*I am listing Mina Park's recipe below - she says to use buckwheat flour to be GF, though she used regular flour in hers. When I made them, I reduced things a little, and substituted in the nettles for some of the daikon; I also used tapioca starch instead of potato starch. I made my first pancake too thick - the batter itself is fairly thick - my 2nd one was better. Be sure to press it out (1/2" thick at most, thinner if you can). I don't have a good grater, which I think is less ideal - my julienner means less liquid (see photo below). My daikon was also rather aged, and less watery, so I had to add some (maybe also b/c of the nettles, so I had a few sub-optimal moments. You want a consistency of thick cake batter. You can see in the video that hers is pretty thin, and she slices it up into wedges to eat it. These brown up really nicely, and were so good with the dipping sauce and some kimchi!! yum. I want to make this again, sans nettles.
Batter: too thick here! |
- Daikon radish, shredded (500 g)
- 4-6 green onions
- 1 clove garlic
- 1/2 c buckwheat flour
- 2 T potato starch
- 1 T toasted sesame oil
- 1 T toasted sesame seeds
- salt/pepper
- 2 eggs
- oil for frying
Dipping sauce:
- 1 T tamari
- 1 T rice wine vinegar
- 1/2 tsp sesame oil
- 1/2 tsp sesame seeds
- 1 T water
1. Grate the radish into a mixing bowl and combine with the remaining ingredients. Adjust the consistency with additional flour or water as necessary. It should be a thick pancake batter.
2. Test the batter by making one small pancake. Season to taste.
3. Heat a generous amount of oil in a nonstick pan over medium-high heat and spoon batter into rounds or make one big pancake. When the underside is golden brown, flip and cook the other side for a few minutes. Cook on both sides one more time to crisp the pancake.
4. Serve immediately with dipping sauce.
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