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Cooking Potatoes On The Stove - Yahoo Recipe Search
YummlyThese potatoes are great, and so simple to make! I actually cooked them in the microwave partially rather than on the stove, and they turned out very tasty.Food NetworkBulgogi jeongol (sometimes spelled jungol) is one of my favorite cool weather dishes. This Korean hot pot features a variety of ingredients simmered together, and this version stars the popular thin-sliced marinated beef known as bulgogi. Jeongol is typically cooked and served in a communal pot that sits in the center of the table on a portable stove. My recipe calls for a very straightforward dasima (dried kelp) broth that’s poured in once you’ve arranged the bulgogi and the rest of the components in the stew pot. The bulgogi flavors the broth as it simmers, making it subtly sweet and savory. You can get creative with layering and arranging components in one by one if you’re having a dinner party, or just dump everything in together for a more casual dish. Either way you’ll have a warming, hearty meal. The broth and bulgogi can be prepared the day before, just leaving the preparation of the noodles, veggies and rice for the day of. The accompanying ingredients I’ve included in this recipe are ones I think go particularly well with bulgogi and dasima broth, especially dangmyeon (sweet potato glass noodles) and an assortment of mushrooms, but feel free to edit the components to your liking—it’s your jeongol!Food NetworkBulgogi jeongol (sometimes spelled jungol) is one of my favorite cool weather dishes. This Korean hot pot features a variety of ingredients simmered together, and this version stars the popular thin-sliced marinated beef known as bulgogi. Jeongol is typically cooked and served in a communal pot that sits in the center of the table on a portable stove. My recipe calls for a very straightforward dasima (dried kelp) broth that’s poured in once you’ve arranged the bulgogi and the rest of the components in the stew pot. The bulgogi flavors the broth as it simmers, making it subtly sweet and savory. You can get creative with layering and arranging components in one by one if you’re having a dinner party, or just dump everything in together for a more casual dish. Either way you’ll have a warming, hearty meal. The broth and bulgogi can be prepared the day before, just leaving the preparation of the noodles, veggies and rice for the day of. The accompanying ingredients I’ve included in this recipe are ones I think go particularly well with bulgogi and dasima broth, especially dangmyeon (sweet potato glass noodles) and an assortment of mushrooms, but feel free to edit the components to your liking—it’s your jeongol!