Food news, restaurant reviews, and other tomfoolery.


Tidbits of Zen

July 22, 2008

Gazpacho Recipe by Anna Lee

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Written by: Daniel
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To tell you the truth, cooking was the last thing on my mind. It was a blisteringly hot early July day, the start of Korea’s infamous monsoon season. The air was punishingly humid, the houseplants looked near-death, and my two hard-working fans were failing to stir up even a decent breeze. For the 47th time I wondered why-oh-why we had thought we could make it through the summer in our new house without an air conditioner.

Another “ding!” in my inbox. A flurry of emails was going back and forth among some friends regarding our potluck lunch in two days. “I’m bringing curry udon!” piped one. “I’m making mapo tofu!” chirped another, from enviably air-conditioned luxury south of the river. “What will you make?”

My mind drew a blank. I didn’t want to go near the stove. I didn’t even want to look at it.
But then another e-mail popped into my inbox, this one from a dear friend that I hadn’t seen in ages. We rarely find the time to meet because she lives about 2 hours outside of Seoul, on a farm in Jecheon (제천). Her note instantly brought a smile.

How r u ? ^^Our farm has many vegetables.These days we have lots of organic tomatoes.I want to send you tomatoes…. ^^May I have your address?

Aaahh…. I thought, mentally savoring the juices. Gazpacho!
When 5 kilograms of luscious, vine-ripened tomatoes arrived by messenger the next day, this delicious summer-weather soup was the first thing on the menu. I like mine nice and chunky, so I reduce the tomato juice, stay away from the blender and use extra tomatoes.
Gazpacho Ingredients

3 humongous organic tomatoes, cored, seeded and diced
2 green bell peppers, cored, seeded and diced
2 small cucumbers, peeled, seeded and diced
1/2 onion, minced2 garlic cloves, pressed
2 teaspoons salt
1/4 cup vinegarground black pepper to taste
2 cups tomato juicea handful of ice cubes
extra virgin olive oil
Combine the tomatoes, bell peppers, cucumbers, onion, garlic, salt, vinegar and black pepper in a bowl
Add tomato juice and ice cubes. Gently mix it all up. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate at least 3 hours
Serve cold, drizzled with extra virgin olive oil.

——————————————————

Anna Lee / Annamatic is a designer with 8 years experience designing for print and web. When not designing, she make things and go places.

She is a NYC native currently living in a traditional Korean house in Seoul, with her husband and a few wilting houseplants.



About the Author

Daniel
Daniel Gray is a Korean adoptee that returned to Korean in 2005 because he wanted to try and find his birth mother and to learn about Korean culture. He started a restaurant review blog in 2007, www.seouleats.com, that became a local and international hit. He and his blog has been featured in the New York Times, Monocle Magazine, The Kimchi Chronicles, Bizarre Foods, Rudy Maxa, Olive Magazine, Euronews and much more. He now is a partner at O’ngo Food Communications (www.ongofood.com), which is a culinary tourism and consulting company that offers Korean cooking classes and restaurant tours to travelers. Their food tours and cooking classes are ranked as one of the top attractions in Seoul according to tripadvisor.




 
 

 

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4 Comments


  1. lunalil

    That looks reallly similar to my gaspacho recipe. Except I make mine very liquidy.

    Yum!


  2. Richard

    That looks really good.
    Im back in Africa again, and unfortunatley I only spent 1 night at my house during my vacation so I never had a chance to cook. I still need to try out that cherry reduction on pork. Maybe I’ll even venture to figure out a way to add brie…lol…oh I just had a thought. What about a pork loin “Wellington” that is stuffed with a cherry reduction sauce and your brie?


  3. Lori

    Also yummy: watermelon gazpacho! The recipe I use is at http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Watermelon-Gazpacho/Detail.aspx , although I leave out the jalapeno, cut back on the onion, and use lots and lots of dill as my herb. DELICIOUS.


  4. Daniel Gray

    watermelon and dill…intriguing.

    Richard. I feel that brie is not the best cheese for frying. it tastes off because the cheese is too subtle. I recommend a swiss or em-mantel because it has more body and a deeper flavor.



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