Don’t be intimidated by the fiery red colour of Kimchi Fried Rice. It actually isn’t that spicy! But it’s certainly loaded with flavour, even more than its Chinese counterpart. It makes an excellent (essential) side dish for a Korean food night, or alongside any Asian food. And it’s a satisfying meal in itself!
Kimchi Fried Rice
Kimchi Fried Rice is as common in Korea as Chinese fried rice is in China. Every household makes it, and it’s a thrifty comfort dish that makes use of leftover cooked rice and kimchi from the fridge. Extra ingredients on hand are often added to keep things interesting.
This fiery-red Korean rice dish is more bark than bite! While it is full-flavoured, it is not nearly as blow-your-head-off-spicy as one might expect.
Though having said that, if spicy is your thing, it’s very simple to dial up the spicy factor until you go cross-eyed!
So what does Kimchi Fried Rice taste like? Well … Kimchi. 🙂 But more! The sauce for Kimchi Fried Rice is made with a combination of the juices from a jar of kimchi, plus gochujang, the Korean soy bean chilli paste commonly used in Korean cooking.
If you love fried rice, this is absolutely one for you to try. It’s one of the more intensely flavoured fried rice dishes, which is right up my alley. I am all for kapow flavours!
What goes in Kimchi Fried Rice
Here’s what you need to make Kimchi Fried Rice:
Kimchi – Kimchi is pickled and fermented cabbage, often spicy. It’s pretty widely availably these days even in everyday grocery stores, especially with the whole fermentation trend amongst the healthy food crowd.
Fashion aside, skip the boho-hipster kimchi brands and stick to a tried-and-true Korean one! Not all kimchi is created equal, so if you can get to an Asian store, even better. Typically the kimchi will be fresher, with better flavour. I am using Paldo brand in this recipe.
Rice – Use day-old cooked rice that’s been refrigerated. Or better yet, have you got a stash in the freezer? If not, WHY NOT?? Rice freezes perfectly and it’s a handy to have a stash ready to go. It’s an Asian thing. 😇
Struggling with how to cook rice? Here’s how I make it. A game-changer for anyone who has struggled to cook rice on the stove!
Type of rice – Any plain white rice works well for the most neutral flavour base, whether long, medium or short grain. Jasmine, basmati, brown and other rices with more flavour will also work just fine but will add their own distinct flavour to the dish.
Enoki mushrooms – While you’ll find every Korean household has their own standard inclusions for Kimchi Fried Rice (I’ve even heard of Spam ham being a regular!), enoki mushrooms is a fairly popular choice you often see at Korean restaurants. Substitutes are provided in the recipe card notes;
Gochujang – A soy bean-based Korean chilli paste that is packed with umami (savoury flavour), commonly used in Korean cooking for heat, flavour and its rich red colour. A dollop of this can save any (Asian) dish that you feel is missing “something” and it lasts almost forever in the fridge. It’s spicy, but we don’t use much, just 1 tablespoon.
Where to find it: These days, you can even find it in the Asian section of major grocery stores in Australia, such as Woolworths and Coles. Otherwise, Asian or Korean stores.
Also used in: Momofuku Pork Bossam, Bibimbap (Korean Rice Bowl), Spicy Korean Pork Stir Fry.
Garlic – It would be an understatement to say Koreans love their garlic. Kimchi Fried Rice would never happen without it!
Sesame oil – Koreans also love sesame oil!
How to make Kimchi Fried Rice
Kimchi Fried Rice is flavoured with the juice of Kimchi plus a dab of gochujang for a extra kick of flavour. Really, don’t skip the gochujang. It would be like making Chinese Fried Rice without soy sauce. Just, no!
Part 1: Prep the kimchi
Extra juice from kimchi – Measure out 1 packed cup of kimchi, then either press through a sieve to extract as much juice as possible OR just grab handfuls and squeeze it out. I normally do the latter, but thought it would be more respectable to use a sieve for the purpose of sharing this recipe!
The purpose of this step is twofold – To extract the kimchi juice which we use as the sauce for the fried rice, and to remove water from the kimchi so the fried rice doesn’t go soggy;
Measure out 1/4 cup of kimchi juice. If you’re struggling to get this much out of the 1 cup of kimchi you measured, if you’re still short, steal some more out of the kimchi jar or squeeze more cabbage!
Chop kimchi into 2cm / ⅘” pieces – Not too fine, we want the chunks in the fried rice.
Part 2: Making the Kimchi Fried Rice
Cook enoki mushrooms – Most recipes will have you cook the enoki mushrooms with the rice. You get a better result by cooking it separately so it doesn’t go soggy, and nor does it get weighed down by too much of the rather intense Kimchi Fried Rice sauce.
I cook it in sesame oil and a little garlic for flavour;
Set aside – It takes barely a minute to start wilting in the pan. Then simply remove it to a plate;
Sauté garlic with gochujang – This takes the raw edge off the gochujang, and removes some of the excess water to keep the fried rice from going soggy. It also intensifies the gochujang flavour;
Cook kimchi – Next, we add the kimchi and cook it for a minute to drive off any excess moisture and warm it through. Kimchi does not need to be cooked, we just don’t want cold bits of kimchi in our fried rice!
Add rice;
Add kimchi juice;
Toss well – Toss the rice well to ensure all the flavours coat the rice evenly. You especially want to ensure the gochujang coating the kimchi goes through the rice;
Add enoki mushrooms back in, and toss through to disperse. You’re done!
Optional toppings: Fried egg & nori strips
If you’re serving Kimchi Fried Rice as a side dish for Korean mains, especially things that are a bit saucy, then it’s fine to serve it unadorned.
However, if you’re serving it as a meal, I definitely recommend topping it with a fried egg, sunny side up! This is a traditional topping for Kimchi Fried Rice, and the runny yolk essentially acts like a bit of sauce for the dish.
Other traditional garnishes that are more for visual effect than flavour include:
Crispy nori / dried seaweed strips – You can buy roasted, crispy nori seaweed in small packets which is just cut into little batons. Otherwise, just use normal nori or skip it. It’s really not a big part of the eating experience, it’s more for visual;
Green onions – Just finely sliced for a nice splash of fresh green colour; and
Black sesame seeds – The black colour pops against the red rice and the egg! But again, it’s not a big deal to skip it.
How to serve Kimchi Fried Rice
Ideas for serving Kimchi Fried Rice:
A side dish to all things Korean;
Alongside all things Asian, in fact. Think: next to stir fries, as a side dish for things like Chinese BBQ Pork or Chinese Crispy Pork Belly;
Prop up light meals such as Egg Foo Young, or create a meal by serving alongside appetiser-type things like Spring Rolls, Chinese Pork Dumplings (Potstickers), Siu Mai or Sticky Chinese Wings;
As a completed meal, topped with the egg;
Throw it together on the hotplate at the end of a home Korean barbecue; or
Use it to stuff into Korean Lettuce Wraps – try it with Momofuku Pork Bossam. Epic!
Enjoy! – Nagi x
The Spicy Side of Life: Korean recipes
Watch how to make it
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Kimchi Fried Rice
Ingredients
- 2 tsp sesame oil , toasted, separated (1 tsp + 1 tsp)
- 2 garlic cloves , finely chopped
- 200g/7oz enoki mushrooms (Note 1)
- 1 tbsp oil , vegetable, peanut or canola
- 1 tbsp gochujang (Korean chilli paste, Note 2)
- 1 cup (packed) kimchi (Note 3)
- 1/4 cup kimchi juice , from the kimchi above (Note 3)
- 3 cups cooked , day old white rice (Note 4)
Garnishes:
- Fried egg , runny yolk, sunny-side up
- Black sesame seeds
- Green onions , finely sliced
- Crispy seaweed strips (Note 5)
Instructions
- Strain kimchi juice – Place kimchi in a sieve set over a bowl. Press firmly to extract as much juice as you can. We need juice for the sauce, and to reduce the wetness of the kimchi so it doesn't make the rice soggy.
- Measure kimchi juice – Measure out 3 tablespoons of the kimchi juice and set aside. (Note 3 if you're short).
- Cook enoki mushrooms – Heat 1 tsp sesame oil in a large non-stick pan over medium-high heat. Add enoki mushrooms, about 1/2 tsp garlic, plus a pinch of salt and pepper. Cook for 1 1/2 minutes until just-wilted, then remove to a plate.
- Garlic and gochujang – Return pan to the stove. Add oil. Add garlic and cook for 20 seconds until it's lightly golden. Add gochujang and cook for 30 seconds until it dries out a bit – just move it around in a lump, breaking it up a bit as you can.
- Cook kimchi – Add kimchi and cook for 1 minute, just to heat it through (kimchi doesn't need to be cooked) and drive off any excess moisture.
- Add rice and kimchi juice – Add rice and kimchi juice, toss well for 1 1/2 minutes until the rice is fully stained red. Toss well to ensure the gochujang mixed with the kimchi disperses throughout the rice.
- Enoki mushrooms and 1 tsp sesame oil – Add the enoki mushrooms and remaining 1 teaspoon of sesame oil. Toss through rice.
- Serve, topped with garnishes of choice!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
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P camp says
This is delicious. As someone who always burns the friend rice, this is perfect. I didn’t have mushrooms so I omitted them but added everything else and doused it with sriacha, chopped tomatoes, fried eggs, and nori. Kimchi is definitely a staple in our house, so will make this often!
Anne Gawenda says
Nagi !! Absolute magic
Thank you
Terri says
Was planning on making your Chinese fried rice but remembered had kimchi to use up so made this. Only had dried shitake mushrooms which worked fine. Absolutely delish. Will definitely be making it again !
Ellen says
Hi Nagi! Hi Dozer!
I’ve made this twice and I absolutely love it!
Just to clarify though, I should only use only 3 tablespoons of the kimchi juice even though I have 1/4 cup from the squeezed kimchi?
Thanks!!
Julz says
Great recipe. I made this for the first time. It was a hit. Only thing I added was soy sauce which brought it together perfectly. A real winner!
Amy Morgan says
Just perfect!
Linda says
OMG was absolutely delicious didn’t have enough kimchi so added some cabbage & peas & spec to stretch it a bit. Was a HUGE hit….. now to try kimchi 🙄😉
Fiona says
Made this tonight and delicious as expected. Didn’t have any roasted sesames for garnish so served a little kewpie roasted sesame dressing on the side – added a yummy sweetness. Definitely on the ‘make again’ list. thanks Nagi
Nagi says
That’s great Fiona!! I am happy that you liked it! N x
Mykala says
Always wanted to try this dish and it did not disappoint, so so yummy!! 😭
alimak says
omg, so good!! I always need lots of protein so stir fried pork belly and steak strips,\, removed, then mushrooms (can’t find enoki here in Godzone, but button did the trick) added beansprouts then proceeded as written.
A keeper, thanks Nagi x
Alexandra says
Hi Nagi, would love to try and make kimchi myself ,was hoping you might put a recipe on at some point? 😊
alimak says
Nagi’s mama has a simple kimchi recipe on her website – it’s good!!
https://japan.recipetineats.com/simple-kimchi-recipe/
Alexandra says
Thank you so much Alimak for pointing out the Japanese website, will check it out and give it a go🙂
Bec Nicotra says
I made this with ramen noodles instead of rice. I was nervous as I haven’t cooked with kimchi before but it was a really quick and easy meal and turned out well. The fried egg was a great addition.
Laird McColl says
Hi Nagi!
I’ve just made my first batch of Kimchi and am keen to use it in this dish.
Thanks for the recipe! If I wanted to add pork belly to it would I be best to cook it first then remove from the pan and then add back in with the rice?
Thanks!
Nagi says
Oh nice Laird!!! Yes I would cook the pork belly first, remove and then add back to the rice at the end to mix through. N x
Laird McColl says
Awesome thanks Nagi!
Anita Eti says
Hi Nagi!
Thanks for this recipe, really excited to try it! I was wondering if the mushroom is absolutely necessary? My dad is pretty allergic! Let me know if I can leave it out or sub for another veggie. Thanks again!!
Nagi says
Hi Anita, just leave them out if you prefer! N x
Adrian Padula says
Can you sub the gochujang with something like sriracha? Not really a fan of corn syrup, msg, artificial sweeteners, etc.
Nagi says
Hi Adrian, sorry not for this one – it’s a key Korean flavour needed in this recipe. N x
Amy says
So flavorful and easy to make; another Tineats hit!
Nat says
We had this last night for dinner with a fried egg. I used button mushrooms as didn’t have enoki mushrooms. It was delicious & a hit with the family. We love your recipes Nagi! 🤩
Nagi says
Glad you enjoyed it Nat!! – Nx
Stela says
Made it and I love it so much,but I do modify abit by adding pork slices, a dash of soy sauce and a pinch of sugar to balance off the sourness from the kimchi the second time I made it. And today I made it again,the third time! Haha,thanks for your recipe Nagi*^_^*
Alyx says
Made this last night and it was so delicious! I also added in a bunch of broccolini and a red capsicum to bump up the veggies a bit. Will definitely make again.
Kate Arkwright says
Very good 🙂 And luckily not as spicy as I thought it would be. I added chicken too.
Nagi says
It’s not overly spicy but it has a little kick, I’m so glad you enjoyed it Kate! N x
Karen Taijeron says
I need help on a product I ordered through you…I never get a respond…I did contact through the other method.. Did you receive them? I think I emailed twice.
Nagi says
Hi Karen, I’ve just responded to your email, unfortunately what you purchased wasn’t through me, I do not sell physical products – N x
Karen says
Who’s the online fitness… I thought it was you who gave the portable electric juicer cup from online fitness and just have to pay shipping..
Nagi says
Hi Karen, sorry I have no idea what you’re talking about, I don’t have a shop nor sell any physical products! N x
Karen says
Do you know any online fitness, do you know if it’s a website or something… I got an email from that saying they were giving away portable electric juicer, just pay shipping..