That Time I Was On The Radio & A Recipe For Korean Tofu-Pork Patties

Cooking Korean food in North Iowa is often an adventure.

This weekend, Twin Cities food critic, James Beard award-winning writer and author Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl invited me to pop into her radio show/podcast Off the Menu to talk about food and community in North Iowa. She is one of the first food writers I ever followed and her writing inspired me to be curious about exploring our local dining scene. The invitation was very much an honor.

I felt like a North Iowan ambassador. We discussed ham balls, the low ceilings in the Frank Lloyd Wright hotel, Greek influence on our culinary scene, Casey’s gas station breakfast pizza, and North Iowa blogging community. You can actually download the podcast on iTunes later this week.

WCCO

Our conversation made me reflect upon the challenges that arise from having access to a smaller variety of multicultural grocery stores and food products.

On one hand, I can’t just make Pad Thai or vegetable korma on a whim. Obtaining the ingredients to make these dishes requires enough forethought to grow the ingredients (such as Thai basil) or purchase them online or while visiting a bigger city. Don’t try to find tamarind paste here, it’s basically impossible. On the plus side, I’ve learned how to be more creative and replicate certain flavors with the ingredients that I can find.

We may not have an Asian market or Indian restaurant in town, but friends continue to eagerly introduce me to their favorite food traditions and restaurants. Ham balls, pork burgers, pork tenderloins, loose meat sandwiches, old school supper clubs like Half Moon Inn in Clear Lake, Iowa, gas station breakfast pizza, it’s all been fun. As Deb Brown, the Executive Director of the Webster City Chamber of Commerce said, “We make magic out of small towns because we have to.”

Here’s a simple recipe for pork-tofu patties. I riffed on a recipe from The Korean Kitchen: Classic Recipes from the Land of the Morning CalmI served the patties with a soy sauce dip, marinated zucchini strips, steamed rice, and kimchi.

Korean Pork-Tofu Patties
Adapted from the recipe for Gogi Chun (Bean Curd and Pork Patties) from The Korean Kitchen: Classic Recipes from the Land of the Morning Calm 

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Ingredients:
1 package of firm tofu. Crumble, squeeze out in towel
1/2 pound ground pork
1 egg
Handful of finely diced onion
1 clove of garlic, minced or grated
1/3 teaspoon salt
Black pepper to taste
Panko break crumbs. Enough to bind mixture, about 1/2 cup.

Dipping sauce:
Soy sauce
Grated ginger
Crushed garlic clove
Brown sugar
Vinegar

Instructions:

  1. Remove tofu from package. Crumble with your hands. Wrap tofu crumble in a clean towel and squeeze out excess water.
  2. In a large bowl, combine crumbled and drained tofu with ground pork, one egg, handful of minced onion, minced garlic, salt and pepper.
  3. Add enough breadcrumbs to bind the mixture. Let the mixture sit for a few minutes before adding more breadcrumbs. It will tighten up as the breadcrumbs absorb the moisture.
  4. Form into small patties.
  5. Fry on each side in a thin layer of hot vegetable oil (I used peanut) until the pork is cooked through. Drain on paper towels and keep warm in the oven on a cooling rack set on a sheet pan until you are ready to serve.
  6. To prepare the dipping sauce, season soy sauce with grated ginger, crushed garlic, brown sugar and vinegar. I did not have rice wine vinegar, so I used a splash of plain vinegar.

10 Comments

  1. Monica Jertson Cateron

    I can’t WAIT to try this recipe!! My late mother in law made what she called Korean Meat Patties and of course, I never got the recipe. She didn’t make many ethnic foods, in spite of adopting 4 Korean sons, so sadly I never got much of a chance to appreciate Korean foods. I don’t know if this will be the same thing at all but it’s the closest recipe I have ever seen!!!

    • Jeni

      I’d love to know how your mom made her meat patties.

  2. Beth Ann Chiles

    These sound delightful! You rocked the radio yesterday, btw. I see you are your mother’s daughter. 🙂

    • Jeni

      Ha! I certainly am.

  3. Alicia Schmitt

    i can’t wait to download the podcast! It really is hard finding ethnic grocery stores around here. My sister in law married a man from China and they love making their own Chinese food so the lack of diversity in grocery stores is one of the reasons that’s keeping them from moving back. I LOVE a good pad Thai I’ll gladly exchange for some Iowa chops?! 🙂

    • Jeni

      As soon as I can get some tamarind, you are one for a trade:)

  4. Nick Lucs

    As a Clear Lake “weekender”, I truly believe North Iowa has the best ham balls – actually just some of the best pork. Kudos to the Clear Lake Fareway! 🙂

    • Jeni

      I’m not sure I’ve bought meat from the Clear Lake Fareway-it’s so close to Louie’s. I will have to check it out. I’ve heard from another person that they like Fareway’s ham balls better too.

  5. Donna Hup

    I’ve had to become creative too. Some have been fun and surprising successes. I’ve also had some major fails that taught me what not to use 🙂

  6. The Korean Diet

    Hi, we just want to let you know that we included this amazing recipe into our list of the 45 best Korean recipes which can be found at http://thekoreandiet.com/easy-korean-recipes/ Thank you for the recipe and we hope to learn more from you in the future.

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