A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - Does Korea Have The Best Food In The World? ft. Deuki Hong and Matt Rodbard
Episode Date: June 5, 2024Today, Josh and Nicole are joined by Deuki Hong and Matt Rodbard to talk about Korean food. Leave us a voicemail at (833) DOG-POD1 Check out the video version of this podcast: http://youtube.com/@myth...icalkitchen To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is mythical.
Josh, you need to stop using my scissors to cut up your food.
Well, how the heck am I supposed to cut my office carb into perfect bites?
There's meat juice all over my packages.
This is an intervention.
And this is A Hot Dog is a Sandwich!
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
What? Welcome to our podcast, A hot dog is a sandwich. A hot dog is a sandwich. What?
Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog is a Sandwich, the show we break down the world's biggest food debates.
I'm your host, Josh Ayer.
And I'm your host, Nicole Inayati.
And today we have two very special guests joining us.
Together in their new cookbook, Korea World, they've taken an insider's look at the exciting revolution of Korean food
through the stories and recipes of chefs and home cooks alike.
Please welcome Dookie Hong and Matt Rodbard.
Hey, guys.
What is up?
What an honor to be here.
Love the show.
No, thank you so much for having us, man.
Thank you for being here.
And thank you for having us at your cookbook release party a few days ago.
It was litty.
It was litty.
It was so litty that we never spoke to each other because I was ripping ube horchata filled
with rum.
That's right.
There was rum there.
I didn't see you, but I heard your fit was
let's go over your fit check
because the fit check
like indexed high
with the audience.
Let me say my part of it
because he just told me
oh yeah that guy was me.
I was like running around
saying hi
and all of our friends
and it was a litty party.
Yes, yes, yes.
And I see this guy
he's just like
great fit
and for me
I just gotta recognize.
I always recognize games.
Real recognize real. I don't know if I'm real but I was just like dude awesome fit for me I just gotta recognize I always recognize real recognize real
I don't know if I'm real
but I was just like
dude awesome fit
or something along the lines
like dude
it all works man
we dapped each other up
and said no words
and then I'm out
which is how it should be
are you still wearing
your kitty cat anklet
yeah yeah
can you show it up
oh no right now
no I don't just wear it
oh it's not a casual
no I don't break out
the anklet
for a Tuesday podcast
sorry but y'all have an incredible cookbook and it's the a casual anglet? No, I don't break out the anglet for a Tuesday podcast.
Sorry.
But y'all have an incredible cookbook,
and it's the follow-up to Koreatown, the cookbook.
We have titled this podcast,
Does Korea Have the Best Food in the World?
We know it is a foolhardy errand to try and measure one culture against another.
Absolutely, yeah.
However.
We're going to do it.
We got to do it.
We're going to do a little bit.
I'm clocking out. I got to. But no, tell me about why Korean food means're going to do it. I'm clocking out.
Tell me about why Korean food means so much to y'all
and what makes it special.
Well, I'm Korean.
And I am not.
It means so much to me.
I mean, it's my culture. I grew up with it.
My mom made sure
language and food
was something that we never forgot.
I think she knew her at an early age like,
hey, you're going to learn English.
You're going to eat a lot of hot dogs and hamburgers in your life.
When we come home, we only speak Korean and we only eat Korean food.
Great.
Yeah.
I mean, for me as a journalist on the projects,
I've really just found that the cuisine is not just delicious,
like Colby Jim and Jake Boocum, dishes like that.
But listen, the culture, there's pages and pages to write about this amazing,
you know, moment we're having in America, in the world around Korean food.
So there's like both the food and then like the more journalistic side.
So yes, it is the most amazing food in the world
and probably the most interesting food in the world, I would say.
There was a phrase that I never heard that I learned from Korea World, actually.
Is it Hallyu?
Yeah, sure.
Hallyu.
Yeah.
Tell me about that process.
I would say direct translation is Korean Wave.
But what we're talking about is, sure, the food, the culinary revolution, as we pointed in Korea World.
The cultural, the arts, the music.
It is a wave that is sweeping through.
Not only it expands outside of Korea.
And the impact. And Matt puts it beautifully,
you do the whole Indiana, size of Indiana.
I've heard it like recently.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And the impact that it has.
Yeah, for a country that's the size of Indiana,
that has 50 million people,
I would say the influence that Korean food
and Korean culture has in the world is outsized.
I mean, it is incredible to think about.
In East Asia, in Southeast Asia, in America, in the world,
everyone knows about all the K-pop songs.
They know the K-dramas.
Are you a Woo fan?
Do you watch Attorney Woo?
That show on Netflix?
I've never seen, I've never really listened to K-pop,
and I've never really dabbled in K-dramas.
But maybe I will after this podcast.
I'm big on a Korean reality show right now.
Oh, really?
And you could probably potentially guess.
Oh, Physical 100.
Physical 100, baby.
I've seen Physical 100.
I had to take a wild guess.
Physical 100 doesn't count.
What?
It's not a K-drama.
It's a Korean drama.
It's a Korean show.
That's part of Hallyu, though.
It is.
Okay, fair, fair, fair.
They wouldn't do that in America.
And if they did that in America,
the show would absolutely flop because it would suck. That was a great show.. It is. Absolutely. Fair, fair, fair. They wouldn't do that in America. And if they did that in America, the show would absolutely flop
because it would suck.
That was a great show.
That was a great show.
It's the amount of reaction shots
from people that they show per thing.
But it's like very Korean.
But not only that,
I've dove deep now
into the Korean sporting culture behind this.
I'm involved in all the Reddit threads
about the drama.
But America, right?
All of our highest paid athletes
are football players
and basketball players, right?
Sure.
In Korea, they have,
what's the wrestling called?
Like Sriram?
Oh, yeah, Sriram.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like you have wrestlers,
you have track and field athletes,
you have pro crossfitters,
and they're all sort of
in the same realm
and they're all competing
against each other.
We couldn't have that in America
because all our best athletes
are already making millions in the NFL. Oh, my God. But back to. We couldn't have that in America. No way. Because our best athletes are already making millions
in the NFL.
Oh my God.
And but back to the wave,
you know,
the idea that all of this
culture is hitting,
you know,
the shores of America,
you know,
as a tidal wave,
it's the food is getting
wrapped up in it.
So I think the K dramas
are highlighting kimbap
and highlighting,
you know,
jay pokum and dishes
that we really love.
And it's all kind of
translating to having
this major moment
in like LA, New York, Atlanta, Georgia, all around America. So it's really kind of translating to having this major moment in like LA,
New York,
Atlanta, Georgia,
all around America.
So it's really,
really like part of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Where did you grow up?
I grew up in West Michigan.
Kalamazoo.
Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I grew up in Kalamazoo.
So I feel I didn't really
experience Korean food
until I went to college
in Madison
and my friend Jason
kind of introduced me
to Korean food
and that was like
the start of my journey.
But yeah,
we didn't have a lot
of Korean food but guess what? Now in Kalamazoo there's two Korean restaurants, and that was like the start of my journey. But yeah, we didn't have a lot of Korean food.
But guess what?
Now in Kalamazoo, there's two Korean restaurants.
Right on.
It's pretty cool, yeah.
I mean, Nicole, you grew up in Los Angeles.
Yeah, born and raised.
So you were probably going to Korean barbecue from like a very young age.
Oh, for sure, yeah.
We've been going since we were like, what, like 14 years old.
We would just get our allowance and just go to KBBQ.
I actually, before the Korea World Party, I had Korean barbecue the night before, and I was like, oh, man, I'm going to go to this partyq i actually before the the korea world party i had korean barbecue
the night before and i was like oh man i'm gonna go to this party you did oh yeah and i was telling
myself like damn i had korean korean food already but i didn't even care because there's so much i
use so much uh korean food and korean influence in my cooking at home a lot of the time i always
have like gochujang at home I have a ton of stuff at home
just to make Korean
or Korean inspired
food at home
so I do find myself
cooking a lot of foods
that are reminiscent of it
which is why
I never get sick
and tired of it
you just described
the Korea world wave
which is like
you attend one of our parties
you read our book
and like
you're going to be eating
at a Korean barbecue restaurant
you're going to be cooking
with some of these ingredients
I actually showed up I had 14 friends at a Korean barbecue restaurant. You're going to maybe be cooking with some of these ingredients.
Absolutely.
I actually showed up.
I had 14 friends at a spot called Prime Barbecue downtown.
And I showed up after they were almost done eating, but they still had all the food on the table.
And it was, is it Yukhoe?
Oh, I love Yukhoe.
I showed up too.
I was a little drunk.
I had to go to another party and meet up with them.
And I think I ate a full pound of beef tartar. How do you do that?
I mean, proteins, gains.
No, actually it was.
But I mean, that kind of leads me to another point.
Like, Korean food, it seems incredibly healthy, right? We talk a lot
about fermented foods.
You know, kimchi itself
is like one of the emblematic
obviously dishes in Korean culture.
And now you're seeing that at like the Erewhon
and all that yeah
i mean i think it's just naturally uh probiotics fermentation it's like i also think i don't know
many i don't think korean food is like very bread heavy like there's no it's not like europe and
there's like a beautiful bread like italian food french food um so rice i would say is but mostly
it's a lot of vegetables as we grow like it's kind of the
land impacts the food and the culture and that we don't have a lot of meat like land to raise cattle
and so we have a lot of vegetables and and we ferment things and you know you know quite frankly
70 years ago like it the country kind of hit a reset with the Korean War. So give a country 70 years to like kind of not only come back to status quo,
but, you know, to be one of the world powers.
It's like pretty incredible.
And I would say, you know, Korea is a peninsula.
So there's like water everywhere.
And so the seafood is really important.
Like seafood is like fundamental in the culture.
You know, the seafood stocks is like essential in most of the times in Chinese.
And to be honest, also temple cuisine, which we cover in Korea World is, you know,
not what you're going to see on Netflix.
Like that one chef has done a lot of work and that's great,
but there's so much more to say about plant-based cooking in Korea.
We spent time at a temple down in Angelado.
And, you know, we found this really cool thing.
We found these like workaday chefs cooking for the monks.
And, you know, they were like doing,
we had this cold broccoli salad with tenjun mayo.
So like tenjun is a brown tub you find at H Mart.
It might've had some eggs in there.
It might've been regular mayonnaise.
No, it's vegan mayonnaise.
Vegan eggs.
The point is, it's a little more flexible
than that like chef's table temple food.
And there's a huge movement in Korea around temple food
for wellness, for mindfulness, but also like the food is really delicious too. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, you mentioned
something and I believe it was actually an old interview that you did with series. It's about
the way that Korean food has been in America for a long time. But like Duki, you said, you know,
you went home and your mom was like, we're only eating Korean food, Korean food, but it didn't
exactly get the like Panda Express treatment, right? You have all of these
fusion Chinese-American,
Italian-American, Indian-American
dishes, but Korean food
didn't really get that, or did it?
Are we seeing that now?
What do you think? You've really seen it. I'm Korean,
so it's really tough to be like, hey, let's look at Korean food.
This just called food.
For Matty, he's a journalist,
he respects the culture, he is a student of the game. I'm not a super fan. I mean, that's all I gotta say. Matty, he's a journalist. He respects the culture.
He is a student of the game.
I'm not a super fan.
I mean, that's all I got to say.
I mean, it's true.
I'm a fanboy.
I'm like the number one fan.
I wear the hat.
I wear the T-shirt.
I wear the sweatshirt.
You're army, but for Korean food.
Army for Korean food.
I mean, back in the 80s,
Korean food was a for us, by us cuisine.
The restaurants weren't marketing themselves
as really for Westerners.
It was more for the Korean populations in the Korea towns.
LA is such a great example.
You drive down Olympic, you can still see so many of these old school places still operating.
Now, gentrification has happened in places like New York, where 32nd Street is now all
about like cosmetic stores.
And we've lost all these great restaurants.
But frankly, it's been only in the past five years to 10 years where the chefs who run
these restaurants, the generations have turned over.
Younger folks have moved in.
And there's been a sense of marketing back to hell you, like, thinking, okay, well, Korean culture is big.
We're going to make this restaurant very modern.
And, like, now you're finding Korean restaurants in all over the country.
They're, like, some of the most modern places you're going to find.
They're in spaces that look like cafes.
They look like bistros.
They look like coffee is amazing in Korea.
So there's been this, this like movement towards marketing better. And like really, again, back to a culture of only 50 million people doing all this work to make Korean food
truly the biggest food story in America right now, writ large, writ large.
Doogie, you were the executive chef at a place that I think meant a lot to both of us. Growing up and being young in L.A., Kang Ho Dong Paek Jong, right?
Tell me about the way that Korean barbecue specifically has influenced the way people eat in America.
Because that's obviously the first thing that we think of.
That was my first exposure to Korean food.
Same, same, same.
Oh, really? Awesome.
I mean, yay.
Like, I think for me, like Korean barbecue,
like we said a little before,
for me, it's just food, right?
But I do have to,
especially with writing Koreatown 10 years ago,
really having conversations with Matt,
you start like taking a step back
and analyzing your food,
which you'd be like,
hey, if you guys wanted to analyze, I don't know,
a hot dog and a burger, like I'd never think about it
on a day-to-day basis or a sandwich or a hot dog.
Yes, we think about it a lot.
But for me to think about it, and I did,
especially when we ran the Korean barbecue restaurant
for, I did it for about three, almost four years.
And I think there's so many elements outside
of just the food, the convivial nature.
Hey, you're sharing from one place.
It's being cooked in front of you.
The interactive element of it.
It's a never ending, at least for our experience, it was a never ending.
Like it's this cut.
It's that cut.
This is with marinade.
This is without marinade.
I think there's a lot of like in terms of senses, there's no like resting of the senses.
Whether that's just like, hey, pour me. You you know even our drinking culture is very like hey very it's weird
to pour for yourself it's actually like kind of like everyone just stops like why are you pouring
so it's always about the people and the community element of it and i love the convivial nature of
korean food or just more specifically the korean barbecue experience yeah yeah when i was in
college i went to uc santa barbara for two years and transferred to ucla but when i was at sb uh
lived with a korean dude and we used to pack like 12 people into two cars somewhat legally and drive
down to la for the night and we used to go to uh we would drink like makgeolli all the time
but like you said it is it's more fun man you don't do that at the outback steakhouse you know
what i mean like i mean i'll order your steaks and that's it but then it's kind
of like what do we eat what do we want to eat not what do you want to eat it's kind of like
what are we eating all together because we genuinely are eating like the same soup we're
gonna eat the same meat and sharing hey pass me that lettuce wrap so yeah I think I didn't think
about it growing up I was like this is just how we eat. And then realizing and studying…
Going to culinary school…
Learning from Matt too.
It's like that's not always the dining experience.
Josh, you had a KBF.
You had a Korean best friend in your life.
So if we write about this in the book…
What's this?
Shout out.
Shout out Dae-sun Kim.
Shout out.
So everyone we joke about…
But it's actually very true and important.
Everyone I feel who has like life and has like a a lot of friends has a Korean friend in their life.
And that Korean friend is often very proud and very cool about sharing culture.
So taking you to the restaurants and explaining the nuances of Korean food.
And I think if you look, all the listeners and viewers have a KBF out there.
So listen, you got to like hug your KBF.
Sounds weird. Jiho Kim. I'm not your KBF. Nicole has a KBF out there. So listen, you gotta like hug your KBF. Sounds weird.
Jiho Kim.
I'm not your KBF.
Nicole has a KBF.
Can we clarify?
Everyone's just shouting out their KBF.
I had a KBF.
His name was Jiho Kim
and he was my friend in culinary school
and he taught me so much about Korean food.
But I'm not his KBF.
That's what people,
contrary to popular belief,
everyone's like,
oh, you guys are…
We just met over there.
Matthew?
Yes.
But Jason O is my KBF.
He was my friend in college.
He lived with us
for a while in New York
when he was in medical school.
He is the guy
who took me around
and explained
other restaurants.
Sure.
Was like definitely
correcting my pronunciation
which I love
and that's like the best thing
is like,
okay, yeah,
it's not gochi jangs.
It's like other words.
Sure.
I think it's just like
it's a real gateway into Korean culture when you have a K. Sure. I think it's just like it's a real gateway
into Korean culture
when you have a KBF.
Absolutely.
Did you have like a white guy
who was like,
hey, here's craft macaroni
and cheese.
Matthew Joshua Warbog
taught me a lot about
non-Korean food.
Yeah, Ashkenazi food.
You've learned a little bit
from that.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry.
You've had the gefilte fish?
You like the gefilte?
Gefilte fish isn't too bad.
Beautiful.
Anything but Korean. Ashkenazi kitchen strays. As we travel, we've been traveling for I'm so sorry you've had the gefilte fish you like the gefilte gefilte fish isn't too bad beautiful anything but
as we travel
we've been traveling for
maybe more than two weeks now
yeah yeah
and obviously
I think when people are like
oh you guys want Korean food
like we don't want Korean food
and we go to LA
we're like
where are you going to
that Korean restaurant
we're like
sometimes we want
a good slice of pizza
you know
that'd be nice
I made a giant tub
of chopped chicken liver
for Pesach the other day
I'm out here doing my part are you doing so what kind of wine are you putting in that'd be nice. I made a giant tub of chopped chicken liver for Pesach the other day.
I'm out here doing my part. Are you doing, so what kind of wine are you putting in that?
Are you going to put sweet wine or put dry wine in there?
Sweet.
I did like a sauterne or something.
Oh, yeah.
Sauterne in there is nice.
Interesting.
I think chopped liver is underrated.
I mean, sorry, this is just.
No, this is the podcast.
Yeah, yeah.
A small little tangent.
Chopped liver is Ashnazi food, the greatest food.
I mean.
No.
Sorry. Is it top 35 in the world? food the greatest food? I mean, no. Sorry.
Is it top 35 in the world?
Sephardic is coming in to say no.
Sorry, guys.
Sephardic is coming in hard.
Sorry, gonna have to say no.
Labneh and zaatar and sumac.
Yeah, there we go.
Just showing off now.
Just showing off.
I was gonna ask you guys, how do you feel about places like Trader Joe's,
like capitalizing on frozen Korean food, like the frozen H-Mart Korean kimbaps and stuff like that?
How do you guys feel about those?
Can I be honest?
Yes.
I've never had it.
Really?
Have you had it?
I've had it.
We just wrote a big piece on Taste about Trader Joe's stealing IP from like founders of color.
Sure.
Let's just be clear.
I'm not a huge Trader Joe's fan.
Sorry, guys, if it's sponsoring the show.
But I would say
outside of that
I just had to recognize that
you know what
I think it's fantastic
that Korean food
like look at
you go to the
quote unquote
ethnic food aisle
and you know
right now
and Dookie has a great story
like it's changing
the dynamic of the
ethnic food aisle
has changed tremendously
I think you have a good
anecdote about that
yeah
do I?
no
just toss it over
he's seen it up for you you know how the the goji
like how basically a goji john used to be just one like literally if you go to like a mire in
it's a great point i think as a korean like how do i feel about as forget the chef part forget
the co-author journalist part of it is as a k Korean, it's cool. Like, it's like,
when you go to Trader Joe's,
I went because I wanted,
I was like,
it's over the trend now.
I was like, great, I'll go now.
And they were sold out, right?
They're always sold out.
Yeah.
It's like a point of pride,
more so than like,
sure, BTS and the Emmys,
the Emmys, the Oscars for the Parasite.
Yeah.
Super like proud moment, moment obviously how could we
like is any Korean
mad at that
I don't know
but for us
like the people
that know Kimbap
right like
there's gonna be
some family
in the middle of Kansas
I always use Kansas
me too
I always use Kansas
I'm gonna go to Kansas
one day
be like
oh it's great
exactly
when I think of America
I just think like Kansas
yeah you're not the only one
Wichita the center
of food in America.
That's the center of the USA.
And if they're talking like, wow, I had kimbap for the first time.
And through whatever means.
Through Trader Joe's, through Costco.
Like Costco has bibigo, dumplings, CJ.
Hello.
Got that CJ money last week.
Like that's…
If there's any introduction, right?
Whether that's bulgogi.
We had a recent conversation of like, hey, do we want to talk beyond Korean barbecue, bulgogi, like the ABCs.
I'm like, I don't care if you know the ABCs or the – it doesn't matter.
At least we're talking about it.
And as a Korean, it's just a point of pride, to be honest.
Like we're so proud of it.
To put a point on the ethnic food aisle, truly it used to be one gochujang.
And now there's like four or five.
Ten jeons as well. Different formats, different sizes. And I think, you know, H-S now there's like four or five. Ten jang as well.
Different formats, different sizes.
And I think H-Smart has done such a great job.
They're not sponsored by us.
Maybe they can in the future.
I feel like it's definitely a great example of how Korean food is really infiltrated the way we cook as Americans.
Nicole, your point is really sound.
Like using these products, and Mythical, you guys always are thinking broadly about using an international International pantry it's like Korean pantry is incredible to cook with Ritlar all around all around the world
Yeah, if they start vaccinating or massage their Trader Joe's I might freak out
Yeah, how do you feel about that?
Do you feel like would that be like a point of pride or would it be like you know it'd be interesting
I think they'd be a lot of online taste tests
My mom versus Trader Joe's
and I think it would blow up.
Trader Joe's, do it for our content.
We gotta get Shala in here.
I don't know.
I mean, when I see it,
I think once I see it like IRL,
then my emotions will fall into place.
But right now,
I think I'd be pretty proud too
to see that in the world.
Yeah.
You mentioned like Korean barbecue,
bulgogi being like the entry points
what do you think
are like other
Korean dishes
that people
should know about
who haven't maybe
been exposed to a lot
of Korean food
who never had their KBF
yeah
I mean we just talked
about kimbap
I mean you can get
a trade joke
accessibility is
we can't help you out
much more than that
and you know
like dumplings
mandu
is what we call it
like with the
beef bulgogi i'm not saying it because they paid me last week it's really actually great like it's
actually one of my favorites sure and it's something that you can get kimchi at costco
right and i think that's it's a good start to it and and dabble in and don't it's not just about
korean food like even costco even traded joe's like the ethnic food like we talked about like go crazy with it
right
stay
like
my whole thing is like
you have a certain
amount of meals per day
quite frankly
today we didn't have
a great lunch
it happened
we gotta talk about
this sandwich shop
down the street
in your studio
we won't name them
but we're like
we wasted a meal
the famous one
I know
the reviews were
misleading
that place was not…
The only thing about it is the food doesn't taste good.
The food does not taste good.
Yeah.
They don't season anything.
But it's great.
Yeah.
Rough hang before hanging out.
And that's why I feel like we wasted a meal.
Right?
And that's how I look at it.
I was like, I have a certain amount of meals left in my life.
I don't know how many.
God willing, he's gonna…
Hopefully, it's a lot more than…
You know what not?
But I always…
What I mean…
Going back to that thing. Like… Why not put some… Put some flavor in there. Right. Different things. willing he's gonna hopefully it's a lot more than you know whatnot but i always what i mean going
back to that thing like why not put some put some flavor in there right different things you might
not like it or you might really find something that you love my great gateway dish is gamjatang
now gamjatang is a good dish and you have gamjigol here on olympic in la but it is pork neck
potatoes and wild sesame seeds or perilla seeds with large perilla leaves with a pork stock.
So, like, to me, that's not really a kimchi flavor profile.
There's no gochujang in it, really.
It's like a porky, peppery.
It's black pepper, of course.
I forgot about that.
And it's like a Mexican pozole.
It's a version of it.
It kind of, like, transcends a lot of cultures.
So, to me, Korean food is, like, all about these, like, different, like, styles of dining and also dishes that kind of aren't like the traditional sweet kalbi.
And like in our books, Koreatown and Korea World, we write about it very frequently.
Yeah.
Nicole, what is like the best Korean food experience you have ever had?
I'm curious.
Like what was the moment where you were just like, oh, this is the greatest thing.
Oh, man. Are you angling it? So many. I know. I'm thinking. What was the moment where you were just like, oh, this is the greatest thing I've ever eaten?
Are you angling it?
There's so many.
I know.
I'm thinking.
I'm going into my brain and thinking about all of the Korean food I've had in my damn life.
Well, I find myself going to Gardena a lot, surprisingly.
So my sister lives in Marina del Rey and her husband works in Gardena.
So what we do is it's me, my mom, my dad, my sister, my brother, my brother-in-law,
my sister-in-law, my niece, and my nephew.
We all mob to Gardena.
And we go and we sit at this place called Yellow Cow.
And we sit there and it's just the best.
My dad eats…
My dad has a very sensitive stomach, so he doesn't eat everything.
But at Yellow Cow, he eats everything.
All of the banchan.
He eats all of the food. it's korean barbecue it's just it's just so versatile and it's just easy to eat and it's a crowd pleaser so i love meals that are crowd pleasers where everyone
from like a nine-year-old to 60 year old can just sit there and enjoy the food yeah so i'd say that's
probably my most memorable korean food experience how about you, Josh? What do you think?
I remember going to Seonnongdan in LA.
And it was at 2 in the morning.
And there was a 45-minute line.
I was there with just one other friend, not the KBF.
He's actually Greece's national record holder in the shot put.
So he and I were like, actually, right?
We were like, we'd gone out drinking after just a day of lifting.
And we're like, what is just the biggest, most satisfying food we can get?
We're like a giant bowl of carby Jim.
Yeah.
Right.
And, but we also got it with the oxtails in there.
Oh, yeah.
Extra meat.
Yeah.
Gotta.
And like the oxtails are shaved thin.
They're like fidget spinners, but we're like, you know, we're like smoking menthol cigarettes
with like Korean teens in the parking lot.
People are brown bagging. Honestly, people are brown bagging liquor.
You know, there's like a nightclub next door.
Dunson's Sa's nearby, which is in La Colcha late night.
Very classic.
And I feel like you got this great vibe in LA Koreatown after 2 a.m.
100%.
I mean, you can't repeat that anywhere.
It's such a scene.
And then we go in there, fully packed restaurant, super bright lights, and we just get this giant stone pot
just filled with spicy braised meat
just covered in like scallions, gochujang.
And that is to this day
like maybe the best thing I've ever eaten.
Like one of my favorite meals of my entire life.
I feel like Colby Jim is like technically difficult.
It's like a challenging dish to do,
especially at scale at a restaurant.
So I think this is something that we should point out.
Like Korean food is not like simple in many ways, especially a restaurant. Like it's a challenging dish to do, especially at scale at a restaurant. So I think this is something that we should point out. Like, Korean food is not, like,
simple in many ways, especially a restaurant. Like, it's a
long-braised short rib that has
been marinated with, like, the orchard fruits
and soy sauce. But then you gotta, like,
serve it hot and, like, you've got your potatoes
cooked perfectly in there. And I feel like this
is a great example of, like, the technical prowess
of Korean food. And you're the chef, you know, like,
how much goes into it. It's pretty amazing.
I mean, I always say, like, even when we're traveling for this book a lot for two two and a
half years um with alex lauer photographer incredible so it was just three of us honestly
i never lived in korea so i i immigrated here when i was one so i don't know korea so i'm
like the guy that i can speak korean so i'm like being the tour guy but i don't know where i'm
going either but it was more of just like going around and what we've noticed and so I'm like being the tour guide but I don't know where I'm going either but it was more of just like
going around
and what we've noticed
and so I'm learning
just as much
I was like
okay these dishes are familiar
I've had it
and one thing we realized is
and what Maddie mentioned is
there's simple dishes
I would like to say
Korean food is
simple
but it's not easy
and what I mean by that is
I think it is harder
even as a chef
and
as you guys will know you give a chef a pantry, he can mask it with a lot of things.
Okay, this is this.
I'll, you know, add seven different spices.
You won't, you can't even tell.
You give a chef three ingredients, it's all technique.
And in comparison, it's simple, right?
Sushi, it's simple.
It's three ingredients.
But it's all technique at that point i think korean
food has a lot of that has a lot of that finesse element to it too where you will know like bad
fermented kimchi like oh yeah and that's like a matter of like probably days then it's gone bad
from like great to bad so it's like very very important i think our book in our book korea
world we are all about both sides of the coin but But really, a lot of the home cooking for Korean food, it can be quite easy.
It's like stovetop cooking, like doenjang jjigae, for example.
You're building like doenjang, garlic, ginger.
Basically, in your pot, you're adding water, rice water, stock, and adding meat to it.
We have a really beefy one in our book, and it's like cuts of short rib, and you boil it for 15 minutes.
And then you serve it, and then you're good.
So think about
most western soups
it's like a long
long long
but this is like
really fast
you can do the same
with kimchi jjigae
with kimchi
and bacon
or pork
and stock as well
and Curran's not a fan
of like waiting
we're not really
we're like
what do we
let's go
yeah the food's still
on the grill
just bring it to the table
come on guys
let's eat bring the grill to the table oh yeah that's true just bring it to the table come on guys let's eat
bring the grill to the table
oh yeah that's true
bring the grill to the table
there's
I love this
a lot of people say the same thing
about Japanese cuisine
where they're like
sushi it's all
or
what is the
ennaka
they do
kaiseki
kaiseki
right
like Japanese food
is all about the seasons
and then you see the dichotomy
with like
yeah but also their 7-Elevens
have the best like fried food in the world I feel like a lot of the Korean food. And then you see the dichotomy with like, yeah, but also their 7-Elevens have the best like fried food in the world.
I feel like a lot of the Korean food right now, you're getting this dichotomy of like, you know, meats marinated with orchard fruits and cooked into stews with fermented ingredients.
And then you got the Korean corn dog and you got fried chicken covered in honey butter.
Fantastic.
Do you think that that stuff is going to sort of like infiltrate popular American food culture,
say, quicker than something like Panjang stew?
I mean, I would say on surface, like face value, probably, just because there's a familiarity.
Like, I don't even have to put the Korean part in it.
I can be like, hey, how do you feel about a corndog?
Great.
And how do you feel about a Korean corndog?
Which is, you know, it's got a sugar coating.
It's got the cheesy pull and whatnot. You put french fries and sugar on a
corndog, somehow making the most American dish
uniquely Korean.
It's not a hard sell, I would say.
And a lot of these chicken,
Korean fried chicken is not a new concept
to Americans in general. It's called chimak, right?
Yeah, chicken and beer.
So like, Americans like beer.
Koreans like beer. Not a hard sell.
So I would say in that terms, you don't really have to package it too much
and just be like, oh, this is our version of that.
And yeah.
I think it definitely has infiltrated now and I think it's a great gateway
because hopefully you do Chumac and you do some Korean barbecue.
But the next day or next week when you want to do more
and go to the AP level of Korean food,
you're going to maybe go and have bossam or have like maybe level yeah a little bit higher level but i feel it is a great gateway and we have
to celebrate anyone who goes to korean fried chicken restaurant but has like a little bit of
like moo kimchi like a little bit of radish which is like definitively korean and and that's an i
mean i love it i can't stop eating that when it's in front of you a bowl of radish you know it's
amazing so i think like hopefully more uh like, younger Americans who are, like, just starting their journey as a foodie are definitely going to start thinking, okay, wow, this food is cool.
Like, this Korean food is here to stay.
And, I mean, it's all, like, a net positive, truly.
Yeah, and as both of you said, it is the best in the world, and every other country has worse food.
That's right.
I'm clocking out.
I have one last KBF question.
This is mostly for Dookie.
My homie Daesung
used to come up behind me
when I wasn't expecting.
He'd put his hands
kind of between my legs
and rummage it around
and he'd say,
uh,
otobike?
Do you know anything about that?
Sorry.
Is that a real thing?
Do you know about that?
That might be a Daesung thing.
No, it is.
Koreans know what it is.
We gave you the nice version of it.
Let's just say that.
You can talk about it in therapy later.
I might have to.
All right, Nicole, Matt, and Dookie,
we've heard what you and I have to say.
A lot of people.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky opinions are rattling out there in the universe.
Well, it's time for a little segment we call...
Opinions are like casseroles.
It takes other guests to come on your show to make you realize how many weird little jingles you've made up.
It's so normal.
It's so normal to us.
I'm sassing.
Also, Josh, you were a little pitchy.
Oh.
Sister, I'm always pitchy.
Let's get into the first opinion, please.
Hi, my name is Nick from Michigan, a long-time listener.
My opinion is that while getting authentic food authentically the way it's supposed to be made is always incredible,
there's something super unique and fun and important about the melding of different foods from regions and cultures.
Okay.
Like doing chicken and waffles, but with Korean fried chicken and using like a spiced syrup,
or doing biscuits and sausage gravy but with
chorizo sausage.
Excellent, excellent
stuff. I like the accent.
I'm sensing it's like a little bit
West Michigan.
Maybe up towards... Kalamazoo guy.
Kalamazoo, maybe up towards like
South Haven, Grand Haven. That's what I'm thinking of his accent.
That was definitely a South Haven-y
accent right there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What do you guys think about that?
I completely agree.
I think it's…
We got that question a lot more maybe in the first book.
And there was like, what is Korean food?
And we're like, we can only…
You know, how dare we say to Chef Tory Miller of Madison, Wisconsin,
that him using a local like the cheese in madison wisconsin
in korean food is not authentic because yeah it is he cooks there he doesn't cook in seoul korea
you know and so i think for me i i love it myself i myself i'm a fan i'm fascinated by a lot of
things i'm weirded out by a lot of things like why would you guys add that and you taste it like oh
i see why you guys would add that and my thing is if, if it's – at the end of the day, is it good or is it not?
And if it's good, great.
I don't want authentic bad food.
I'd rather have not authentic really good food.
Yeah, and I think it also flexes creativity.
And we have to really respect the culinary arts.
And I think when a chef decides that they want to do like ddeokbokki but add a little bit of cream to it,
which is something that is big in Seoul and we have in our book, it feels like that's just invention.
And that's just like really making more delicious versions of more traditional cuisine.
And I feel like we can never hate on someone trying to, you know, be creative or take the next step.
Yeah, the question of when something becomes authentic or inauthentic is really fascinating.
And even if you were to use time as a scale, right?
One of my facts that will not leave my head
is that carbonara is a newer dish than chicken parmesan.
Yeah.
You know, like, so many Italians would come here
and be like, chicken parm's not authentic.
It's melanzana alla parmigiana.
It's like carbonara is,
it's like a weirdly fascist invention.
That's a vast overstatement.
But I'm saying like
people view Carbonaro
as authentic
and Chicken Parm as not.
But it's simply because
there is a diaspora, right?
And also cultures
have been changing
time and place
for literally forever.
And I think a lot
of the gatekeeping
around what is authentic
and not probably
had very good intentions.
Yeah.
And I think we are really
on the tail end of that
where people are like, hey, man, as long as it's good
and you're not being a schmuck about it.
Exactly.
Yeah, I think when you need to preserve culture,
you need to actually say that there is an origin here.
Korea is the origin.
But outside of that, gatekeeping beyond that
is kind of an impossible task, I feel.
Yeah.
My name is Nicole, and I love fusion food.
That's it.
Put wasabi in the mashed potatoes again.
My name is Matt, and we have a whole section of fusion food in our book, Korea World. YOLO. that's it. Put wasabi in the mashed potatoes again. My name is Matt and we have a whole section
of fusion food
in our book,
Korea World.
YOLO.
Life's short.
I love just chopping up
some kimchi
and putting it in my quesadilla
when I'm drunk.
Come on.
It's beautiful.
Who doesn't?
We're all just exposing ourselves.
Hey, lovelies.
I adore the show.
I adore you guys.
Call us lovelies.
Here's a not-so-hot take
that I have
somehow gotten a lot of backlash for
recently. In my instant
ramen, I like to add cheese.
And that's
a very common thing in Korea, but I
have been told that it is absolutely
disgusting and abominable.
But it's
absolutely delicious.
And I think that more people should adopt the mindset of don't knock it till you try it.
Right?
Anyways, love you.
Have a good day.
Lovely.
Ooh, a little air kiss at the end.
Nice.
We have great listeners.
We have a very intimate family.
I love it.
We're all lovelies.
That's like your fandom name.
I'm telling you.
It is now.
Our hotline was very sexy.
It's not a joke.
Oh yeah.
You guys gotta call it.
2AM line.
Probably.
Probably.
I mean on the…
I would say you guys are…
It's both right.
So there's no names I guess.
They're not saying their names I guess.
But…
This person didn't show their names.
Lovely.
I'm gonna call you lovely.
You're right.
It's delicious.
And then the person that was yucking
they're yum yeah it's good yeah i like that one they're right as well right and what i mean by
that is it might not be your thing you just might want like okay for i if i don't put anything in
there i don't put the cilantro they gave me i don't put anything some of my people are what
are you doing that's just broth i'm like yeah i just want to eat the broth sure i don't put anything. Some of my people are like, what are you doing? That's just broth. I'm like, yeah, I just want to eat the broth.
Sure.
I don't want to…
Some people with the ramen…
Ramen…
Might not want to put cheese.
But it might be really good for some people.
It's your preference.
There's no like…
I hope you're not getting too much of a backlash
where it's like bothering your day.
Yeah.
But like I get it.
Like…
And the beautiful thing about food is that
you might not like spice.
You might love sweet. You hate… He you might not like spice you might love sweet you
hate you doesn't really like spice like i don't like cheese right sure but we're all that's all
good you're you're right you're right you're right and i love the question it brings up korean
instant ramen which i think in ramyeon is the correct term for Korean style. And, like, it is a moment right now between Shin Ramyeon, which is obviously the kind of gold standard.
But then you've got Bulldog.
This, like, crazy.
Oh, my God.
Bulldog's taken off.
All over the internet.
Bulldog is everywhere.
And that's a Korean company.
And it's just amazing to see this, like, ultra spicy, like, kind of based around Bulldog, which is like fire chicken.
But it's, like, this version of it in in like a very very
easy to make form
and I think like
Korean instant ramen
is like on fire
and do you like
so does everyone
have you guys tried
bulgogi?
yes
you guys like it?
I tried the black container
yes
and I needed to eat
a banana afterwards
correct
Josh how about you?
I love it man
I love spicy noodles
I can't
I can't mess with it.
I really can't.
Yeah.
I hate it.
It makes me really uncomfortable.
I was like,
why do people eat this?
But, you know,
that's the point.
And I think that's
the whole point of food.
The fact that we could
have conversation about it.
And I like it that
we all don't like
the same things.
It'd be very boring.
It'd be boring.
Yeah.
I just feel bad
for the people
this person's
surrounding themselves with
I wish
I wish they weren't
backlash
that is like
they weren't so hard on you
because
girl put cheese on your ramen
yeah put cheese on your ramen
you don't need to listen
to the non-believers
you got four foodies
over here telling you
to do it
so live your truth
enjoy the cheese on your ramen
again life's short YOLO
I think that's just
the vibe for today
I think that I hate
when people
you're talking about not putting like the herbs in your food think that's just the vibe for today I think that I hate when people you're talking about
not putting like
the herbs in your pho
etc
that's like
if you go to
North Vietnam
it's typically
not served
with all that stuff
yeah
and so like
when a lot of people
are criticizing
people and food
others end up
like weirdly
catching strays
and a big thing
we made a video
we were cooking
it was like
during the pandemic too
so we're just trying
to make videos
showing people how to cook.
And I was like, you can just boil rice and then strain it.
We got a ton of people.
People were so mad at you.
Oh, yeah.
Wasn't that the whole thing with the internet and like strain?
They were like…
They were upset that people were like straining their rice.
Yes.
Yeah.
And they were like, no, you have to steam it and use the finger method.
And again, it was like a lot of white people in there. But like there are so many other cultures that don't steam rice. Yes. Yeah. And they were like, no, you have to steam it and use the finger method and this, and again, it was like a lot of white people
in there,
but like,
there are so many other cultures
that don't steam rice like that.
Persian people,
West African food,
Indian,
like,
you know,
there's so many different ways
to do things
and for anybody to get hung up
on this is the one way to do it.
Quick question,
cheese on ramen,
what are we doing?
What kind of cheese?
I want to get your take.
What are you doing?
You're doing cheese on ramen?
Craft American single, right on there. I don't of cheese? I want to get your take. What are you doing? You're doing cheese on ramen? Craft American single.
Right on there.
I don't care.
I'm not a cheese guy either.
People would think
that I would be
and I'm not.
No, I mean,
I personally,
I like doing like a pepper jack.
I think it's a great
melting cheese.
Oh, nice.
I'm a zero cheese.
I'm a keep it pure.
I mean,
I don't put anything
on my fuzz.
So what would I do?
We did do a recipe though
and this is during the pandemic
because I was cooking
with whatever I could find but we did like a French onion and this is during the pandemic because I was cooking with whatever I
could find but we did
like a French onion ramen
so we just caramelized
like four onions hit it
with the seasoning packet
shot of whatever liquor
you have put in the
seasoning packet
what else were we
supposed to do
I've heard like drunk
I've been drunk
I went drunk
all the events in life
you know but then when
you put the like you
know cheese on top and like broil it and that's that's a fun time.
Yeah.
Into it.
Into it.
Yeah.
Hey, Josh and Nicole.
First off, I just love your guys interaction and the relationship you have.
It's excellent.
Don't touch me.
But going to my question.
So I've got some like conservative eater friends.
Right. question. So I've got some like conservative eater friends, right? And like, here's me just
like loving like hot pot and Korean barbecue and like some like different ways of eating.
What's your guys' recommendations to like get my friends into that that are maybe,
you know, not so into like this different style of eating or trying different kinds of foods?
I have one. Yes. Honestly, I feel like shabu-shabu is probably the easiest
just because it's easy and you're just dunking meat in water.
And what's more conservative than that?
Nothing.
Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.
Yeah.
The flavors aren't too, they're not too competitive with one another.
They're not too crazy.
It's just a boiling pot of water with beef
and whatever vegetables you want.
And I feel like
that's pretty simple.
Yeah.
Very approachable.
I don't have a lot of friends.
I don't have a lot of friends
like this.
I'm your friend.
No, conservative eater friends.
Oh, you don't?
I tend to not have any
friends like that.
No, so I guess
it's tough for me to write.
I think for conservative eaters,
it's like fried rice.
Like if you've got
like flavors
that maybe are a little more challenging,
if you add rice and oil and fire it up and get a little bit of that wok hang
and stuff going on, it's going to taste like fried everything
in an American's Love Fried show.
Add a little oil to it.
To me, it's like frying it up is going to maybe bridge that gap a bit.
Korean fried chicken?
I don't know.
It's fried chicken, y'all.
What are we talking about
like how do you hate
I have
I have not met a
person that
that hated
fried chicken
or Korean fried chicken
yeah
but also I just don't make friends
with people that don't eat fried chicken
that's right
that could be a self filtering thing
yeah
that's right
I think you gotta like
find the commonality
in the food that they do like
yes
I remember taking a friend
who I thought was a picky eater
to a birria de chivo restaurant.
And so, you know,
a lot of little goat bones in there.
And I just watched this dude
ask for like sour cream
at like a legit taqueria, right?
And I was kind of scared.
And then he like cracks
the goat neck bones,
goes and slurps out the marrow.
He's Nigerian.
So he grew up eating
like goat pepper soup.
So he knew what he was
getting himself into.
It wasn't that he was picky.
It was just he had the foods that he was used to.
And one of them had to be, you know,
goat marrow in spicy broth. And so
birria was the exact crossover.
So find what things they do like and
it probably is fried chicken. Think about format too.
Format is it, like if people don't like meat
on the bone, find a version of it without bones.
If people don't like the smell
of a Korean barbecue and they don't,
some people are really adverse to smells, you know, like go to a Korean barbecue with like those fancy vents, you know, like think about the diner and format.
You can really sell lots of cuisines, especially like some people are like scared of like going into like those little like darker places that are like a little like, you know, like less polished dining rooms.
So just think about your – the vibe, I guess, the environment.
That might be a great way to get your more conservative friends involved.
Good point.
Hey, you two.
Zach Willard here, amateur food scientist.
I have just so many convictions about food for someone who will eat anything.
I don't believe any food is inherently bad and that any food can be made to fit someone's taste.
But anyway, the conviction I'm here for is a discovery that I just made,
and it's that instant coffee with a sprinkle of salt and cinnamon
and a little dab of butter friggin' slurps.
It removes that astringent quality that turns people off from instant coffee,
and the newfound sweetness and richness will make you a sewer drink.
Anyway, try it out.
I hope you like it.
Love you.
Bye.
This dude has 10 cups of instant coffee deep right now.
He's had it.
He had a lot of it. High in his own supply. Okay. This is just bulletproof, but sexier. I'm down. Love you bye
Okay, this is just bulletproof but sexier
Only comment on that I'm sorry, and I'm not a Gen Z person It's cuz I just got corrected on it for my Gen Z and these are my team members, huh?
music slaps food smacks
Slaps.
Food smacks.
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
You're so right.
I refuse.
I just.
I'm a language descriptivist, not a prescriptivist. Damn it.
Zach, pour over.
Think about your coffee beyond instant.
Just saying.
You're a scientist.
Scientist of a chemex.
Go there, buddy.
I drink instant coffee.
And I'll tell you why.
So much of the world runs on Nescafe instant coffee.
And when I'm going to the gym and I don't want a belly full of liquid, but I do want
caffeine, I'll mix it into a sludge and then I slurp it with a spoon. I'm going to the gym and I don't want a belly full of liquid but I do want caffeine I'll mix it into a sludge
and then I slurp it
with a spoon
I'm here for the caffeine
but coffee is acidic
and incredibly bitter
so salt
and a little bit of fat
is going to counter both of those
you're just making
buffalo sauce baby
that's good
I love it
food scientist
is a food scientist
love it
what a perfectly unhinged opinion
yeah it was a great way
to end it
Matt and Dookie
everybody check out
their new cookbook, Korea World.
It is fantastic.
It's beautiful.
A lot of incredible recipes in there.
You guys got anything else to plug?
I think we're going to be on tour.
We're going to Dallas and Denver later in June.
And we're going to be in Atlanta as well.
So those three cities, check out our Instagram.
Our socials will be posting it.
Hope to see you out.
Say hey.
And, you know, like and subscribe this show, please.
I'm just going to do that call out.
I know it's coach for the host to say that.
So I'm just going to say as a guest, like and subscribe.
What a great show.
I love your show.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you all so much for stopping by.
We got new audio-only episodes every Wednesday.
Videos come out on Sunday.
Yeah.
And if you want to be featured on Opinions or like Castor Rolls, hit us up at 833-DOGPOD1.
The number again is 833-DOGPOD1.
You guys should call it.
You got to listen to the voice.
We're going to get sexy.
Bye, lovelies.
See you guys.