Banchan

Kimchi-jeon

Kimchi Pancake

Kimchi-jeon — Kimchi Pancake

Tangy, spicy pancake loaded with aged kimchi, pan-fried to a crispy red-tinged perfection.

Kimchi-jeon is the genius reuse of over-fermented, too-sour kimchi — the kind that has been sitting in the back of the refrigerator for months and has become too pungent to eat raw — transformed by heat into a crispy, tangy, deeply savory pancake that may well be better than the fresh original. The kimchi is chopped and mixed into a batter of flour, water, and sometimes a little gochugaru, then poured into a hot oiled pan and pressed flat so that the kimchi juices seep into the batter and color it a vivid orange-red as it cooks. The edges crisp and lacquer in the rendered kimchi fat, while the interior stays moist and packed with the concentrated umami of fermentation. Kimchi-jeon is an iconic rainy-day food — the sizzle of the batter in the pan said to echo the drumming of rain — and it is equally beloved as a drinking snack and a quick weeknight dinner. The dish requires almost no technique beyond patience at the stove, making it one of the most accessible and forgiving preparations in the Korean home repertoire.

✦ Tastypinch tip

Tear or cut pieces at the table; eating from a communal pancake and breaking it apart with chopsticks is perfectly normal.

How to eat it

  1. Dip in soy-vinegar sauce to cut the richness.
  2. Eat while hot — crispy edges are the prize.
  3. Pair with makgeolli for the definitive rainy-day experience.

Common mistakes

  • Using fresh kimchi — aged, sour kimchi gives far more complex flavor and better texture.

Where to try it

  • Makgeolli bars (makgeolli jip) throughout Korea
  • Gwangjang Market, Seoul