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  1. Momofuku Noodles - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Momofuku's Ginger-Scallion Noodles with Tofu
    Yummly
    Momofuku's Ginger-scallion Noodles With Tofu With Scallions, Peeled Fresh Ginger, Neutral Oil, Soy Sauce, Sherry Vinegar, Kosher Salt, Firm Tofu, Asian Wheat Noodles, Sriracha Hot Sauce
    Soy Sauce Eggs
    Food.com
    These are inspired by the soy sauce eggs I always have at Momofuku Noodle Bar. They are perfect as a snack, part of breakfast, with a nice bowl of rice, in your zhuzhed up instant ramen, in your zhuzhed up instant naengmyeon... just anything.
    Shoyu Ramen
    Food and Wine
    After visiting New York City's top ramen spots (including Ippudo NY, Sapporo and Momofuku Noodle Bar), Grace Parisi created her dream ramen with a pork-and-chicken-based broth that gets extra depth of flavor from kombu (seaweed) and shoyu (Japanese soy sauce).
    Tony Kim's “Cacio” e Pepe
    Food52
    Traditional cacio e pepe relies on practice and patience, and vigorous tossing—a technique well worth mastering, but maybe not tonight—to make a smooth sauce. Dry, grated cheese and starchy pasta water don’t inherently gravitate toward one another—the wrong heat, timing, moisture, or position of Mercury can send the sauce into dry and clumpy misalignment. But, as chef Tony Kim has discovered, a swirl of miso, butter, and chicken stock do no such thing—they love melding together. “The emulsification process pretty much happens on its own,” Kim wrote when he published this recipe in Lucky Peach in 2016. They also happen to make an incredibly delicious, noodle-coating sauce that does a very fine impression of a creamy, cheese-based one. And there’s a good chance they’re all waiting for you in your kitchen now. Adapted from Momofuku Noodle Bar Executive Chef Tony Kim, via Lucky Peach magazine (February, 2016). This recipe was featured on our new cook-along podcast Play Me a Recipe. Listen as Kristen Miglore cooks her way through this recipe, offering insider tips and backstory along the way.
    Momofuku's Bo Ssäm
    Epicurious
    Our bo ssäm was a long time in the making before it showed up on the menu. I'd had an inkling for years it would be a good idea—bo ssäm is a supercommon dish in Korean restaurants, though the ingredients and cooking that go into it are frequently an afterthought. The oysters are usually Gulf oysters from a bucket, the kind that are really only suited to frying; the pork is belly that's been boiled into submission. Almost every time I ate it at a restaurant, I'd think about how much better it would be if all the ingredients were awesome. The first time we made one was for family meal back when we'd just started serving kimchi puree on our oysters at Noodle Bar. One of the new cooks was fucking up oysters left and right, so I made him shuck a few dozen perfectly, and then we ate them ssäm-style: wrapped up in lettuce with rice, kimchi, and some shredded pork shoulder that was otherwise destined for the ramen bowl. (The shoulder in our bo ssäm is, essentially, the same shoulder we put in the soup at Noodle Bar, except that we add more sugar in the last step to make the crust even more delicious—it's like a shoulder encrusted in pig candy.) So there, in the cramped, dark subterranean kitchen of Noodle Bar, I ate the best bo ssäm of my life. I think that experience and our take on the bo ssäm are typical of the way we approach "traditional" dishes: with one foot rooted in tradition and the other foot kicking it forward. There is a great line from Emerson that sums up my perspective perfectly: "Meek young men grow up in libraries, believing it their duty to accept the views which Cicero, which Locke, which Bacon have given, forgetful that Cicero, Locke, and Bacon were only young men in libraries when they wrote these books."
    Roasted Rice Cakes with Scallion Oil
    Food52
    After a recent trip to China, I've been obsessed with crispy scallions on noodles, and have been inspired by a recipe from Fuchsia Dunlap's Every Grain of Rice. For this recipe, I experimented with using scallion-scented oil to roast fresh cylindrical rice cakes, a la David Chang's instructions in Momofuku. I can highly recommend this combo with kimchi and a fried egg.