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How to Make Omija Tea (Korean Schisandra Tea)
Recipe

How to Make Omija Tea (Korean Schisandra Tea)

Few Korean drinks are as quietly dramatic as a glass of omija tea. Pour cold water over a handful of dried crimson berries, wait overnight, and you get a jewel-toned infusion that tastes sweet, tart, and faintly saline all at once.

8–12 hr (cold steep)
easy
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Homemade Bungeoppang Recipe (Korean fish-shaped pastry)
Drinks & Dessert

Homemade Bungeoppang Recipe (Korean fish-shaped pastry)

Few smells say Korean winter like a cart of bungeoppang sizzling on a frozen street corner — golden, fish-shaped, and steaming with sweet red bean paste. This beloved Korean street food is easier to recreate at home than most people expect, and the reward is a crackly-edged pastry fresher than anything sold frozen. Here’s what to know before you heat the mold.

30 min
easy
View Homemade Bungeoppang Recipe (Korean fish-shaped pastry)
Omija-cheong (Korean Schisandra Berry Syrup)
Drinks & Dessert

Omija-cheong (Korean Schisandra Berry Syrup)

Pour a spoonful of omija-cheong over ice, top it with sparkling water, and watch the glass fill with a color like pomegranate held up to the sun. This traditional Korean berry syrup — one of the most beloved bases in the whole repertoire of traditional Korean beverages — carries a taste no other fruit can claim: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and pungent, all in one sip. Making it at home is mostly a matter of patience.

30 min
easy
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Myeong-i Namul Jangajji
Vegetable&Fruit

Myeong-i Namul Jangajji

Few side dishes earn a permanent place on the Korean BBQ table the way Myeong-i Namul Jangajji  — Korean pickled wild leek — does. Pull one glossy, soy-stained leaf from the jar, wrap it around a sizzling piece of pork belly, and you taste the whole appeal at once: bright vinegar, mellow sweetness, deep umami, and a whisper of garlic that lingers without overpowering. It is humble, make-ahead cooking that quietly elevates every meal it joins.

30 min
easy
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Matcha Bingsu
Drinks & Dessert

Matcha Bingsu

There are few things more comforting on a sweltering summer afternoon than a bowl of matcha bingsu. The moment your spoon breaks the surface, a hill of snowy milk ice collapses, releasing the cool, grassy aroma of stone-ground green tea — and a final dusting of vivid emerald powder layers in that deep, earthy bitterness on top.

20 min
easy
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Watermelon Feta Salad
Vegetable&Fruit

Watermelon Feta Salad

Few things cut through summer humidity like a cold, glistening bowl of watermelon feta salad — juicy sweetness against briny cheese, brightened with dill and a whisper of chili. This Korean-fusion take treats watermelon the way Korean cooks have long treated subak (수박) — Korean summer watermelon: as a cooling centerpiece. The result is sophisticated, barely-cooked, and ready in minutes.

15 min
easy
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Watermelon Juice with Pineapple Flower
Drinks & Dessert

Watermelon Juice with Pineapple Flower

When the first wave of summer heat rolls into Seoul, few things feel as restorative as a cold glass of watermelon juice, its color glowing somewhere between rose and ruby. This version dresses up that everyday refresher with a hand-made pineapple flower, the kind of small flourish that defines Korea’s beloved home-cafe culture.

10 min
easy
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Mango Bingsu Recipe
Snacks & Street Food

Mango Bingsu Recipe

There are few things more refreshing on a sweltering afternoon than the first spoonful of a mango bingsu recipe done right — a cool cloud of milky ice giving way to bright, fragrant mango. This is Korea’s answer to the heat, and the homemade version is far easier than its luxe café presentation suggests.

20 min
easy
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Patbingsu: Traditional Korean Shaved Ice with Sweet Red Beans
Drinks & Dessert

Patbingsu: Traditional Korean Shaved Ice with Sweet Red Beans

Few things signal the arrival of a Korean summer like a towering bowl of patbingsu (팥빙수) — Korean shaved ice with sweet red beans. The first spoonful is pure contrast: powdery cold ice, the deep earthy sweetness of red beans, chewy little rice cakes, and a ribbon of condensed milk pulling it all together. Best of all, this budget-friendly classic comes together at home with nothing more than a freezer and a zip-top bag.

15 min
easy
View Patbingsu: Traditional Korean Shaved Ice with Sweet Red Beans

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