Dose Market

Fashion, Food and more from Chicago’s River East Art Center’s monthly artisanal pop-up

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Spending what little free time you have to uncover unique, handmade products on your own around Chicago may cause you to lose your mind. Fortunately, four intrepid scavengers have decided to dig up new artisanal food, design and fashion vendors and invite between 40-50 of them each month to the indoor Dose Market.

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Dose, which launched in June 2011, takes place each month at the River East Art Center and draws hundreds of people seeking new foodstuffs (hot sauces, spices, small-batch tea, handcrafted bitters), design pieces (refurbished tables, wooden eyeglass frames, handmade bikes) and fashion (vintage handbags, ties, funky hats, scarves). But what’s most fun is hearing everyone talk about what they ate or found, or what they ate while they found something.

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While some of the vendors may set up a booth just one time, you can often find their things online, and many others are repeat purveyors. Look for goods from vendors like Old Town Social for charcuterie and panini; Fresh & Proper unique ties; holiday wreaths from Sprout Home; Blis maple syrup; hand-dyed silk wraps from Lydia Brockman and more. We hit Dose Market’s November installment to select a few things we think you too may be pretty geeked over—see below for our picks.

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Bittercube Bitters

Various flavors like cherry bark vanilla, barrel-aged blood orange and Jamaican #1 (with ginger and black pepper) slow-crafted over two months to enhance your holiday cocktails.

Drift Eyewear

Chris Mantz handcrafts these handsome wood frames with a solid steel core for added strength and durability.

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Buckshot Sonny’s

Great sporting goods for the everyguy like vintage baseball mits, camo hunting jackets, beer coozies, trucker hats and more.

Shades of Grey

For the woman with perhaps slightly quirky style these unique necklaces and earrings are constructed from a combination of metals, natural materials and funky geometric hardware.

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Spices of Lezzet

If your scouting trip to Turkey and India keeps falling through, you can hit up Spices of Lezzet for incredibly vibrant, exotic spices and seasonings that you’d be hard-pressed to find anywhere else.

Method Bicycle Company

When a Trek or Cannondale just won’t do, Method Bicycles designs and builds a custom bike using top-line components, steel frames and an exacting sense of style.

All images by Nathan Michael


Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

Want more choice in your chocolate box? Mix and match fillings and toppings with these modular chocolates by French designer Elsa Lambinet.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Each white, milk or dark chocolate shell has a slot in the front for wafers, nougat, biscuit or caramel, and a depression in the top to hold nuts, fruit or liquid.

Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

Lambinet designed the system while studying at Master of Advanced Studies in Luxury course at the Ecole Cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL).

Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

Other graduates of the same course have shown a musical box that incorporates swaying sticks of barley and an indoor croquet set crafted from timber, cork and leather.

Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

See more stories about food  here and our report on Food and Design here.

Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet

The information below is from Elsa Lambinet:


Sweet Play

“Don’t Play with Food”

A new kind of chocolate which can be created according to your taste, thanks to three elements.

Adaptations allows for intuitive combinations, yet allows for freedom and range of choice to the participant.

A modular design allows for three types of chocolate that can support two added ingredients: black chocolate has a hole to contain fruit, milk chocolate has spaces for nuts, and white chocolate is surfaced to hold liquids,
and all three contain a hollowed compartment for inserted flavored wafers, perhaps nougat, biscuit or caramel.

Participants get to mix and match ingredients for hours and hours as they gorge themselves on custom confectionery goodness.

The greater the amount of cacao corresponds to the thickness of the shape.

Partners: the famous Swiss chocolate maker Blondel

Gifts for Your Foodie Friend

Food and drink-focused highlights from our 2011 holiday gift guide

The holiday season is underway and so is our freshly launched 2011 Holiday Gift Guide, and with the magnificent gorging of Thanksgiving, we’ve got food on the brain. Peppered among art-related items and the newest gadgets are culinary trinkets, tools and ingredients to fuel your aspirations throughout this season and the following year. The following are eight of our favorite foodie additions to the gift guide, from hand-pressed espresso to a home-grown mushroom kit.

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Bought, Borrowed & Stolen

This unique book showcases the most extravagant meals chef Allegra McEvedy encountered on her most recent travels around the world. Accompanying each recipe is a unique knife from each locale, reflecting the gastronomical heritage of each of the 20 countries.

Paella Kit

From Calasparra rice to saffron and spices to the actual Paella pan, the Paella Kit provides the essentials for cooking up the ultimate surf and turf Spanish delicacy—just add shellfish and sausage.

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Clear Hive Honey Set

Inspired by the geometry of bee hives, the Clear Hive Honey Set is perfect for design enthusiasts and apiarists alike. Plus the artfully crafted wooden dipper keeps fingers sticky-free.

Steel Chef Knives by Bob Kramer for Zwilling

As the only master bladesmith in the world specializing in kitchen cutlery, Bob Kramer’s supreme skills have been tapped to construct a set of knives built for remarkable strength and unmatched edge-retention.

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Intelligentsia Pourover Set

This winter-themed Pourover Gift Box contains a Hario V60 dripper, a box of 40 paper filters, a custom designed notNeutral coffee mug, a half-pound of coffee beans and detailed instructions for brewing the perfect cup of joe.

Presso

When there’s not enough time to enjoy a drip coffee there always espresso to get you going. With Presso just add boiling water and you’ll be enjoying your hand-pressed shot before most automated machines would have even gotten warm.

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Twin Hens Chicken Pot Pie

We love a good, old-fashioned chicken pot pie when winter hits. Nothing says comfort food like these delectable little gems from Twin Hens, but if you’re feeling guilty about indulging, just remember they’re made with organic ingredients and free range chicken.

Mushroom Garden

Perfect for the urbanite with a green thumb, the Mushroom Garden grows more than a pound of gourmet oyster mushrooms in a matter of days. Best part is they grow from the box so there’s no real gardening necessary.


Mobile Gastfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

Designers Anna Rosinke and Maciej Chmara of Kollectiv Stadtpark have been touring Austria, making friends with locals in the street at their mobile kitchen table.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

The Mobile Gastfreundschaft (mobile hospitality) comprises a kitchen unit with sink and gas hob, a separate sideboard and a long table with stools.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

They’re made from standard sections of timber and each structure has a wheel at one end like a wheelbarrow.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

Other outdoor kitchens on Dezeen include a cooking trolley by Studiomama and stall for cooking and selling pigs heads by Studio Swine.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

The sharing of food, ritual dining and the communal kitchen were key themes in our acclaimed report on Food and Design – read it here.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

Here are some more details from Kollectiv Stadtpark:


Mobile Gastfreundschaft (mobile hospitality)

The project mobile hospitality pays attention to an important aspect of the design work of collective stadtpark – the responsibility and the self-initiative in public space. The city, as space that does not belong to anyone, but at the same time to all. It is merely used by us actively, as it used to be in former times. It has decreased to the background of our everyday activities. Responsibility for the outdoor space, for most of the inhabitants stops at their garden fence. The project mobile hospitality starts just here.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

Designers Anna Rosinke and Maciej Chmara drive with a wheelbarrow kitchen, table and ten folding stools from place to place to sit and eat in public space with spontaneously joining passers-by. At this big table, design meets delight and discussion and is a very good opportunity to get to know each other.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

The project took place in Vaduz, Dornbirn, Bregenz and Feldkirch in summer and autumn 2011 and was initiated and supported by Art Design Feldkirch and Tschabrun Wood.

Mobile Gasfreundschaft by Kollectiv Stadtpark

designers: kollectiv stadtpark (Anna Rosinke, Maciej Chmara)
links: www.stadtpark.org , www.kollectivstadtpark.blogspot.com
location: Vorarlberg, Austria

Bacteria and pedal power could be the future of kitchens – The Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
design critic Justin McGuirk says that a kitchen concept by Dutch electrical company Philips that uses decomposition to generate methane gas for cooking is an example of how we may “have to get more comfortable with bacteria and with putrefaction’s role in our ecosystem” – The Guardian

McGuirk claims the Microbial kitchen concept‘s “steampunk” aesthetic offers “an alternative vision to the clinical kitchen,” and also mentions the trend for low-tech kitchen appliances, such as designer Christoph Thetard’s pedal-powered devices, which he says represent a reaction to the impending energy crisis.

Last year Dezeen published a report on Food and Design, including examples of low-tech gadgets for preserving and preparing ingredients and concepts for growing food in the kitchen.

BoxBag by Casey Ng

BoxBag by Casey Ng

This take-away packaging by Casey Ng combines a paper bag top with a rigid carton for the base.  

BoxBag by Casey Ng

A perforated tear-off strip indicates where the parcel should be ripped open and shared.

BoxBag by Casey Ng

Casey Ng designed the packaging for fish and chips served up in New Zealand, and the inside is printed with newspaper-style graphics about local scenery.

BoxBag by Casey Ng

See more stories about packaging on Dezeen here.

BoxBag by Casey Ng

Here are some more details from the designer:


Project: Food Culture (Packaging)

New Zealand has attracted more and more people from around the world, either for a short visit or to live. New Zealand is renowned not only for its beautiful landscapes and its sandy beaches but also for the out door lifestyle. In this project, I wanted to design a product that best captured those New Zealand assets to the international market.

Fish and Chips have been part of New Zealand culture for many years and is known as a dish icon of the nation. Whatever the origin, New Zealanders chomp their way through about seven million servings of chips a week, or about 120,000 tonnes a year. Fish and chips shops are established on every street and have become part of the New Zealand lifestyle.

My study project Boxbag, is to explore and introduce the tradition of Fish and Chips and inform the consumers the best of New Zealand. The tradition of this dish lies in the process of unraveling the newspaper packaging into a open dish to share between friends and family and eating in an outdoor location.

As traditional as fish and chips, the food presentation hasn’t really changed much over time. Traditionally, the Fish and Chips packaging is a two-step wrapping process of plain white newsprint and then newspaper. The packaging is cheap, easy to be wrapped and unwrapped, with minimal preparation but provides sufficient insulation and soak up the excess grease. The BoxBag is a combination design between a paper bag and a carton incorporating all of the traditional fish and chips packaging factors and evolving for the modern day consumer. The process of this design uses one sheet of plain newsprint to wrap the Fish and Chips and is then placed into this BoxBag, providing insulation and freshness. The packaging is purposely designed taller than a typical paper bag, encouraging the consumer to rip the bag open. Once the packaging is ripped, it will reveal the custom designed newspaper on the inside. Each article on the newspaper introduces the best of New Zealand landscapes, providing anecdote and information to the consumer whilst eating.

The BoxBag is also designed with consumers who like eating on the go in mind. The tab located at the back, linking to a decorative perforation, circulates around the BoxBag. This aesthetic and functional perforated line allows the consumer to rip around the whole packaging and turning it into an open carton. This method not only provides convenience to the consumer but also encourages the ripping tradition of Fish and Chips.

The form uses a combination of two materials of paper and cardboard not only to provide an interesting contrast between materials but provides better insulation and support for these dual consuming purposes. The packaging is flat packed prior to being used, minimizing space for the restaurant, and a generic size design allowing restaurants to fold multiple times, up to the size necessary to seal the amount of food within the packaging.

Moreover, the packaging is made to be disposed easily, like the traditional packaging of Fish and Chips. So once the consumer has finished with the Fish and Chips, the consumer can simply dispose the BoxBag. Not only does fish and chips provide a Kiwi experience to the tourist industry, now it will also tell a story about Aotearoa.

Something I Ate

A seasonal gastronomic event celebrates delicious art and beautiful food
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The cliché of the artist so wrapped up in his work that he routinely forgets to eat is a familiar one. Even those fiercely dedicated to their creativity can go beyond the practicality of eating to reap the true benefits of enjoying a meal. “Something I Ate,” a seasonal event series based in NYC, brings together a diverse group of artists to explore the purpose of food as more than just fuel. “From food, we derive pleasure and inspiration,” says co-founder Kat Popiel. “And these elements ignite our creative fires.”

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Now in its third iteration, Something I Ate was founded by Popiel—who also launched the food magazine On Plate, Still Hungry—and Sam Kim of SkimKim Foods. The two set out to facilitate artists’ interpretations of the connections that exist between food and art, while also fostering a sense of community around the shared experience of food, drink and creative work. In the weeks prior to the event, participating artists are asked to keep a food diary and track the meals they consume over the course of seven days. These food diaries become the foundation for both the menu that is served at the event and the creative work unveiled, with each artist displaying a piece inspired by their documented eating habits.

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“We refer to Something I Ate as a ‘happening’, we’re not art curators. We’ve simply approached creative folks from our community to become involved with the project,” says Popiel. Past works have included a video installation by Duffy Higgins, a wall of lollipops by Gastronomista and a sculpture inspired by Brian Hubble‘s weight gain after the completion of his food diary. “We want this to be an unusual playground for artists to explore their creativity outside their usual mediums,” she adds.

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The latest edition of Something I Ate takes over Acme Studios in Williamsburg for a feast loosely themed around the atmosphere of a fall carnival. Cool Hunting favorite Kristen Wentrcek of Wintercheck Factory will present her Turkey Leg Pretzelbread Sammies with an updated ball-toss game and photographer Sidney Lo debuts his new series entitled “Sometimes When We Eat, We Eat Alone,” along with plentiful servings of deconstructed Orange-Ginger Pork Dumpling.

Something I Ate Fall 2011 takes place on 18 November 2011 in NYC. Tickets are available online for $30 ($15 for past Something I ate artists).


Design: Digest

A look at Design Indaba Magazine’s latest food-centric issue

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Billing itself as the “carrier pigeon” of South Africa’s Design Indaba Conference and Expo, the organization’s eponymous magazine explores the same optimistic philosophy that creativity can change the world for the better, but in print. The quarterly magazine covers the latest in design from fashion to architecture to product design, and now, they take on food. Hitting newsstands 16 November, the latest issue is guest-edited by Dutch “eating designer” Marije Vogelzang, inspired by the key to our sustenance and survival.

The issue’s theme starts with the simple question Vogelzang posed to editor Nadine Botha every day for several weeks, “What did you eat yesterday?” From there, Vogelzang showcases her intriguing and absolutely unconventional use of design when it comes to food and eating. Describing her work as a bridge between the aesthetics of food and the chefs that create it, Vogelzang aims to design the entire experience from physical to psychological. Her unique approach to design has gained international notice, resulting in work with a list of notable clients that includes Hermès, Nike and Philips.

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The issue also talks to chefs René Redzepi, Ferran Adrià and Homaru Canto for the “Declaración de Lima,” discusses problems with the current world food system and how creatives may approach the issues and celebrates food-industry players from Jamie Oliver to the countless food designers who remain behind the scenes.

To learn more about Vogelzang you’ll have to snag a copy of the issue from 16 November 2011, or head over to Design Indaba Magazine online to read more.


Clean and organize your refrigerator

Tomorrow, November 15, is Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day in the U.S. I’m not really sure who decided to declare such a day, but my guess is a refrigerator manufacturer or food producer had something to do with it. I only know about it because of Hallmark’s Ultimate Holiday Site, which tracks the most absurd holidays. (Case in point, today is National Guacamole and Pickle Day.) Although zany, Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day makes a teensy bit of sense being so close to Thanksgiving — it is a good idea to make room in your refrigerator for all the food that will be needing space in the coming days.

When cleaning out a refrigerator that hasn’t been tended to in many months, I like to tackle it in the following manner:

  • Gather supplies. Two large trash bags nested one inside the other (food is heavy and a broken bag makes a huge mess) is a must. You’ll also want a bucket with fresh, warm (not hot) water and mild dish detergent with a sponge. Also, a roll of paper towels or a few clean hand towels are good to have with you to dry the shelves when you’re finished wiping them down, especially for the freezer. Finally, I recommend having a notepad and pen handy so you can create a shopping list as you work.
  • Purge all food past its prime. Working from top to bottom, clear out all food from your refrigerator that is expired, rotten, and not good for eating. If you don’t know if something is edible, check StillTasty.com. If a food is in a jar or bottle and you can’t find its expiration date, visit the company’s website. Many websites have sections where you can enter the item’s bar code and learn its shelf life information.
  • Wipe it down. Give all the walls and shelves of your refrigerator a firm but gentle scrubbing. Clean up all spills, leaks, and general yuckiness that can dirty up the inside of your refrigerator.
  • Organize. In addition to putting like items with like items (making it easier to retrieve foods, as well as remembering what items you have), consider employing some advanced organizing techniques. Add stackable, removable shelves or under shelf baskets to better separate items. Use shelf liners to make it easier to clean up future messes and to keep round foods from rolling. If your crisper is where foods go to mold, try removing your drawers so you won’t forget about your produce (if you’re a visual processor, this may really help you). Also, learn what the recommended cooling temperatures for your food are so you know where the best place is inside your refrigerator to store each item.
  • Clean the containers. Now is a great time to wash all the reusable food containers that may have been hiding storing rotted items.

While you’re working, it’s also nice to inspect the seals on your refrigerator. Are they letting air escape? If they are, you can likely replace them yourself for not very much money or effort. Check your manufacturer’s website for exact information on the replacement seal required for your specific refrigerator model.

If your workplace refrigerator is in need of a good cleaning, you still have time to organize a clean-up project for tomorrow. You may want to add rubber gloves to your list of supplies, though. You never know what science experiments are happening in the back of those shelves.

Random note: November 15 is also Sadie Hawkins Day, so if you are female you can ask a male to help you clean out your refrigerator and celebrate two bizarre holidays at once.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Debbie Lee’s Seoultown Kitchen

Our interview with the Korean pub grub master chef

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Korean ingredients are popping up in the most unlikely of places. A few years ago a kimchee slider would have been a curiosity, but now in cities across the country bibimbap-inspired breakfast dishes and Korean flavor in comfort foods are taking their place in the culinary scene. Chef Debbie Lee has made a name for herself creating menus at several restaurants, appearing on the Food Network and now, with her new cookbook, Seoultown Kitchen, she shares her take on Seoul’s pub grub with recipes for small plates, skewers and cocktails.

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Lee lives in Los Angeles, a city home to a massive Koreatown estimated to have more than 3000 restaurants, from Korean BBQ joints and noodle houses to tofu hot pot cafes, not to mention dozens of bars. For the last year she has been rolling around town in her Ahn-Joo food truck serving up her favorite Korean pub grub dishes, and has a brick-and-mortar snack bar set to open. We asked “Chef Deb” to sit down for a beer and a bite—spicy kimchee fried rice—to talk more about the cookbook, as well as the tastes of her childhood, her love of bar food and the origin of her Korean nachos.

Why is Korean food so popular in LA?

Korean food has become part of daily food culture in several cities across the U.S. People have caught on not only to the great flavors and textures of the cuisine, but also their range of uses. Whether you are eating a classic bibibap or if you are jazzing up a burger with some kimchee, what’s not to love?

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What led you to focus on Korean pub food?

It’s my favorite way to eat. Being a chef and working restaurants all day long, Korean pubs are great to go to for a late-night meal, have a drink and unwind with your friends. It’s a ritual in Korean pop culture, contrary to the notion that we eat Korean BBQ every day. Galbi is like our steak and is eaten on special occasions, not for daily dining.

How do you develop your recipes?

A lot of it comes from my childhood with my grandmother in the kitchen. Then having my own interpretation of my favorite items that I order in a Korean pub.

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Where did the idea for your Korean nachos come from? Did you feel you needed to include a fusion dish or are they just ingredients that you felt were destined to be served together?

The concept of the Korean nacho was inspired from the classic take on tteokbokki. Typically the dish is wok-tossed with vegetables, sometimes pork belly and chile sauce. Nowadays the thing to do is to top it with cheddar or mozzarella cheese and broil it. So it got me thinking of taking it apart in a separate way while still keeping the concept of the original dish.

Your popular Ahn-Joo food truck has been rolling around LA for a while. Where can people taste your Ahn-Joo menu now?

On 10 November my brick and mortar Ahn-Joo will be open daily at the Americana at Brand in Glendale, California. A true Korean snack bar!

Check out Chef Debbie Lee’s recipes for kimchee fried rice and Soju sangria after the jump, and watch a Korean grandmother’s tutorial on how to make kimchee here.

Kimchee Fried Rice

There are two things that I always want when I’m in a Korean pub: One is Korean fried chicken and the other is kimchee fried rice. Kimchee fried rice is the ultimate bar food and is great with a cold beer or a bottle of chilled soju. The spicy flavor of this quintessential fried rice melds perfectly with the sweetness of the twice-fried pork belly and the creamy texture of the fried egg yolk. It’s the best thing to make with surplus rice and kimchee. If you don’t have pork belly, I suggest using bacon, hot dogs, or even Spam.

Serves: 4

Prep time: 15 Minutes

Cook time: 20 Minutes

1/4 pound pork belly, skin off, cut lengthwise into 1/4-inch slices

1/4 cup soy sauce

1/4 cup mirin

Sea salt and white pepper to taste

2 tablespoons sesame oil, for frying

2 cups kimchee, julienned

1/4 cup Korean peppers (gochu), sliced into rings

4 cups cooked Calrose rice, chilled

1/4 cup kimchee juice, poured from a kimchee jar

1/4 cup chopped scallions

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

4 eggs

1 tablespoon roasted and salted sesame seeds, for garnish

In a medium mixing bowl, combine the pork belly, soy sauce, and mirin. Season with salt and white pepper. Set aside. Heat a skillet over medium-high heat. Sear the pork belly for 3 to 4 minutes on each side until the marinade caramelizes on the meat. Set the skillet aside, letting the pork continue to cook off the heat for about 10 minutes. Slice crosswise into 1/4-inch strips and transfer to a bowl. Heat a wok or large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add the sesame oil and warm for 1 minute. Add the reserved pork belly, kimchee and Korean peppers and sauté for 3 to 4 minutes, stirring constantly. Add the rice and break it up with the back of a wok ladle, tossing
constantly to prevent it from sticking to the wok. Add the kimchee juice and scallions, and season with salt and white pepper. Remove from the heat and set aside. Heat another nonstick skillet over medium-low heat. Add the vegetable oil and warm for 1 minute. Crack the eggs into the pan and cook sunny side up until done. Season with salt and white pepper. Place a mound of fried rice on 4 separate plates and top each mound with a fried egg. Garnish with the sesame seeds and serve immediately.

Soju Sangria

I highly suggest making this the day before, so the fruits have time to steep with the soju.

1/2 cup grapes, cut in half

1/2 cup diced Korean pear- shingo

1/2 cup diced mango

1/2 cup diced plum

One 375-ml bottle of soju

One 8-ounce can aloe vera juice

1 ounce Grand Marnier

2 ounces simple syrup

1 lime, cut into lime wheels and then quartered, plus 4 wheels, for wine glass garnish

In a large container with an airtight lid, combine all the ingredients
except the garnish. Mix well and cover. Refrigerate for at least a couple of hours, if not overnight. Transfer to a serving pitcher and pour into the wine glasses. Garnish with
lime wheels.