Korean Style Fried Rice

This may not be exactly what you would get if you ordered Fried Rice in Seoul, but it's still a pretty good fried rice recipe.

I'm not sure just how Korean-style this fried rice recipe is. I found the recipe on the Internet and transcribed it, but I didn't make note of the website from which I found it and I can't seem to relocate it. As I looked at a number of websites with various Korean-style fried rice recipes, I realize that there is no such thing as the definitive Korean Fried Rice Recipe. Fried rice among Asian cultures might have some generally distinct attributes but regionally, fried rice recipes are all across the board. It's easy to understand why. Fried rice was a way for families to use previously cooked rice adding whatever ingredients they had on hand. So there can be literally billions of variations on the same theme: cooked rice, fried in a wok with fat or oil, with added vegetables and proteins, seasoned with soy sauce first and then the sky is the limit.

It’s like hamburgers in the US following a general theme: bread, beef patty, veggies and a sauce of some kind. Beyond that, however, one only needs to put a McDonald's Big Mac along side a Five Guys Cheeseburger to understand not all hamburgers are created equal.

If there is a common denominator among Korean fried rice recipes, it's that most seem to contain meat (which can be beef, pork or chicken), an egg (be it fried on top or scrambled within), kimchi and gochujang. Kimchi is a traditional Korean side dish made of salted and fermented cabbage and other vegetables such as radishes, carrots, cucumbers and onions. Gochujang is a red chili paste made from fermented glutinous rice. So, if the latter two items are defining characteristics of Korean Style Fried Rice, then no, this is not really fried rice in the Korean style. That said, it’s a pretty good recipe that honestly, could have been a single dish meal on its own, but I served it along side the Kitchen Tapestry recipe for Korean Style Short Rib Tacos with Cucumber Slaw.

You can make your own long grain white rice for this recipe, or do what I did, which was to use a couple of 8-1/2 ounce pouches of microwavable Jasmine rice. Rice purists are probably horrified I used a microwavable rice, but that's what I had on hand, which brings us back to the humble beginnings of fried rice in the first place.

Korean Style Fried Rice

Korean Style Fried Rice
Yield: 4-6
Author:
This may not be exactly what you would get if you ordered Fried Rice in Seoul, but it's still a pretty good fried rice recipe.

Ingredients

  • 2 8.5-oz pouches microwavable long grain white rice, about 2-3/4 cups (like, Ben's Original Jasmine Ready Rice)
  • 4 slices thick-cut smoked bacon, cut into lardons (thin, perpendicularly-cut strips), or 4 oz pancetta cubetti
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 3 green onions, finely chopped with white and green parts separated
  • 2 cups frozen baby green peas, defrosted in the microwave
  • 3-4 tbsp low-sodium soy sauce (like, Kikkoman Less Sodium)
  • 2 tbsp oyster sauce (like Lee Kum Kee Panda)
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 1 tbsp Sriracha sauce (like, Huy Fong)
  • 1 tbsp toasted sesame seeds
  • 2 tsp garlic, finely minced
  • 3 tbsp butter

Instructions

  1. Blend the eggs well in a small mixing bowl
  2. Add the green parts of the green onion to the eggs and mix well.
  3. Place the butter in a cold wok and turn the stove heat to high.
  4. When the butter melts, add the scrambled eggs and quickly stir-fry with a chuan (wok spatula) until the eggs have set. This will happen very quickly. Remove the scrambled eggs to a nearby plate and set aside for the moment.
  5. Add the lardons or pancetta to the wok and stir-fry until browned and becoming crispy, 2-3 minutes.
  6. Add the baby green peas, garlic and the whites of the green onions to the wok, and stir-fry for a few seconds.
  7. Add the rice, soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil and the Sriracha sauce. Mix everything together in the hot bacon fat until everything is coated and heated through.
  8. Add the scrambled eggs back into the wok, and stir well to combine.
  9. Sprinkle the sesame seeds on at the last minute, giving the dish one final stir, and serve while the fried rice is hot and fresh.

Notes

  • Variation: Substitute 6-8 oz sliced shiitake mushrooms for the green peas. Stir-fry them in the bacon or pancetta fat for 4-6 minutes until beginning to brown before proceeding with the recipe.
Korean, Asian, Rice, Vegetables, Side Dish, Korean Style Fried Rice, Fried Rice
Potatoes & Rice, Asian & Wok Cooking
Korean, Asian
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