Ultimate Korean Fried Chicken

Being American, I have always loved fried chicken. Korean Fried Chicken, the better KFC, has been gaining wide popularity in its many forms. The difference is in the very thin crisp skin. The spicy sauce can either be drizzled on top or kept on the side. As a kid, I used to just eat the skin off fried chicken– it's the best part! My version has the thinnest crispiest crust ever.

Ingredients

Serves 2-4

PICKLED RADISH CUBES

  • 1/2 cup (113 grams) rice vinegar
  • 1/2 cup (113 grams) water
  • 1/2 cup (113 grams) superfine sugar or caster sugar
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt or sea salt
  • 1 pound (about 500 grams) daikon radish, cut into 1/2-inch cubes

PRE-COATING

  • 2 chicken drumsticks, 2 thighs and 4 wings with tips (bone in, skin on)
  • 1/4 cup (32 grams) cornstarch or corn flour
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt or sea salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 10 grinds black pepper
  • Oil, for frying

BATTER

  • 1/2 cup (70 grams) cornstarch or corn flour
  • 1/4 cup (34 grams) fine matzo meal
  • 1/4 cup (35 grams) all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons gochugaru (Korean chilli flakes)
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt or sea salt
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons garlic granules
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons onion granules
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 cup (237 grams) water
  • 1/3 cup (75 grams) vodka
  • 2 tablespoons gochujang (Korean chilli paste)

KOREAN BBQ SAUCE

  • 3 tablespoons gochujang (Korean chilli paste)
  • 3 tablespoons ketchup
  • 2 packed tablespoons dark brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon roasted sesame oil
  • 2 teaspoons grated ginger (from about a 2-inch piece)
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped

Method

Make the pickled radish cubes

  1. Combine the first four ingredients in a large bowl, whisking until the sugar and salt are dissolved. Add the radish and toss to coat. Leave at room temperature, covered, for 24 hours. Then refrigerate.

Make the pre-coating

  1. In a large bowl, whisk together the first 4 ingredients. Add the chicken and toss well until evenly coated in all areas. Transfer the chicken to a rack, shaking the chicken well to get rid of any excess coating. Let rest uncovered for 1 hour.
  2. Pour enough oil into a 6-quart Dutch oven to reach a depth of 2 inches. Heat the oil over medium-high heat until a deep-fry thermometer reads 350 degrees Fahrenheit (175 degrees Celsius).

Make the batter

  1. In a large bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients. In a smaller bowl, whisk together the wet ingredients. Just before frying, whisk the wet mixture into the dry mixture. The consistency should be relatively thin and runny. Working in two batches, dip each piece of chicken into the batter, letting excess batter drip off.
  2. Suspend the chicken in the oil for a couple of seconds for it to set before letting it slip completely into the oil, otherwise the chicken will fall and stick to the bottom of the pot. Fry the chicken until golden brown and cooked through, 15 to 20 minutes per batch. Transfer to a wire rack to drain as done.

Make the BBQ sauce

  1. Combine all of the ingredients in a small saucepan and simmer over medium heat until slightly thickened, 3 to 5 minutes. Serve the chicken with the BBQ sauce, pickled radish and beer.

Notes

The batter’s dry and wet ingredients can be assembled but not mixed together ahead of time. Whisk the wet and dry ingredients right before you’re ready to fry the chicken, otherwise the batter may thicken too much. Cook the chicken in batches, cooking the drumsticks and thighs together as one batch and the wings as a separate batch. Loosen the BBQ sauce with a little water if you want to drizzle the sauce or glaze the chicken.

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@judyjoochef Instagram profile imageFrom Wall Street to kitchens, glaciers to spice markets— @tumitravel has carried me through every chapter of life. ✈️💼

I bought my very first TUMI luggage as a fresh-out-of-college banker, hauling laptops and pitch decks across the globe. Then came the plot twist: chef’s knives, whisks, and kitchen clogs replaced balance sheets and binders—but my TUMI stayed constant, loyal and true.

My Celina Voyageur Backpack has accompanied me down snowy Alpine peaks, chased the shimmer of the Northern Lights, cooked in pop-ups from the Maldives to San Francisco, and wandered through spice-scented markets in far-flung corners of the world. It’s been there for family reunions across continents, always packed with more than my essentials—stuffed with moments, memories, and a little bit of me. Through career pivots, new cities, shifting seasons, and wild adventures, it’s remained my steadfast companion—weathering both turbulence and triumph with grace.

What I pack always shifts—recipes, snorkels, speeches, spreadsheets, or memories—but my TUMI never does. Trusted. True.  Because life never stops moving, and some bags don’t just carry your things—they carry your story. 🌍✨

#TUMI #TUMIIcons17 hours ago via Instagram
@judyjoochef Instagram profile imageLet’s sip our way through K-Viral Kitchen — this one’s a certified Seoul college campus legend. 🍇🍶💥

The name started as a bit of a tongue-twister: Bokbunja-ju (black raspberry wine) + Soju (Korea’s firewater) + Cider (Korean lemon-lime soda aka Chilsung Cider by Lotte). Put it all together and you get Bok-soju-“sa” (for cider). But after a few rounds — and a little campus slang — it got shortened to the snappier Bok-so-sa.

Bok-so-sa is a fizzy, fruity soju soda bomb that first went viral in a tiny Chungmuro pub, where the walls are lined with empty Bokbunja wine labels. 

One bottle, one label — and now the whole place is covered in memories.

Made with Bokbunja-ju (Korean black raspberry wine), it’s bold, bubbly, and way too easy to drink. Don’t let the fizz fool you — this one sneaks up fast.

Here’s the mix:
 🍇 1 bottle Bokbunja-ju (Korean black raspberry wine)
 🍶 ½ bottle plain soju @jinro_global @jinro.uk
 🥤 500ml Sprite (or sparkling lemonade) @sprite
 ✨ Optional add-ins: fresh berries, lemon slices, mint — for that extra flex

Stir gently (never shake — you’ll lose the sparkle) and serve chilled. Bonus points if you peel the label and stick it on the wall — it’s tradition!

📍 Ingredients via @koreafoodsuk 
 💄 Glam by @jonesroadbeauty & @justbobbidotcom 
 👩🏻‍🍳 Pro tip: Use chilled bottles for max fizz + ruby-red sparkle.

 📌 Save this for your next party trick
 👯‍♀️ Tag your drinking crew — this one’s made for sharing

#KviralKitchen #BokSoSa #SojuBomb #KoreanCocktail #BlackRaspberryWine #BokbunjaJu #SojuSpritz #SeoulNightlife #EasyCocktails #DrinkTok #JudyJoo #JudyJooChef #KBarCulture #ChungmuroClassic #DrinksThatBrokeTheInternet #PartyDrinks #KoreanBarHack #FruityFizz #SojuSzn #WomenInFood #KRecipeReel1 day ago via Instagram
@judyjoochef Instagram profile imageEvery stall has a story — and every face has fed a city. 🥬🌶️🐟

For me, Korean markets have always been the heartbeat of the cuisine. Everywhere you look, there’s movement and life: women neatly packing bundles of vegetables, bottling golden sesame oil, and scooping out rich gochujang and doenjang. A few steps away, fruit sellers stack seasonal peaches and vibrant melons beside piles of fresh greens. Down the row, fishmongers expertly fillet the day’s catch, while others build mountains of fiery red chilis — and sometimes, you’ll even spot a vendor catching a quick nap between customers.

After the Korean War, women known as ajummas (아줌마) became the backbone of these markets. They weren’t just selling food — they were feeding families, supporting communities, and keeping traditions alive during some of the country’s hardest years. Alongside them, men worked as butchers, fishermen, and produce sellers — roles often passed down through families, keeping skills alive from one generation to the next.

Even now, in the age of supermarkets and delivery apps, these markets endure. People come not just for the freshest fish or the ripest fruit — but for the trust, the stories, and the familiar faces that keep them coming back.

That, to me, is the true magic of Korea’s markets: the people who bring them to life every single day. ❤️

@visitkorea.uk 🇰🇷
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@judyjoochef Instagram profile imagePart of my K-Quick Recipe Series — quick, bold Korean dishes from my newest cookbook!

Zingy. Crunchy. Instant gratification kimchi 🥬💫

This fresh kimchi is bright and bold — no fermentation time required. A perfect sidekick to your BBQ lineup or banchan spread. 

Make it once, crave it every day.

My mom used to whip up this vibrant little number every sweltering summer. I can still picture her—elbow-deep in a giant blue plastic tub, wearing those signature Korean hot-pink rubber gloves, tossing cabbage like a pro. This salad packs a punch that could wake up even the laziest heatwave afternoon. 

Find the recipe below — perfect for your next BBQ 🥬

💡: @samsunguk 
 🛒: @koreafoodsuk 
 📚: K-Quick — From my latest cookbook, K-Quick — link in bio if you want the full collection!

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Fresh Cabbage Kimchi Salad (Baechu Geotjeori)

Ingredients (Serves 2–3):
• 1kg (2lb) baechu (Chinese leaf/Napa cabbage)
• 1 tbsp coarse sea or kosher salt
• 25g (¼ cup) gochugaru (Korean chilli flakes)
• 1 tbsp caster sugar
• 1 tbsp saeu-jeot (salted shrimp), or to taste 
• 1 tbsp fish sauce, or to taste 
• 1 tbsp grated garlic
• ½ brown onion, thinly sliced (5mm / ¼in)
• 3 spring onions, halved lengthwise & cut into 5cm (2in) pieces
To Serve:
• Drizzle of roasted sesame oil (optional)

Method:
1️⃣ Trim the base of the cabbage, wash thoroughly, discard wilted leaves, and cut into ~5cm (2in) pieces.
2️⃣ Place cabbage in a colander over a bowl. Toss with salt and let sit 10 min.
3️⃣ Meanwhile, in a separate bowl, mix gochugaru, sugar, saeu-jeot, fish sauce, and garlic.
4️⃣ After 10 min, drain any liquid from the cabbage.
5️⃣ Add the sauce mixture, onion, and spring onions. Toss well.
6️⃣ Drizzle with sesame oil (if using) and serve immediately.1 week ago via Instagram
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