Sunday, October 11, 2009

What is Vann listening to?

I know all of you are super curious about Korean music. Allow me to provide you some of the kpop that I've been exposed to via my students, the radio, passing cars, clubs, and mp3 players turned up too loud on the bus. These 2 songs are super catchy and way overplayed. And yes, I am a fan. enjoy

This is g dragon, the leader of big bang. Everyone will look like him in the year 2062. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOXEVd-Z7NE.

The boybands/girlbands are popular. They throw in some English lyrics for style. This was the first Korean song I heard.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFjP-OJ7Bh4

It ain't Judy Fu's

Last week for the Korean Thanksgiving (Chu Seok) we made dumplings (mandu). I watched this video on utube : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zECZXmDmHR0 and thought it looked easy.

Step 1 buy ingredients at store:
We went to our local grocery store to buy all of 5 things - mandu wrappers, meat, onions, tofu, and noodles. I think we left with about 11 things. We walked by the deli and thought about making kimchi dumplings - the lady wouldn't let us buy anything less than a WHOLE head of cabbage kimchi. We considered buying some panchan (side dishes) to go along with our mandu - the lady wouldn't let us buy just one, we had to buy THREE. We were going to buy one container with premixed/preseasoned meat - the lady suggested we buy pork AND beef.
------ so much food for so few people --------
Step 2 make mandu:
It went well - with the exceptional floppy mandu and lack of kitchen space (we made them at our dining table)

Step 3 cook mandu - fried and in soup:

Step 4 eat and enjoy mandu:

We forgot to add mushrooms and buckwheat noodles - making the our mandu's more like meatloaf balls with a thin noodle covering it. It was fun... but they aren't nearly as good as Judy Fu's dumplings.

Lessons learned:

one side dish is better than three, no kimchi is better than a whole head of kimchi, use a light hand when filling mandu with meat, Judy Fu's dumplings cannot be recreated.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Some things

Here's another update on some things in Korea:

Pizza in a cup! Pretty easy to understand.


There are animal cafes - where you can pay a little less than $5 to go and pet cute little doggies and kitties. Isn't he handsome!?

Everyone brushes their teeth after lunch to get rid of that kimchi breath. I also brush my teeth after lunch so that I don't offend the students with my breath.

Friday, October 2, 2009

We've been hiking

We've been on two trips hiking and plan on going hiking again this Saturday. When I read in "Frommer's guidebook to Korea" that the most popular Korean "sport" was hiking I didn't believe it. But now I believe that this applies to everyone in Korea. Everyone includes the following people and accessories: old and young, fit and seemingly unfit, hiking boots and high heels, people with heavy hiking backpacks girls with designer handbags, umbrellas for rain and umbrellas for sun. People really enjoy hiking and lucky for us fall is the perfect season for it.

Our first hiking experience was at Mudeung Mountain - just southeast of downtown Gwangju. We went with a few other EPIK english teachers and we decided on a trail named "wind" - we had a choice of "wind" or "rabbit". It was an uphill battle followed by a treacherous downhill trip-and-stumble. The viewpoint we stopped at was beautiful and the fresh air was a nice welcome from our usual city smell.

Our second experience hiking was much different. We went with two teachers that work at both of my respective schools (they are actually best friends) Ji Sook and Chan Yo. They're both very funny and outgoing. They picked us up at 10am sharp and drove us out towards Sunchan (I think) or maybe it was Gochuchang (which means red chili paste). We ate at a delicious restaurant that served us traditional Korean dinner - lots of side dishes and fish. V's favorite was the quail egg (mechuri al, al = egg mechuri=quail). And once we were nicely stuffed we drove a bit farther to a Buddhist temple for hiking.

The weather was a little rainy but for us it was comforting and really peaceful. The air was fresh and there was a little river that the trail followed for most of the way. We walking along a very flat trail until we reached our final destination. A hanging bridge. We walked up a large hill with steps and climbed up to this hanging bridge:

Eeek! It was scary for a number of reasons : it was really narrow, the metal was slippery with rain, there were tons of people on it so it swayed, and lots of people kept stopping in the middle of it. I'm not really afraid of hights but I kept picturing that scene in Indian Jones Temple of doom where they have to go across that bridge... oh and i kept looking down :( But we made it safely across and back.
Here are the lovely and talented teachers that took us:

V, Chan Yo, Ji Sook

One last picture :