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Cook time
30 minutes
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Serves
4
Author Notes
Whenever I go home, my mother Jean makes a huge vat of kimchi fried rice and leaves me a firm note: ERIC, EAT. I've seen her cook it a thousand times, yet I still don't feel that mine has ever come out like hers. She once said that the secret to her kimchi fried rice is, well, the kimchi. And though I'm able to recreate some version of her spicy-briny cabbage from taste memory, my kimchi will never be her kimchi, and in turn neither will my kimchi fried rice ever be her kimchi fried rice. Still, here it is: my best effort at Korean ambrosia, which, when you really look at it, isn't much at all. Just a cheap way to use up leftover rice with this and that from the pantry. A proper holdover comfort of my childhood, this is all I want to eat at the end of a rough week—proper mom food. —Eric Kim
Test Kitchen Notes
Featured in: When I Came Out to My Parents, Kimchi Fried Rice Held Us Together. —The Editors
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Jean's Spam Kimchi Fried Rice
Ingredients
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1 tablespoon
toasted sesame oil, plus more as needed
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6 ounces
Spam (about 1/2 can), finely diced
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2 cups
very ripe kimchi (like, the rankest, ripest you've got), chopped, plus as much of the juice as you can get
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4 cups
cooked, day-old white rice (especially short-grain)
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2 teaspoons
soy sauce
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1
(5g) packet roasted seaweed snack, crushed with your hands
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4
fried eggs, to serve with
Directions
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First, heat the sesame oil in a very large nonstick pan or wok. Crisp up the Spam, then add the kimchi (hold the juice for later) and sauté for a few minutes until fragrant and darker in color.
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At this point you can mix in the rice, breaking it up with your fingers or with a wooden spoon. Add the kimchi juice, soy sauce, and more oil here if you need. Be diligent with that spoon, stirring constantly and scraping up any rice that sticks to the bottom (this is where one of those nonstick pans with that old-fashioned red dot in the middle comes in handy). Cook for 5 to 10 minutes until everything is well-combined and slightly toasted.
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To finish, crush the roasted seaweed snack with your hands and mix it into the rice. (I find that this really rounds everything out and means you can skip extra seasoning. The kimchi and Spam are salty enough, anyway; plus, this is what my mom does.)
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It's traditional to top each serving with a fried egg—to be exact, a gooey, runny egg, barely set, coating the red rice with yolky gold.
Eric Kim was the Table for One columnist at Food52. He is currently working on his first cookbook, KOREAN AMERICAN, to be published by Clarkson Potter in 2022. His favorite writers are William Faulkner, John Steinbeck, and Ernest Hemingway, but his hero is Nigella Lawson. You can find his bylines at The New York Times, where he works now as a writer. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram at @ericjoonho.
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