A few weeks ago, Dana and I wanted to check out a new restaurant for part of Columbus's Restaurant week where a plethora of restaurants were offering 3 course meals for a great price. We ended up going to Gogi Korean BBQ because of all the Korean shows I had been binging and I reaaaaally wanted to have some sort of Asian food besides Japanese curry or ramen.
I think it was $25 or $30 for each of us: both of us choosing a grill your own meat option (different ones of course so we could maximize trying everything), Dana got japchae for an appetizer and I went with fried dumplings. I regretted my choice because as soon as I saw his japchae I recognized it as a dish a friend had before, and let me try some, that I LOVED. Japchae is at the top of my list of recipes to try at home.
Japchae image courtesy of PBS |
Back to this grill your own BBQ: neither Dana or I have much experience with Korean food- I've been heavily researching and learning Japanese cuisine and etiquette, the only thing I knew about Korean dishes is what I've seen in my shows: how there's normally a bowl of rice and people will have their bowl of a more soupy thing, and they'll use these big long spoons to put a little of both in the same mouthful, how there's more a large communal eating bowl in the middle everyone takes from to put in their own personal bowl, everyone drinks soju, etc.
BUT THIS RESTAURANT HAD THE LONG BIG SPOONS AND I WAS SO EXCITED. I've watched so many people eating using these spoons, and they're always so big compared to the actors'/actresses' mouths that I've been wanting to have one of these spoons for WEEKS.
Dana laughed at me when I was excited over the spoons, shared my story on watching everyone eat with them, and then again when I stole two spoons from the restaurant to use at home.... no regrets.
Cooking, cooking, cooking! Even here, not all the food on the table can fit in the picture! |
We're still not too sure on all the sides that came with it, there definitely was: an egg thing, something that resembled a spicy vegetable soup, pickled vegetables, rice, kimchi, bean sprouts, corn salsa, seasoned jalapenos, fish cakes, macaroni salad- there will be pictures below for you to see and guess which is which (it's not that hard). I want to have more Korean foods in my diet, even though Dana and I ate SO. MUCH. FOOD. it was all mostly meat and vegetables, and we didn't feel overburdened with grease or fat like an american meal would have made us. Neither of us can wait to go there again!
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