- We're here in Seoul, South Korea,
and we are trying a
North Korean restaurant,
which is so exciting to me.
We're gonna talk to Chef Yoon,
who actually fled North
Korea and came here,
and eventually opened this restaurant.
He knows how to cook North Korean cuisine,
he was a chef in North
Korea, in Pyeongyang,
and he's gonna prepare
one of the most famous of
North Korean dishes, which
is Pyeongyang Naengmyeon.
So I'm gonna see how he
makes these cold noodles,
what is so unique about
them, and what's unique
about North Korean food as a whole,
what are the differences between
North Korean and South Korean cuisine.
How did you become a chef?
Tell me a little bit about
somuchim, and why is it special?
I wanna try this beef dish,
this is good.
This is just great, I
mean, so interesting.
The vinegar is super, you know,
super acidic, but it's perfectly balanced.
You get this, you know
this, boiled beef right,
it's possibly the least
sexy way to eat beef,
and for some reason it
really works with this dish,
'cause it's sort of a meal-ier,
I mean it's tender enough,
it's certainly not tough,
and you contrast that with
crunchy, pickled, celery,
you got cucumber, and chiles.
It's a nice, fresh, like bright dish.
Naengmyeon is a classic,
cold, Korean noodle dish,
it's made generally
with buckwheat noodles,
and the broth is usually
sort of a beef broth.
This particular style is so unique because
of how kind of sparse it is,
it's not really adorned,
I mean there's some
garnish here, there's just
like one piece of beef,
and just this huge pile
of buckwheat noodles.
Pickled daikon radish,
maybe a little bit of,
like a sliver of Asian pear,
they do give you some vinegar
and mustard on the side,
but I'm gonna taste the broth first,
and see if I even need to
add additional seasoning.
This sort of subtle beefiness,
and that's really it,
you know you get kind of the,
the flavor of the buckwheat, the grain,
I added a little bit of
the vinegar and mustard.
Even though it's the dead of winter,
these cold noodles are
still pretty refreshing.
If you focus on having
really fresh noodles,
and really crisp, clean broth,
you don't need much else.
It's such a barebones
version of the dish,
that I'm, it's almost
stunning to see the contrast
between this and a naengmyeon
you would see elsewhere.
(laughter)
So this dish, eobokjaengban is,
a sort of this kind of
big, shareable, platter.
Nice pieces of beef chuck,
they're kind of sitting on the bottom,
you know you got some
aromatics, green onion,
incredible, never seen this.
Oh, damn.
It's consomme-like, but has
so much more beefy flavor.
And I think all those flavors,
you know the aromatics and the
other ingredients in here, amplify that.
I think it hasn't left my mind,
like what a privilege
it is to be able to have
something so luxurious and so grand,
for us to have it here in Seoul.
Okay, just had some of this beef.
Nice, tender, good, really intense.
Like in other parts of the world,
you know the more North you go,
you have a less variety of ingredients.
This is still Korean food,
they've made the use of
Korean cooking techniques,
this is a different approach.
It's just hard to ask these questions.
It's uncomfortable because,
I mean how do I ask him,
oh you know you were the one that got out,
and you're here now,
and get details about how he
how he's here,
and he's able to do something
that is truly, truly unique.
Food is political.
This food especially
is loaded with so much,
so much meaning.
So, yeah.
People talk so much about North Korea
as some sort of, either a farce,
or some sort of crazy, political entity,
totalitarian society, and all
those may or may not be true,
but I'm here to think about the
food, the culture, you know.
This is the only gateway that I have left.
It's interesting, I remember
when my grandfather was alive,
I would ask him, you know like,
what was life like in North Korea?
You know, what, what was
life like in Pyeongyang,
you know in the 1930s, the 1940s?
He didn't have much to
say, not a lot of color,
it was very sparse.
He wasn't the kind of
person that would yabber on,
blabber like me,
but he loved his family, he loved me,
he was a devoted guy,
and there was something
so solid about that,
and I think this food
kinda reminds me of that,
you know there's
something very solid here,
there's something that's
true to it's people.
I wanna understand it more,
this is all I have, this
is the only lens that I can
see into my family history.
Thanks so much for watching,
and if you want to see more
of my dining adventures in
K-Town, click right here.
