This is a copy and paste to a chef friend of mine that took a Korean cooking class. I have to do a ton of bul go gi this weekend and was wondering if anyone could help...
Thanks,
Cheffy
Hey Chef,
I have to do a bul go gi this weekend for a thousand people and I have never seen, tasted or done it before...
I talked to a Korean friend of mine who gave me the basis for the marinade etc. but I had done it differently somewhat, because I have to do such a large volume of it.
First, do you remember what cut of meat you used?
I took top rounds and have been marinating them for a couple days now, versus cutting it thin and then tossing it in the marinade. Maybe tomorrow I will partially freeze it, slice and then toss in the marinade and cook it on Saturday.
It appeaars to me, that the recipe I of yours that I have would make the meat somewhat tough, is this true?
(her recipe calls for very thinly sliced, shortly marinated sliced beef then stirfried)
My marinade was more in depth also, although basically the same...I used soy, water, fish sauce, hoisin, a ton of ginger and garlic, sesame seed, sesame oil, home made beef oil, chipotle peppers, palm and brown sugars and a little cumin.....man the marinade was awesome.
Now, my gut instinct was to sear the top rounds, lightly smoke them, and then slice, stirfy and add some sweetned sauce, similiar to the marinade...do you think this would pass??
Also, in the class you took did he offer some kind of dipping sauce or retoss the meat in some kind of sauce when they completed the dish...
Just wondering....
Thanks for any help you can provide...
Respectfully,
Chef Michael Hayes
http://restaurantedge.com/index.phtml?catid=47
http://geocities.com/yourcraving
Thanks,
Cheffy
Hey Chef,
I have to do a bul go gi this weekend for a thousand people and I have never seen, tasted or done it before...
I talked to a Korean friend of mine who gave me the basis for the marinade etc. but I had done it differently somewhat, because I have to do such a large volume of it.
First, do you remember what cut of meat you used?
I took top rounds and have been marinating them for a couple days now, versus cutting it thin and then tossing it in the marinade. Maybe tomorrow I will partially freeze it, slice and then toss in the marinade and cook it on Saturday.
It appeaars to me, that the recipe I of yours that I have would make the meat somewhat tough, is this true?
(her recipe calls for very thinly sliced, shortly marinated sliced beef then stirfried)
My marinade was more in depth also, although basically the same...I used soy, water, fish sauce, hoisin, a ton of ginger and garlic, sesame seed, sesame oil, home made beef oil, chipotle peppers, palm and brown sugars and a little cumin.....man the marinade was awesome.
Now, my gut instinct was to sear the top rounds, lightly smoke them, and then slice, stirfy and add some sweetned sauce, similiar to the marinade...do you think this would pass??
Also, in the class you took did he offer some kind of dipping sauce or retoss the meat in some kind of sauce when they completed the dish...
Just wondering....
Thanks for any help you can provide...
Respectfully,
Chef Michael Hayes
http://restaurantedge.com/index.phtml?catid=47
http://geocities.com/yourcraving





