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Home Health

Park’s BBQ ‘Magic Sauce’ Marinade and Bulgogi Recipe

by Yonkers Observer Report
September 7, 2023
in Health
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“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

“I call it magic sauce because you can use it for beef, chicken, shrimp, fish,” says Jenee Kim, owner of Park’s BBQ, the Los Angeles Times’ Gold Award winner for 2023.

It encapsulates so many of the flavors of Korean BBQ, with heady aromatics and nutty sesame oil. “Once you make this sauce, you can come up with five, six dishes,” says Kim. Kiwi is her secret ingredient, but she warns that if you use it, you can’t marinate the meat too long, no more than an hour.

At home, she marinates bulgogi, thinly sliced rib-eye, in the sauce then stir-fries the meat over high heat until cooked through. The marinade also works on LA galbi, or lateral-cut short ribs and as a sauce for japchae, a stir-fry of sweet potato starch glass noodles (dangmyeon) soaked in water for 15 minutes then stir-fried with julienned vegetables of your choice (Kim likes carrot, onion, red and yellow bell pepper). The sauce is also excellent for chicken, seafood or other proteins.

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