Hurry! Beat the #lunchcrew at @briercreekeats and get some #bulkogi or a #lunch #baguette with this great #foodtruck #lineup next week brining #chairs 🤓 @ncbulkogi @baguettaboutit #foosyefied (at Brier Creek Eats Alternative)
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from South Korea

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Norway
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Mexico
seen from South Korea
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
Hurry! Beat the #lunchcrew at @briercreekeats and get some #bulkogi or a #lunch #baguette with this great #foodtruck #lineup next week brining #chairs 🤓 @ncbulkogi @baguettaboutit #foosyefied (at Brier Creek Eats Alternative)
#bulkogi #beef #instafood #✨
New Post has been published on Taste Wine With Us
New Post has been published on http://www.tastewinewithus.com/asian-cooking-alternative-meals-for-your-dining-pleasure.html
Asian Cooking - Alternative Meals For Your Dining Pleasure
My son’s best friend is Chinese. This gives us ample time to sample various Asian meals. His Mom just recently sold their restaurant so is spending more time at home. This allows the kids to play together more often. My son is eating things that he would never accept from me. If his friends Mom or his friend offers it to him, it is the most amazing thing in the world.
My husband enjoys steamed rice (Japanese) and Bulkogi (said: bool-ko-gee) which is a Korean Barbecue Sauce. Just recently we ate at a Chinese restaurant in town and enjoyed our first bowl of Miso Soup. It is tofu paste soup with seaweed and scallions. We also tried our hand at making dumplings after seeing an Asian film about the first Chinese Marriage for Love. We did okay but the dumpling soup I had at the restaurant was the bomb as my son would put it.
If you take a look at the resource site I listed below, you will see a big difference in what the Asian world perceives to be a balanced diet. First off you will see that the bulk of the diet is Daily Physical Activity followed by rice, noodles, bread, millet, or other whole grain. Another thing you will notice is the amount of sweets and meat they eat is minimal compared to the American diet. Sweets are limited to a weekly treat while meat is only a monthly treat.
Going back to my son’s friend, I can tell you that the main part of his diet is noodles (Vietnamese Rice Noodles), rice, or some other type of carbohydrate. He rarely eats meat and the main poultry eaten is chicken with lots and lots of vegetables. He and my son love the broccoli dipped in heated cream cheese (kind of sweet).
Below you will find some recipes for some of the above mentioned meals but if you don’t feel up to cooking local grocery chains sometimes carry these foods in the Asian isle. (Bulkogi – Miso Soup – Rice Noodles – Ramen – Dumplings) Trader Joes actually has Bulkogi ready to cook. We tried this not too long ago and it was delicious, easy, and fed us for 2 days for just under $12.
MISO SOUP
1 Tbsp Hondashi (instant fish stock)
½ cup shiro (white) miso paste
8 o.z. tofu cubes
2 green onions, thinly sliced
5 cups water
Bring the water to a boil Add the Hondashi and miso paste and stir until miso is dissolved Add the tofu pieces and cook an additional minute before serving Garnish with green onion slices.
STEAMED RICE
1 cup Rice
1 cups Water
My rice steamer uses 1 cup of rice per 1 cup of water. Please see your rice steamers users guide for directions.
BULKOGI
6 lbs short ribs cut into thin pieces, about 2 ½ inches long
Marinade: (yields 1 ½ cups)
2 Tbls toasted sesame seeds
4 large cloves garlic, pressed
1 C soy sauce
2 Tbls sherry (or substitute sweet rice wine)
3 Tbls sugar
2 Tbls sesame oil
2 Tbls water
2 ts fresh ginger, finely grated
½ C chopped green scallions (green and white parts, mixed)
DUMPLINGS(from movie)
Round dumpling wrappers (cold food produce section where tofu is)
Mushrooms (button, pre-cut)
Scallions
Garlic
Round 1:
We heated up the mushrooms and scallions and garlic
We then filled the wrappers as per instructions given
We steamed dumpling
Outcome:
Okay – good taste – good texture – stuck to the bottom of the steamer
Round 2:
Same as above but this time we fried the dumplings
Then boiled them
Outcome:
Not so good – taste was okay but it was like a big jumbled mess of noodle and stuffing mixed with the grease of having fried them first – by far the least favorite way for us
Round 3:
Same as above however we just boiled them without steaming or frying
Outcome:
Again taste was okay but it ended up being one soggy mess will not try this way again
Round 4:
We purchased frozen Potstickers (vegetable) and boiled them.
Outcome:
Yum! No mess, not soggy, great taste, and very enjoyable.
OUR RICE STUFF by The Duggan Clan
1 cup of rice
1 ¾ cup of water
1 Tbs butter/margarine
1 ts salt
1 -2 Scallions
¼ cup Frozen corn
¼ cup Frozen peas
Bring water and salt to a boil
Add rice and bring to another boil
Cover and lower heat to a low fire
In a skillet, use a bit of butter/margarine to saute scallions, corn, and peas
When rice is cooked add to the veggie mix and saute a bit until well blended
Optional, add a clove of garlic or some pepper or other seasoning
Outcome:
This is very delicious and we’ve been eating this budget friendly meal for years. 1 bag of rice, 1 bag of corn, 2 bunches scallions and 1 bag of peas usually will last us 2 weeks.
MARINATED TOFU (BULKOGI EXPERIMENT)
1 Firm Tofu sometimes this goes on sale for $1.00 each (10 for $10) You can Freeze Tofu or keep it refrigerated until date on package. After you open it however you do need to eat it within 7 days.
1 Bulkogi sauce
Cut up the Tofu into slices
Pour the Bulkogi sauce over the Tofu being sure to cover it all (we found that ½ a bottle is the perfect taste for us but use the entire bottle if you don’t mind a little bit of a bite)
Marinate overnight
You can either eat as is or Bake the Tofu in the oven at 350degrees for about 20 – 30 minutes
Outcome:
Very delicious!!! By far one of our more positive experiments we have done. Low cost treat and high in protein when buying meat/chicken/turkey/etc. is out of budget. We just ate it plain with some Miso Soup as a side dish.
Hope this helps you in exploring various foods from other lands. If you have a friend who is Asian, ask him/her to help you cook up your own “special” meal.
Food Truck Party
So Duke had this food truck event thing yesterday for sophomores where the major food trucks in Durham all parked out on the Quad and students got a coupon for $6 off food from one of the trucks. The events started at 5 and was supposed to end at 7. Nyrle and I headed to the quad around 5:30 to grab some food, but when we got there the lines were huge. There were probably 100-200 people per line at all the food trucks. Luckily, Adeeb and Keke had already gotten in line at Bulkogi (the Korean food truck), so once Nyrle and I got our coupons we kinda just cut in line to where Adeeb and Keke were - about 1/3 of the way from the front. Alex soon joined us.
The line took forever to move though. By the time we ordered, it was 7ish, and we got our food around 7:15. There was a mandatory hall meeting at 7, but we all ended up skipping it waiting for food. I think part of the reason it took so long was that people would just sort of merge into the front of the line from the sides, and a ton of people just got their friends who were near the front to order for them. So although we weren't originally too far from the front, the fact that each order consisted of multiple dishes caused the queue to move so slow. I remember seeing about 20 orders taped above the grill where the Korean guy was cooking.
Yeah, so once we got our food, we all headed to Jiten and Alex's room and ate. I got Spicy Blkogi, and it was really good. It was really spicy too. I only got and spice level of 5 out of 10, but I was dying eating it. I can't imagine a 10 out of 10.