This Is the Best Recipe The New York Times Has Ever Published

I could eat Eric Kim's gochujang buttered noodles every day.

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

I’m a total sucker for easy, weeknight-friendly, pull-from-the-pantry recipes. As a person who cooks and develops recipes for a living, these are the ones I come back to and find comfort in after a long workday.

Eric Kim’s Gochujang Buttered Noodles fit the bill for a quick, pantry dinner (with nearly 10,000 5-star ratings to boot) and use one of my favorite Korean ingredients: gochujang. Here’s how to make his simple take on buttered noodles that are a bit sweet, a tad spicy, a lot garlicky, and incredibly delicious.

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

How To Make Eric Kim’s Gochujang Buttered Noodles

Find the recipe in full on NYT Cooking, which feeds about four, or follow along here to cook it for one, just as I do. 

The recipe starts simply: Bring a pot of water to boil and cook five ounces of fresh or dried ramen noodles or any long pasta, like spaghetti. Reserve some water before draining.

While the noodles cook, melt a tablespoon of unsalted butter in a frying pan over medium low heat. Add three cloves of garlic (minced or, for ease, grated or pressed), season with salt, and let cook until softened but not browned.

Stir in one heaping tablespoon gochujang and one tablespoon each honey and sherry or rice vinegar. Increase the heat to medium-high and let cook, stirring constantly, until it reduces and you can drag a spatula across the bottom of the pan, leaving a visible trail that’s slow to fill in; this doesn’t take long.

Add the cooked noodles to the sauce with another half tablespoon butter. Toss well, adding a splash of reserved noodle cooking water as needed to loosen the sauce. Taste, season with salt and pepper as desired, garnish with chopped cilantro or sliced scallion, and serve immediately.

Read More: This Is How Long You Can Leave Butter On the Counter, According To Kerrygold

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

How I Perfected the Recipe for Myself

Eric’s recipe leans a bit sweeter than my taste, so over the years, I’ve adapted it to make it my own—more flexible, even fewer ingredients, and less sweet.

Eric calls for long noodles, like spaghetti or instant or fresh ramen, but I’ve found the sauce works with any noodle shape. It’s thick enough to cling to the ridges of mezze rigatoni (one of my favorites). You can also thin the sauce with more cooking water if needed, say for udon noodles.

When I make this recipe, I tend to skip both the honey and vinegar and add a splash of the pasta cooking water to the sauce with the gochujang; if I have a lemon wedge, I’ll use the juice of that, too. I prefer the sauce to have a bolder gochujang and garlic flavor that isn’t tempered by the sweet, thick honey or vinegar. That being said, this could depend on the gochujang paste you use. Mine tastes pretty round and mellow on its own; if yours is spicier and needs that sweetness, the honey is key and you can always play with the amount to find your preference.

Gochujang is a staple in my kitchen, but there was one time that I was caught without and ended up using tomato paste and a pinch of red chili flakes instead. It wasn’t the same but it was tasty nonetheless!

Get Recipe with Title: Eric Kim's Gochujang Buttered Noodles Recipe

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud

Simply Recipes / Devan Grimsrud



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