
After our little stroll through the brambles and rice paddies of northern
Sokcho, we got on the one bus to our final destination a tad off of the beaten trail.
Getting off the bus a little before hitting
Sokcho proper we went down a road about a mile and a half to a little
restaurant in a tiny ass town whose most distinguishing feature today was the dead cat lying in the middle of the road.
So, to get to this
restaurant, in the middle of nowhere, I had to be scared
shit less by a snake, cut up my legs traipsing through massive amounts of thorns and brambles, and wade across an ankle deep stream. Was it worth it? Most
definitely!
The picture itself does not do this feast justice, not in the picture is the big pile of
bulgogi (marinated beef), our potato pancake, or the big stone pots filled with hot rice, the second fish that we got for free, or the excellent
Tae-
jon jiggahe, a kind of soup.
What you have here is a very typical feast of
Gangwon-do, the province I live in. Almost everything on this table either comes from the land and mountain slopes of this region or the sea around it.
There were four of us for this little feast and the total cost was twelve dollars each.
The dishes as I
remember them, starting from the lower left corner.
1. A crappy
mayo and corn mixture
2.
Pollack eggs, not bad
3. Raw prawns in soy sauce, very good
4. Two kinds of squid, really nice and sweet
5. Soy beans, raw and good, like chewy peas
6. A fruit salad, just like home
7. Jellyfish, excellent, soft and
chewy8. Cold noodles, chop
chae, really nice, kind of sweet, a sweet potato noodle.
9. Acorn Jelly with soy sauce and
chillies, flavorless on its own but the soy sauce and
chillies very nice.
10. Pickled burdock root, chewy, nice,
surprisingly sweet.
11. Pickled
sesame leaves, with a hint of anise, really nice
12.
Kimchi, not good,
surprisingly13. I cant
remember, but it was good
14. Squid sundae fried in egg, really really good.
15. Rice dumplings stuffed with honey, not my favorite, kind of
tasteless then a small sugary sensation when your teeth hit the middle.
16. Some sort of roe, possibly from a sea urchin. Tasted like salt and brine, not nice at first but it grows on you.
In the middle
The big fish, possibly a type of flounder is fried in some sort of oil. Light crispy skin, most white flesh, this is why we came out here. Three minutes after this fish was set down, there was nothing left but fins. The owner of the
restaurant came over, took a look, and came back with another, free fish. It took about six minutes for this one to
disappear.
To the lower left of the fish is marinated beef and steamed
octopus. The beef was
incredibly tender, excellent, very succulent. The
octopus was chewy, loved both of these.
Above that sea snails and mussels,
superb.
To the right of the fish and on the top, three kinds of
vegetables. Cold, chewy, good.
Below that is crap in red pepper sauce, not my favorite, hard to eat, messy, not much meat.
We also had a nice pile of marinated beef that we ate stuffed in lettuce, sesame, and
spinach leaves, big bowls of rice with
Asian dates, and zucchini and tofu soup.