This bok choy kimchi salad is a quick and easy recipe when you need to whip up a kimchi substitute or when you want fresh kimchi.
In late fall, Korean homes make enough kimchi to last through the winter and early spring. By this point in spring, the kimchi has aged and tastes pretty sour. While old kimchi is great for dishes such as kimchi jjigae, kimchi jjim, kimchi jeon, etc., we crave fresh kimchi. This makes a salad-like kimchi, called geotjeori (겉절이), a popular spring dish.
Geotjeori is made in a small amount for immediate consumption without fermentation. Geot means outer or outside, and jeori means salted or pickled, so the name, geotjeori, implies that the vegetables are lightly salted unlike normal kimchi, which is fermented.
Geotjeori is typically made with napa cabbage or other varieties of cabbages such as young cabbage called putbaechu or spring cabbage called bomdong (봄동). Here, I made it with tender baby bok choy. In Korean, bok choy is called cheong-yeong-chae (청경채), so the name of this dish is cheong-gyeong-chae geotjeori.
Typical kimchi seasoning is used to make geotjeori. Every household makes it a little differently. My mother sometimes added sesame oil to her geotjeori, and some of my friends even add a little vinegar. So, adjust to taste!
This recipe is perfect when you want to whip up a kimchi substitute quickly or when you want fresh kimchi.
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Ingredients
- 1 pound baby bok choy
- 1-1/2 tablespoons salt
- 1/2 red onion thinly sliced
- 2 scallions roughly chopped
Seasoning ingredients
- 2 tablespoons gochugaru Korean red chili pepper flakes
- 1 tablespoon fish sauce
- 1 teaspoon saeujeot salted shrimp, finely chopped (or use more fish sauce)
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 1/2 teaspoon sesame seeds
- 2 teaspoons sugar or corn syrup or Korean rice syrup
- 2 teaspoons minced garlic
- 1/4 teaspoon grated ginger