Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Korean comfort

Traditiona­l pork bone and potato soup packs a punch.

- By David Hammond Chicago Tribune David Hammond is a freelance writer.

Ask Koreans about gamjatang, and they may get a little emotional as they think back to their grandmothe­r’s version of this pork bone and potato soup.

Ask non-Koreans about gamjatang, and they probably won’t know what the heck you’re talking about.

“Gamjatang is probably in the top-five popular Korean foods,” says chef Edward Lee, who focuses on Southern cuisine at 310 Magnolia, his Louisville, Ky., restaurant, but grew up eating gamjatang with his Korean-American family. “It literally translates to ‘potato soup,’ so there’s a million variations. It’s basically made of pork spine or neck, potatoes and whatever leftovers you have in your kitchen.”

Gamjatang, like chitterlin­gs in the Southern United States, is a dish born of necessity that uses what others may toss in the trash. No one is going to argue that pork spine is a treasured cut of meat, but it was traditiona­lly used in this soup because that’s what people could get their hands on inexpensiv­ely.

“Pork spine was a throwaway,” Lee says, “and using it comes out of the tradition of whole animal cookery, before it was trendy. You can even put tails or trotters in there.”

Gamjatang’s must-have ingredient­s are pork bone and potato. There’s some variation in what else chefs and home cooks include, and different chefs argue more or less aggressive­ly for this or that additional ingredient.

Many recipes call for the pork bones to be boiled first, “a traditiona­l Korean technique,” Lee says. Chris Na, chef at Chicago’s Gogi, a Korean barbecue restaurant that serves an excellent gamjatang, says he always boils the meaty bones “to get rid of the smell,” the sometimes funky aroma generated by boiling pork.

In addition to pork bones, gamjatang also usually contains scallions, perhaps cabbage and other vegetables, cooked in a broth of garlic, chile peppers and seasonings. Many of the better bowls of gamjatang are topped with both perilla leaves and roasted perilla seeds. Perilla, like shiso, is a member of the mint family. It tastes a little like basil, with a citrusy applelike fruitiness; perilla seeds have a sesamelike flavor.

At Korean restaurant­s, gamjatang is often served with a variety of banchan (little bowls of pickled radish, kimchi, sesamedres­sed spinach and other palateperk­ing tidbits). Gamjatang is eaten with a spoon and either fork or chopsticks; both fork and sticks come in handy when pulling tender slivers of meat from the spine bone. After enjoying several bowls of gamjatang from restaurant­s and at home, we developed a protocol for eating the soup:

1. Don’t wear white to a meal of gamjatang, unless you’re headed to the laundry immediatel­y after dinner. It’s messy.

2. The stone bowl is very hot, and although the gamjatang smells fantastic and you’ll want to start eating immediatel­y, don’t. Give it a few minutes to stop bubbling and cool down.

3. Begin eating gamjatang by lowering a spoonful of rice into the bowl and letting it absorb the rich liquid. Then gingerly eat that spoonful before going straight for the steaming broth.

4. To make room to move around the bowl, remove some of the meat and bones to the side plate that’s traditiona­lly set next to the stone bowl.

5. Slurp carefully, there may be bone chips in there.

 ??  ??
 ?? MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE; LISA SCHUMACHER/FOOD STYLING ?? Vivid perilla leaves provide a vibrant background for a bowl of gamjatang, a Korean soup of potatoes, pork bones and plenty of chile-based spices.
MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE; LISA SCHUMACHER/FOOD STYLING Vivid perilla leaves provide a vibrant background for a bowl of gamjatang, a Korean soup of potatoes, pork bones and plenty of chile-based spices.
 ?? DAVID HAMMOND/FOR THE TRIBUNE ?? The components of gamjatang can vary from version to version, but all include potatoes and pork bones.
DAVID HAMMOND/FOR THE TRIBUNE The components of gamjatang can vary from version to version, but all include potatoes and pork bones.

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