Saturday, December 17, 2011

I need to learn how to read Korean

The English translation on the bag of potstickers said "Kimchi potstickers". I assumed they were stuffed with some pickled Korean vegetables. Instead, it's a tasty mix of some sort of meat with tasty Korean vegetables. What kind of meat? I dunno, I can't read the Korean labeling!

So anyhow, that was my supper tonight -- steamed "kimchi potstickers" and tasty Korean veggies. Yum!

-- Badtux the Potstickered Penguin

6 comments:

  1. sType that Korean into Google Translator and see what breed of dog you had for supper. Or, it might have been one of Fang's distant relatives. LOL

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  2. Several times I enjoyed homemade Korean pot stickers. The most amazing thing and never have tasted anything close since.

    Ling Ling a type gotten here is better than what's had most places.

    How good were they and your dinner?

    BTW - There's a new cat on the block here.

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  3. Dave: Turns out it was the meat of the mighty tofu beast. Yeppers, what I thought was meat was actually Korean-style textured bean curd!

    One Fly: I can get homemade pot stickers any time by going to my local Korean restaurants, but dropping $20 a meal at Korean restaurants is something I'll do once a month, maybe, at most. These were as good as anything I've eaten at a Korean restaurant, and the rest of the dinner was just as good, those Koreans do know how to whip up nice spicy veggies! I think I've seen the Ling Ling ones you're talking about at Costco, but never bought them because they came in a bag the size of a football lineman and I woulda never eaten them all before they got freezer burned.

    Time for coffee...

    - Badtux the Needs-caffeine Penguin

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  4. Sometimes, it is best not to know...

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  5. Comrade, that's my philosophy regarding tacos bought from street vendors in Baja ;). Way I figure, knowin' what was in those suckers would ruin my appetite for eating some yummy goodies.

    But in this case, since what I was eating was the flesh of the mighty Tofu Beast, it's safe to ask :).

    - Badtux the "Don't ask don't tell" Penguin

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  6. I frequently buy veggie potstickers at the grocery. The bag has (in English) three sets of instructions for preparation. One is the traditional one. The one I use, though, is for boiling them, and it includes a line something like "be sure to use enough water that the product does not stick to the pot." WTF? !!?!?

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