>> Eat the World Los Angeles: Buena Park
Showing posts with label Buena Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buena Park. Show all posts

Friday, 4 March 2022

๊ฟ€๋ผ์ง€ Honey Pig

SOUTH KOREA ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ท
Orangethorpe Avenue facade

COVID-19 UPDATE: The dining room is open, tables are separated by screens and each have their own little nook for groups of four.

๐Ÿ“ 7212 Orangethorpe Avenue, Buena Park, Orange County

The Honey Pig franchise has been around long enough that some locations have come and gone since the original in Koreatown opened long ago. While that one can leave some customers with less than stellar experiences sometimes these days, the Buena Park location is a bit more low key, tucked in a strip mall just north of the 91.

While it can still get busy, and seems perennially understaffed, the folks that tend tables do their best and even are running back and forth when overwhelmed. So if there is anything to criticize on Yelp and Google Maps like many do, it is the bosses that let such a thing happen in the first place, not the kids that are doing their best.

Table set up before sitting down

When you are taken to your table, it will have already been prepared with bean sprouts and kimchi on the inverted grill. as well as dipping sauces for each diner, a scallion salad called pa muchim (ํŒŒ๋ฌด์นจ, below), and a pickled radish water kimchi soup called dongchimi (๋™์น˜๋ฏธ, below).

The kimchi will probably not win any awards, but this is a workaday version that is meant to be eaten inside of the rice paper wraps with bits of meat and later with the fried rice at the end of the meal. The pa muchim and dongchimi are both delicious, and a treat to eat in between (and with) meaty chunks for the duration of your time at the table.

ํŒŒ๋ฌด์นจ pa muchim (scallion salad)

๋™์น˜๋ฏธ Dongchimi (pickled radish water kimchi) soup

The main event here, and something you find on almost every table is samgyupsal ์‚ผ๊ฒน์‚ด ($31.99, below), thick slices of unmarinated pork belly. This is usually placed on the grill first so that all of the fatty juices can be cooked out of them, caught by the kimchi and bean sprouts for later usage in the fried rice.

By this time you will notice that the staff has taken over preparation of everything as usual at Korean barbecue, and will let you know when meats are ready to eat. Due to the understaffed nature of the restaurant already described, it is probably acceptable here to keep an eye on things yourself, and turn some things over if they start to burn.

Uncooked slices of thick ์‚ผ๊ฒน์‚ด Samgyupsal (pork belly) placed on grill

์‚ผ๊ฒน์‚ด ๊ตฌ์ด Samgyupsal gui (pork belly) cooks on the grill

While listed prices for meat might seem high to the brain, remember that they are inclusive of all the items set on the table before you sit down, which you can always ask for more of during the meal if necessary.

And do not forget the soju, because eating samgyupsal without it is like enjoying a perfectly cooked steak without a glass of wine. The rules are the rules.

A piece of pork belly ready to eat

Two portions of meat are required per table, so you can either make your meal more porcine with pork jowel, black pork belly, or pork skin, or add a different meat (or vegetable) with mushrooms, shrimp, and a few different cuts of beef available.

During this visit the boneless marinated galbi ๊ฐˆ๋น„ (beef short rib, $34.99, below) was selected, a worthy option especially when joined with the greens and sauces. This cut is not premium like you can find at galbi specialists and might leave some dissatisfaction. On future visits it was confirmed that a return to the pork jowel will be in the cards or trying out one of the other pork options.

Marinated ๊ฐˆ๋น„ Galbi (short rib) before cooking

Marinated ๊ฐˆ๋น„ Galbi (short rib) cooking

Hard not to look forward to the whole meal, when you finally start slowing down the servers will ask if you want fried rice. This is part of the price as well, and is something that should never be turned down no matter how full you are, as you can stick it all in takeout containers immediately even if you cannot eat one bite.

The remaining meats, kimchi, and some bean sprouts will be tossed and cut up with a large portion of rice before all being thrown back on the grill. This can burn quite easily so keep moving it around and further away from the center as necessary. The whole ending is somehow so much more satisfying than dessert, and usually leads to a nice round of leftovers the next day.

Fried rice made after the meats are finished

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Tuesday, 15 January 2019

Kitakata Ramen Ban Nai


๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต JAPAN

EDITOR'S NOTE: An updated version of this article (06 December 2023) is available as part of the Historical section of our Substack page. Check that out here:
 
When talking about "Big 3" regional styles of ramen, most people outside of Japan have heard of Hakata and Sapporo styles, both having evolved from large metropolitan areas with many vendors and varieties. But a third lesser known style was developed in northern Honshu in the small village of Kitakata which gives it its name. Known for its storehouses full of soy sauce, Kitakata-style ramen uses this as its base, a type of shoyu.

The bowl itself appears simple, a broth full of noodles and topped with chashu and some thinly sliced spring onion, but do not let this fool you. This broth has been extracting pure umami from pork bones for "long hours" which gives it an almost smoky and toasted taste, full of earth and charcoal.

Ban Nai is the most famous source of this style of ramen, with 62 locations around Japan. Here in the United States there are now two in Orange County, California (the other is in Costa Mesa), one outside of Chicago, and one in Jersey City, NJ.


The broth of their standard Kitakata ramen ($8.99, above and below) is already full of flavor, but the chashu is a flavor bomb. Some might call this salty but their "secret recipe" marinade is wonderful, the pork belly is definitely its own product and not just full of taste from the bowl. For an upcharge to $12.50 you can get a bowl completely covered at the top with chashu (see plastic model below).


The noodles of Kitakata ramen are thick, curly, and chewy as seen above. More water than usual is used in these to give it the soft texture and they are hand-crumpled for the waviness. This character seems to be perfect for the interaction it has with the broth.

Plastic models (shokuhin sampuru) of all the three most popular items.

๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต