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VegWeb.com  |  Recipes  |  Appetizers  |  Miscellaneous Appetizers  |  Korean Vegetable Pancakes « previous next »
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Recipe submitted by grundig7, 06/09/05

Korean Vegetable Pancakes

Ingredients (use vegan versions):

    1 cup vegan Korean Buchim pancake mix
    1 1/2 cups water
    miscellaneous chopped vegetables (onion, zucchini, scallions, mushrooms, etc.)
    extra virgin olive oil (or other light cooking oil)
    1 tablespoon sesame oil
    sprinkle of sesame seeds
    1/2 soy sauce

Directions:

This recipe is a lot like the scallion pancake appetizer that you find at many Chinese restaurants. You can buy the buchim mix at any Korean grocery store.  This is basically just a mixture of wheat flour, salt, vegan sugar, and baking powder.  So if you can't find a Korean grocery story near you, you can easily make the pancake mix yourself.

To prepare this dish, first chop up any vegetables you want to put into the pancakes.  I suggest zucchini, onion, scallion, enoki mushrooms, and even Korean kimchi.  Traditionally, the vegetables are cut into thin slivers or are diced.

Mix the water, pancake mix, and vegetables together in a bowl.  With a little olive oil or other cooking oil in the pan, fry the pancakes till brown on either side.  Over a medium heat, this should take about 5 minutes on each side.  Make sure the pancakes are quite thin.  If they are too thick, the inside will be goopy and the vegetables won't cook fully.  Properly cooked, these pancakes shuld be light and somewhat crispy, not thick and fluffy like regular pancakes.

Dipping Sauce:  Mix sesame oil, soy sauce, and sesame seeds in a small bowl.  You can also add dried and  crushed seaweed if you like.

Cut the cooked pancakes up into several slices (like a pizza).  Serve hot with dipping sauce.  I also recommend dabbing the pancakes with a paper towel to remove any excess cooking oil.

Makes: 2-4 servings, Preparation time: 15 minutes, Cooking time: 20 minutes


I've seen buchim mix in the stores before, but I'd like to try to make my own from organic ingredients. Does anyone know what proportions of wheat flour, salt, sugar, and baking powder to use? And, how much water?

Archived comment by: kokua
Kokua - I'd reccomend just finding a regular pancake batter recipe online and then steal the ratios and apply it to this recipe, that usually works for me when confused.

Archived comment by: mortuasum
I live in a Korean area, and there are variations on what the batter includes. Mine, for instance, has onion and garlic powder, baking powder, black pepper, vitamin B2 and flour (not in that order). A look at different Korean recipes sites will give other variations. I did see some without any onion and garlic, just flour and baking soda, so it will also be up to your tastes.

Archived comment by: sheDevil

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atomikkitty
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« Reply #1 on: July 10, 2006, 08:12:50 AM »

living in korea this summer, this is my favorite thing to eat at home.  i put in whatever veggies are handy and crumble in some tofu to the batter.  i also add either the red pepper paste, fermented bean paste, or some seasoned bean paste to the batter and it adds a lot of flavor.  ah, so good! 

also, a recipe to make the batter from scratch: 
1/4 cup rice flour (or all-purpose flour)
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup water, approximately
Few drops sesame oil
Dash white pepper
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prettyin_punk
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« Reply #2 on: April 04, 2007, 06:28:46 PM »

THESE ARE AMAZING  Grin! i always make mine with baking powder, sweetner, flour, water, and sometimes soy milk. i also bake mine in cupcake tins so i don't have to fry them.
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Lezly
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« Reply #3 on: April 23, 2007, 09:29:33 AM »

These are great! I served them with hot mustard & soy sauce. Slurp!
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animal_g
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« Reply #4 on: June 11, 2008, 01:08:36 PM »

these pancakes fill me with joy.
I used one large (not monster-size) zucchini,1/4 onion, and  3 smallish carrots. I chopped them all together in the food processor. I took the blade out of the processor and just added the pancake mix and water to the veggies in the processor bowl. nice and easy...I made my own pancake mix with 1 cup flour, 2 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp salt, 1 tablespoon sugar. Next time I will use less sugar, and up the salt a little. I made dollar size pancakes out of these... it took me  longer than 5 min for each side to fry, but worth the wait for sure. I set my oven to 250 and put all the cooked pancakes in there while I finished using all the batter.I think this step is usefull in keeping them hot and fresh; also to make sure the pancakes are cooked all the way.
I made 3 types of sauce:
the soy sesame listed in the recipe- a little too much salt when eaten with the pancakes
an agave/dijon sauce- yum
and a spicy sweet and sour- the major winner
i will make this again tonight with only the spicy sweet and sour and happiness will reign through my corner of the world.
thanks for the recipe! i recommend it wholeheartedly Tongue
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amymylove
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« Reply #5 on: June 06, 2009, 02:09:41 PM »

Some tips I learned after completely screwing this up the first time:

1. I have the actual Korean Buchim pancake mix and added a bit more water... I used 1 3/4 cup

2. Use cooking spray not oil

3. Make sure your veggies are diced really small

4. Make the pancakes in a really small fry pan... I used 2 small fry pans at once to speed up the process... Large pancakes were very hard to flip

5. Cook on medium heat only for about 20 minutes total, flipping every 5 minutes

These are okay... it's pretty hard to get them to be not goey in the middle... The thinner you make your pancakes the less gooey they will be... Hope this helps.
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Spike936
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« Reply #6 on: November 13, 2009, 03:57:20 PM »

These were awesome! I made them for my gentleman friend and his dad and we all loved them! Thumbs Up
I used sweet and sour chili sauce for dipping - yum
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