Banchan

Gamja-jorim

Braised Spicy Potatoes

Gamja-jorim — Braised Spicy Potatoes

Small potatoes braised until glossy in a sweet and savory soy sauce.

Gamja-jorim is one of the most comforting and universally loved banchan in the Korean kitchen, a dish that feels like home regardless of which region of the country one grew up in. Small potatoes — ideally marble-sized or halved baby potatoes — are cooked in a sauce of soy sauce, sugar, garlic, and gochujang or gochugaru until the liquid reduces to a sticky, caramel-hued glaze that clings to each potato with irresistible sweetness and depth. Sesame seeds scattered on top add a faint nuttiness and visual appeal, signaling the dish is finished and ready to serve. The potato's starchy interior absorbs the braising liquid beautifully, so each bite delivers a contrast between the firm outer glaze and the fluffy center. This banchan is a fixture in Korean school lunch menus, military base dining halls, and home refrigerators alike, valued as much for its long shelf life as for its crowd-pleasing flavor profile.

✦ Tastypinch tip

Round potatoes roll easily — press one side gently against the bowl to stabilize before gripping.

How to eat it

  1. Pick up a whole small potato or half with chopsticks.
  2. Eat with plain rice — the sweetness balances the salt of other banchan.

Common mistakes

  • Using large potatoes that don't glaze evenly — small or marble potatoes are essential.

Where to try it

  • Korean school cafeterias and army-style meal restaurants (gunbap jip)
  • Home-cooking banchan shops