
Here’s another tasty dish using the Korean Sauce recipe you can find in my Korean Pulled Pork Sandwich post. The Sauce is really is versatile and, once made up and in a jug in the fridge, it can spice up and make more interesting a variety of other dishes.
In today’s offering, it serves both as a topping for baked salmon, and as a stir fry sauce for veg, served over noodles as shown in my photo above.
Servings
A main meal for 2.
Timings
With a batch of the Sauce already made up, this dish takes a further 15 – 20 mins.
You Will Need
- a jug of Korean Sauce – follow here for the recipe
- 2 salmon fillets
- 1 onion
- a few mushrooms, chopped
- half a green pepper, and half a red pepper, cut into strips
- 1 pack of fresh beansprouts
- 1 pad of dried noodles
- a few scallions, chopped
Method
- Heat the oven to 180C. Grease a roasting tray and place the salmon fillets in it. With a basting brush, spread a few spoonfuls of the Korean sauce over the top of the fillets and place in the oven for 15 – 20 mins.
- Heat some oil in a wok and chuck in the onions, mushrooms and peppers. Stir fry until the veg is all nicely charred. Add in the beansprouts and a few spoonfuls of the Korean sauce. Stir again so that all the veg is coated in the sauce.
- Place the noodles in a pan of boiling water for about 2 mins, then drain.
- Serve the stir fried veg over a bed of noodles, topped with the salmon fillet. Garnish with chopped scallions.
Customise It!
Mix up the stir fried veg as you wish – bok choi, mange tout or carrot sticks would all be excellent. Sprinkle sesame seeds over if you like – they go really well with the Korean Sauce.
Next track for the ADK Playlist is from a band whose music I have been exploring recently. I always thought PSB stood for Purple Sprouting Broccoli, but now I know it also stands for Public Service Broadcasting. They make an interesting sound, incorporating samples from classic, archived audio files, with clear influences including David Bowie and Kraftwerk. Here’s a track to introduce them by, using Mission Control’s commentary on the moon landing. This is Public Service Broadcasting with Go!














