butterbur Stems
Meowi-namul-bokkeum stir-fries boiled butterbur stems in perilla oil, adding a cooking step that distinguishes it from the cold-dressed muchim version. While the muchim blanches and seasons immediately without further heat, the bokkeum takes the boiled stems into a pan with soup soy sauce and water for five minutes or more, driving the seasoning deep into the plant fibers. This additional cooking time also volatilizes more of the butterbur's bitter compounds, producing a milder flavor compared to the cold preparation. Perilla oil, though more prone to oxidation than sesame oil, is the traditional choice because its earthy, grassy aroma harmonizes with the herb's character in a way sesame oil cannot. Adding perilla seed powder in the last minute causes its starch to partially gelatinize, giving the sauce a thicker consistency, but leaving it on the heat too long makes the dish chalky and heavy. Timing this final step precisely is what separates a well-made version from an overcooked one. This banchan appears on spring mountain-village tables alongside gondeure-namul and chwinamul as part of the seasonal wild greens spread that marks the transition out of winter.
Korean Stir-fried Sundae and Tripe
Sundae-gopchang-bokkeum is a bunsik-style stir-fry combining blanched beef tripe and Korean blood sausage (sundae) with cabbage, onion, and scallion in a gochujang-gochugaru sauce. The tripe is seared first for a lightly charred exterior, then the spicy sauce is built in the pan before vegetables are added. Sundae goes in last and cooks briefly to prevent the casing from splitting. Each component brings a distinct texture - springy tripe, dense chewy sundae, and sweet crunchy cabbage - unified by the bold, spicy coating.
Korean Water Parsley Salad
Minari-muchim is blanched water parsley seasoned with gochugaru, soy sauce, and vinegar, one of the most distinctly seasonal banchan on the Korean table. Minari is a semi-aquatic herb that grows along paddies, wetlands, and clean waterways throughout Korea. Its aroma belongs to a different family from Western parsley or celery: fresher, more herbal, with a green brightness that is difficult to compare to any common Western herb. That aroma is the entire reason to use minari in this dish, which makes the blanching time critical. Beyond twenty seconds in boiling water, the volatile aromatic compounds escape with the steam and what remains is texture without character. Trimming the toughest lower stems and cutting stalks to roughly five centimeters makes each piece easy to eat in a single bite. Transferring the blanched herb immediately to ice water or very cold water fixes the chlorophyll and holds the vivid green color. The vinegar in the dressing does two things simultaneously: it amplifies the herbal brightness of the minari and suppresses the faintly aquatic mustiness that water-grown plants sometimes carry. Gochugaru provides heat, soy sauce adds salted depth, and together they season the herb without masking it. International awareness of minari as an ingredient grew substantially after the 2020 film of the same name. Serving raw minari alongside cho-gochujang as a dipping green is another common spring preparation.
Korean Stir-fried Sundae with Vegetables
Sundae yachae bokkeum stir-fries Korean blood sausage with cabbage, onion, and scallion in a sauce of gochujang, soy sauce, and gochugaru. The vegetables go into the pan first to drive off excess water so the sauce clings better, while the sundae is added later to keep its casing intact and its filling dense and chewy. The combined seasoning creates a spicy-salty glaze that coats the sundae slices evenly. Compared to sundae-gopchang-bokkeum, this version skips the tripe and leans heavier on vegetables, making it a lighter take on the same street food flavor.
Korean Stir-fried Seaweed Stems
Miyeok-julgi-bokkeum is stir-fried seaweed stems - specifically the thick midrib portions of salted miyeok (wakame) - offering a textural experience entirely different from miyeok-muchim (seaweed salad) or miyeok-guk (seaweed soup). While seaweed leaves are soft and slippery, the stems are thick and resilient, producing a distinctive crunchy pop with each bite. Salt levels vary by brand, so soaking in cold water for ten minutes is the baseline desalting step, but tasting before cooking and rinsing again if needed is essential. Julienned onion and carrot stir-fried alongside break the monotony of seaweed alone, adding sweetness and color. Garlic sauteed in oil first establishes an aromatic foundation. A finishing drizzle of sesame oil and sesame seeds bridges the oceanic seaweed flavor with a toasty nuttiness. The extremely low calorie count makes this banchan a staple in diet-conscious Korean meal plans.
Korean Tomato Dalgyal Bokkeum (Tomato Egg Stir-fry)
Tomato-dalgyal-bokkeum uses a two-stage cooking method: eggs are scrambled to about 70% doneness and set aside, then returned to the pan with seared tomatoes for a final quick toss. The tomatoes release a small amount of juice when cooked briefly with oyster sauce and sugar, and the partially set eggs absorb this liquid to stay soft and moist. Bright tomato acidity, mild egg richness, and oyster sauce umami layer together without any single flavor dominating. Sharing roots with Chinese tomato egg stir-fry (xihongshi chaodan), it crosses easily into Korean home cooking.
Korean Seaweed Salad (Tangy Chili-Vinegar Dressed Miyeok)
Miyeok-muchim consists of rehydrated seaweed seasoned with either a vinegared chili paste called cho-gochujang or a vinegared soy sauce known as cho-ganjang. In Korean culinary traditions, this preparation represents one of the most frequent methods for consuming seaweed outside of the traditional soup typically served on birthdays. To prepare the foundation of the dish, approximately thirty grams of dried miyeok requires a twenty-minute immersion in water. During this period, the volume of the seaweed expands by eight to ten times its original size, which results in a quantity sufficient for two individual portions. A frequent error made by individuals unfamiliar with this ingredient involves using an excessive amount of the dried seaweed because the dramatic scale of its expansion is often underestimated. Following the soaking stage, the seaweed undergoes a brief blanching process in boiling water. This technique intensifies the color of the miyeok into a vivid green while simultaneously reducing the strong marine odor associated with the raw plant. Immediately after blanching, a thorough rinse in cold water is required to lock in the specific texture of the seaweed, which is characterized as being both slippery and bouncy. For the dressing, the spicy cho-gochujang variation combines fermented chili paste with vinegar and sugar to create a profile that is sweet, sour, and spicy. This combination serves to temper the inherent saltiness found in the seaweed. Many versions of the dish include thinly julienned cucumber to provide a crisp textural contrast to the silkiness of the miyeok. Alternatively, the cho-ganjang dressing offers a more subtle flavor for individuals preferring a clean taste without the heat of chili. From a nutritional standpoint, a single portion contains roughly fifty kilocalories and is recognized as a significant source of dietary fiber and iodine. These attributes make the dish a consistent feature in Korean home cooking focused on health and nutrition. The salad is typically kept in the refrigerator and served chilled, making it particularly refreshing during the summer months when people often experience a decrease in their appetite.