2686 Korean & World Recipes
Charim is a recipe guide that organizes Korean, Western, Asian, and baking recipes in one place. Each recipe features a clear ingredient list and step-by-step instructions, along with nutrition facts and cooking tips.
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Korean Cactus Fruit Ade (Prickly Pear Citrus Sparkling Drink)
Baeknyeoncho ade is a Korean fruit drink made from prickly pear cactus fruit syrup blended with lemon juice and grapefruit juice, then topped with sparkling water. The cactus fruit syrup carries a deep magenta color and a flavor reminiscent of berries but with an earthier sweetness and slight viscosity unique to the fruit. Sharp lemon acidity and the bitter edge of grapefruit juice counterbalance the syrup's sweetness, creating a drink that is fruity without being cloying. A pinch of salt acts as a flavor amplifier rather than a source of saltiness, making the fruit acids more pronounced. The sparkling water must be added last and stirred gently after the syrup and ice are already combined, preserving the carbonation. A sprig of apple mint floated on top adds an herbal note that reaches the nose with each sip, reinforcing the cooling sensation. The intense natural pigment of the cactus fruit makes this drink visually striking when served in a clear glass.

Apple Crumble
Apple crumble appeared in British kitchens during World War II, when butter and sugar rationing made traditional pie crusts impractical - the crumble topping required far less fat and no rolling. Sliced apples are tossed with sugar, lemon juice, and a pinch of cinnamon, then piled into a baking dish and covered with a rough mixture of flour, oats, butter, and brown sugar rubbed together by hand until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs. In the oven, the fruit collapses and bubbles while the topping bakes into a golden, craggy layer that is crunchy on the peaks and slightly chewy where it meets the fruit juices below. The contrast between the hot, soft, almost sauce-like apple beneath and the crisp, buttery rubble on top is what makes the dish work. Served with vanilla ice cream or custard, the cold cream against the steaming fruit creates one more layer of contrast. It remains the default British home dessert, assembled in ten minutes from store-cupboard ingredients.

Blue Crab Lemon Garlic Pasta
Blue crab lemon garlic spaghetti starts by slowly warming thinly sliced garlic in olive oil over low heat until fragrant, then tossing in crab meat with a splash of rice wine to cook off any raw ocean smell before stirring in butter. Pasta water emulsifies the oil and butter into a thin, glossy sauce that coats each strand of spaghetti without heaviness, carrying a clean marine flavor throughout. Lemon zest and juice are added only after the heat is turned off, preserving the sharp citrus aroma that would otherwise evaporate. Keeping the garlic just short of golden - pale and softened, not browned - is the key to a nutty depth without bitterness.

Korean Napa Cabbage Pancake
Baechu jeon is a Korean pancake made by coating napa cabbage leaves in a thin flour batter and pan-frying until golden. Outer leaves of medium size work best; if the stem end is too thick, it is flattened with the back of a knife so the batter adheres evenly and the leaf does not buckle during cooking. The batter is mixed thin, roughly equal parts buchim flour and water, so it forms a light coating rather than a heavy shell that would mask the cabbage flavor. Generous oil in the pan and steady medium heat produce a crisp exterior while the cabbage inside softens and releases its gentle sweetness. Each side must brown fully before flipping to prevent the pancake from breaking apart. A dipping sauce of soy sauce with vinegar and sliced cheongyang chili adds acidity and heat that offset the mild character of the pancake.

Korean White Kimchi Tofu Stew
Baek kimchi dubu jjigae is a mild Korean stew where the gentle tang of white kimchi replaces the bold heat of regular kimchi. Anchovy-kelp stock provides the umami foundation, and chopped white kimchi is added so its fermented acidity dissolves into the broth, creating a refreshingly different direction from typical doenjang or kimchi stews. Thick tofu slabs go in after the broth reaches a boil to prevent them from crumbling, and enoki mushrooms are added in the final two minutes to keep their delicate texture. Guk-ganjang adjusts the salt level cautiously since the white kimchi already carries its own brine salinity. A sliced cheongyang chili introduces a controlled spicy note into the otherwise gentle broth. Unlike the intense red broth of standard kimchi jjigae, this version stays clear, lightly tart, and nearly fat-free, making it noticeably light on the stomach.

Albondigas en Salsa (Spanish Meatballs in Tomato Sauce)
Tender, bread-softened meatballs simmered in a smoky paprika-tomato sauce until every bite soaks up the rich, glossy gravy -- Spain's ultimate weeknight comfort food. Ground pork and beef are mixed with soaked bread, egg, and garlic, then rolled small and browned in olive oil before simmering in a tomato-based sauce seasoned with smoked paprika and bay leaf. The bread in the mixture keeps the meatballs from turning dense, giving them a soft, almost spongy center that absorbs the sauce as they braise. The tomato sauce mellows over twenty minutes of gentle heat, losing its raw acidity and developing a concentrated sweetness that clings to each ball. Served with crusty bread to mop up the sauce, or spooned over plain rice, this is the kind of dish Spanish grandmothers make on weekday evenings without measuring anything.

Avgolemono Soup (Greek Egg-Lemon Chicken Rice Soup)
Avgolemono - from the Greek avgo (egg) and lemoni (lemon) - is a soup that has warmed Greek households for centuries, with roots reaching back to the Sephardic Jewish communities of the Byzantine Empire who brought egg-lemon sauces to the eastern Mediterranean. Chicken broth is simmered with short-grain rice until the grains swell and release their starch, thickening the liquid slightly. The defining step is tempering: beaten eggs and fresh lemon juice are whisked together, then a ladle of hot broth is stirred in slowly to raise the temperature without scrambling the eggs. This tempered mixture returns to the pot off heat, transforming the broth into a velvety, pale-yellow cream with a bright acidity that hits the palate before the warmth of the chicken stock settles in. The soup must never boil after the eggs go in - gentle heat is the only way to maintain the silky emulsion. Shredded chicken stirred in at the end makes it a complete meal. Greeks consider avgolemono the definitive comfort food for cold days and recovery from illness.

Korean Seasoned Mallow Greens
Mallow greens have appeared in Korean cooking since the Joseon era, typically in doenjang-guk. For this namul, they are blanched just 40 seconds - supple but not collapsed. After squeezing dry, they are rubbed gently with doenjang, soup soy sauce, and garlic so the fermented paste penetrates the porous leaves. A finish of sesame oil adds a glossy coating. The distinctive mucilaginous quality - slightly slippery on the tongue - sets this apart from other Korean greens.

Steamed White Rice Cake (Soft Crumbly Korean Traditional Rice Dessert)
Baekseolgi is a traditional Korean steamed rice cake made from non-glutinous rice flour mixed with sugar and salt, then sifted and steamed. The sifting step, repeated two to three times, determines the final texture: thorough sifting incorporates air into the flour so the cake steams into a soft, crumbly structure that breaks apart in fine layers. Skipping or rushing this step produces a dense, coarse cake that lacks the defining quality of good baekseolgi. Moisture content requires precision as well; the flour should clump when squeezed but crumble when lightly pressed. Steaming over high heat for twenty to twenty-five minutes cooks the cake through, and a cloth under the lid prevents condensation droplets from falling onto the surface and creating wet patches. Dried jujube slices and pumpkin seeds placed on top before steaming add color contrast to the pure white surface. The sugar content is modest, allowing the clean, mild flavor of rice to lead, and the cake is best eaten warm since it firms up as it cools.

Korean Grilled Cabbage Leaf Wraps
Baechu kimchi gui ssam takes napa cabbage to the grill, charring the leaves before using them as wraps for grilled pork belly and doenjang-based ssam sauce. A whole cabbage head is halved lengthwise, brushed with sesame oil and sprinkled with salt, then grilled over high heat for two to three minutes per side until the outer edges char while the inner layers remain slightly crisp. Pork belly is grilled separately until golden and sliced into bite-sized pieces. The ssam sauce, a blend of doenjang, gochujang, minced garlic, and sesame oil, is spread on a grilled leaf, topped with pork, and rolled into a wrap. Each bite combines the smoky sweetness of the charred cabbage, the fatty richness of pork, and the salty fermented punch of the sauce. Grilled cheongyang chili on the side adds extra heat. The cabbage must not stay on the grill too long, or it loses all structure and cannot function as a wrap.

Almond Biscotti
Biscotti - meaning 'twice-cooked' in Italian - originated in the Tuscan city of Prato, where they have been baked since at least the 14th century as provisions for long sea voyages because the double baking drives out nearly all moisture. The dough is shaped into a flat log, baked once until firm, then sliced on the diagonal and baked again at a lower temperature until each slice is dry and hard throughout. Whole almonds embedded in the crumb provide a contrasting crunch and a toasted, slightly bitter note that balances the vanilla-scented dough. The resulting cookie is deliberately too hard to eat comfortably on its own - it is meant to be dipped into espresso, Vin Santo, or strong black coffee, where the liquid softens the outer layer while the core stays crisp. This dual texture, hard giving way to yielding, is the entire point of the biscotti tradition.

Korean Zucchini Soybean Paste Soup
Aehobak doenjang-guk is the soup Koreans think of when they think of home - a bowl of soybean paste broth with soft zucchini that appears on dinner tables more often than any other guk. The foundation is anchovy-kelp stock, which provides a clean umami base for the doenjang to dissolve into. Zucchini is added after the broth has simmered with onion and garlic, cooking just five minutes so each half-moon slice holds its shape while releasing a gentle sweetness into the liquid. Cubed tofu goes in last, warming through without breaking apart. The finished soup is cloudy and golden, with the earthy funk of fermented soybean paste sitting underneath the vegetable sweetness. It is the kind of dish that Korean mothers make when nothing else seems right - uncomplicated, warm, and restorative.

Korean Burdock Matchstick Pancake
Burdock root is julienned into thin matchstick strips and pan-fried with onion and green chili in a light batter. The combination of Korean pancake mix and tempura flour produces an extra-crispy texture that highlights the burdock's natural crunch. Burdock's earthy, slightly sweet flavor comes through clearly, while the green chili adds a subtle kick of heat. Mixed with cold water to keep the batter light, this jeon delivers a clean, vegetable-forward taste.

Aloo Methi (Indian Potato Fenugreek Dry Stir-Fry)
Aloo methi is a North Indian home-cooking classic built on the pairing of starchy potatoes and bitter fenugreek leaves - two ingredients that balance each other naturally. Fresh methi leaves have a pronounced earthy bitterness that mellows into a warm, maple-like aroma once they hit the hot pan. The potatoes are diced and cooked covered until fork-soft, absorbing cumin, turmeric, and chili along the way. When methi leaves fold in at the end, their residual moisture evaporates quickly, concentrating that herbaceous flavor into every bite. In Indian households, this dish often appears alongside dal and rice for a weeknight dinner that comes together in under thirty minutes.

Aloo Gobi (Indian Cauliflower Potato Curry)
Aloo gobi is one of North India's most recognized vegetarian dishes, found on dhabas and home tables across Punjab and Uttar Pradesh. Potatoes and cauliflower florets cook together in a dry preparation - no gravy, just oil, cumin seeds, turmeric, and chili powder forming a thin spice crust on every piece. The technique relies on covering the pan to let trapped steam cook the vegetables through while the base stays dry enough to develop light browning. Cauliflower edges turn nutty and slightly charred, while potato cubes hold their shape with a floury interior. It pairs naturally with roti or plain rice, and tastes equally good at room temperature in a lunchbox the next day.

Korean Zucchini Pork Stew
Aehobak-jjigae is a home-style Korean stew that builds bold flavor from modest ingredients - pork, zucchini, and a spoonful each of gochujang and gochugaru. The pork is stir-fried first with garlic to render fat and build a savory fond at the bottom of the pot, then the chili paste is toasted into the fat before anchovy broth goes in. This layering technique gives the broth a depth that plain boiling cannot achieve. The zucchini cooks in the simmering liquid for just six minutes, softening into the stew while keeping enough structure to hold its half-moon shape. The broth finishes spicy and slightly sweet from the pork fat and vegetable sugars, with enough body to soak into a bowl of rice. A reliable weeknight meal that requires no special ingredients beyond a basic Korean pantry.

Korean Beoseot Deulkkae Jeon (Mushroom Perilla Pancake)
This Korean pancake combines oyster and shiitake mushrooms with perilla seed powder, creating a distinctively nutty aroma that sets it apart from standard mushroom jeon. The mushrooms are sliced thin and mixed with onion into a batter seasoned with soy sauce for built-in umami depth. Once pan-fried until the edges crisp up, the contrast between the crunchy exterior and the soft, chewy mushroom filling makes each bite satisfying. It pairs well with makgeolli or as a simple side dish.

Korean Napa Cabbage Tofu Porridge
A gentle, warming Korean porridge of napa cabbage and soft tofu - light enough for a recovering stomach yet satisfying for any morning. The rice is first sauteed in sesame oil, forming a thin oily coat on each grain that releases a nutty fragrance as the porridge cooks. Vegetable stock and finely chopped cabbage are added, and the pot simmers at medium heat until the rice grains break down completely, during which the cabbage releases its moisture and sweetens the broth naturally. The tofu is crumbled by hand and stirred in during the last five minutes, dispersing evenly to create a smooth protein layer within the porridge. Minced garlic goes in early so its raw edge cooks out fully. Seasoning is kept to a minimum with just guk-ganjang and salt, letting the ingredients speak for themselves. Without heavy oils or strong spices, the porridge draws its flavor entirely from the cabbage sweetness and the quiet richness of tofu.

Garlic Olive Oil Pasta
Aglio e olio - garlic and oil - is the pasta Italians make at midnight with nothing in the kitchen but pantry staples. It originated in Naples, where olive oil was abundant and elaborate sauces were a luxury working-class cooks could not afford. The entire dish depends on technique: garlic must be sliced thin and toasted slowly in generous olive oil on low heat until fragrant and barely golden - seconds past that point and it turns acrid. Peperoncino flakes go in briefly to release their capsaicin into the oil. The real transformation happens when starchy pasta water hits the hot oil, emulsifying into a silky, clinging sauce that coats every strand of spaghetti. No cream, no cheese in the traditional version - just the clean triad of garlic, chili, and good olive oil. Parsley scattered on at the end adds a fresh, herbal brightness.

Korean Grilled Yellowtail
Bangeo-gui is a Korean salt-grilled yellowtail dish that relies on the fish's own winter fat for flavor rather than elaborate seasoning. Yellowtail caught in the cold months develops a thick fat layer under its skin, so coarse salt alone is enough to bring out its natural richness. Patting the surface bone-dry before grilling is essential: moisture interferes with the crisping of the skin, which should be pressed against a medium-heat pan for six to seven minutes until it turns brittle and golden. Grated fresh daikon and a squeeze of lemon are served alongside to cut through the oiliness with sharp, clean acidity.

Korean Seasoned Napa Cabbage Namul
Boiled napa cabbage dressed with doenjang and perilla, passed down through generations of Korean home cooks. The cabbage boils two minutes - leaves collapse while white stems stay slightly firm - then is rinsed, squeezed, and cut. Perilla oil gives a distinctly herbal quality, and perilla powder thickens the dressing into a paste clinging to each piece. This quiet, understated banchan pairs well with clear soups and plain rice.

Korean Braised Monkfish in Spicy Soy Sauce
Agwi-jorim - braised monkfish - is a gentler preparation than the fiery agu-jjim, focusing on a soy-based braising sauce rather than a chili-paste coating. Thick slices of Korean radish line the bottom of the pot, cooking first to release their natural sweetness into the liquid. The monkfish goes on top and simmers covered in a mixture of soy sauce, gochugaru, garlic, and water that reduces slowly into a concentrated glaze. The radish acts as both a buffer preventing the delicate fish from sticking and a flavor sponge that becomes the best part of the dish. As the liquid reduces, the sauce thickens and stains both fish and radish a deep amber. The finished dish has a more balanced, less aggressive flavor profile than agu-jjim, with soy saltiness and radish sweetness in equal proportion to the chili heat.

Korean Pear Bellflower Root Tea
Baedoraji cha is a traditional Korean tea made by slowly simmering pear and bellflower root (doraji) together in water. The bellflower root is peeled and kneaded with salt two to three times to draw out its inherent bitterness, a step that cannot be skipped without the tea turning unpleasantly sharp. The pear is cored, cut into large chunks, and added to the pot where its juice gradually dissolves into the liquid, providing a natural sweetness. Ginger and dried jujubes join the pot: ginger contributes a warm, slightly peppery note that complements the herbal quality of the bellflower root, while jujubes add a subtle fruity depth. The mixture simmers on low heat for thirty to forty minutes so the active compounds in each ingredient fully infuse the water. Sweetness is adjusted with jogcheong (grain syrup) rather than refined sugar. The tea is traditionally served warm during dry or cold weather, when the saponins from the bellflower root are valued for soothing the throat.

Korean Napa Cabbage Anchovy Stew
Baechu myeolchi jjigae is a homestyle Korean stew built on dried anchovy stock with napa cabbage as the main vegetable. Large dried anchovies and kelp are simmered for ten minutes to create a stock with deep umami, then strained for a clean base. Baby napa cabbage is cut into long vertical strips so the stems release their sweetness into the broth, naturally balancing the saltiness of the anchovy. Thick-cut tofu slabs are nestled between the cabbage pieces, and sliced onion adds another layer of sweetness. Diagonally cut cheongyang chili brings a sharp heat that enlivens the otherwise mild broth. Simmering for fifteen to twenty minutes allows the cabbage to soften fully and its sugars to dissolve into the liquid. The stew demonstrates a core principle of Korean home cooking: a well-made stock and a single good vegetable can produce depth without complicated seasoning.