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A Dragon Beats an LTTE Tiger

Beijing's less than speedy resolution to slap Pyongyang's wrist is just one reason to reconsider how the United Nations votes its Security Council members to the big table. Vijay Sakhuja offers Beijing's less than positive influence in Sri Lanka as another cause for alarm. China continued to provide political and more recently enormous military support to [...]

Kaplan's Badly-Framed Glasses on DPRK

Robert D. Kaplan comes up close (via Coming Anarchy's North Korea, the Next Iraq?) but ultimately not so nearly as compelling and provocative as Victor D. Cha.China also has good reasons for not wanting to see the kind of North-South Korean conglomerate that might ultimately emerge from collapse. Reunification of the Korean Peninsula would be, [...]

Tweets for 2009-06-12

@KimcheeGI Right! And, nothing about launching satellites can help learn more about the launching of missiles! in reply to KimcheeGI # More links from RT @JamesTurnbull To make it more useful, I've updated this post http://tiny.cc/BRLpD on #domesticviolence in #korea # @KimcheeGI Maybe both Koreas can launch intersecting missiles! NO! in reply to KimcheeGI # RT @TAMILTODAY The [...]

Tweets for 2009-06-12

@KimcheeGI Right! And, nothing about launching satellites can help learn more about the launching of missiles! in reply to KimcheeGI # More links from RT @JamesTurnbull To make it more useful, I've updated this post http://tiny.cc/BRLpD on #domesticviolence in #korea # @KimcheeGI Maybe both Koreas can launch intersecting missiles! NO! in reply to KimcheeGI # RT @TAMILTODAY The [...]

Drag Yourself to the Nearest Movie Theatre


Drag Me to Hell

DRAG ME TO HELL

Directed by: Sam Raimi

Release Date: In Theatres Everywhere June 11

Before becoming indelibly assocated with the Spider Man franchise, Sam Raimi was famous for his gratuitous depictions of zombies being beheaded and dismembered (often by chainsaw) in “The Evil Dead” (1981). His latest film, “Drag Me to Hell,” about a bank employee who denies an old gypsie woman a loan on her house and subsequently finds herself haunted by demons, marks a return to his roots. While it’s sure to deliver some serious grossout scenes, it won’t really compare to the filmmaker’s early B-movies – it’s rated PG-13.

Jacques Tati Retrospective at the Busan Cinematheque


Jacques Tati

JACQUES TATI RETROSPECTIVE

The Busan cinematheque is screening all six of Jacques Tati’s features and three of his shorts June 16 through June 21. Often compared to Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, the French filmmaker (who also stars in nearly all of his works) is famous for creating one of cinema’s most beloved comic characters, Mr. Hulot – a clumsy goofball easily recognizable by his raincoat, pipe and umbrella. All films are in French with English subtitles, with the exception of “The Big Day.”

Shorts:

School for Postmen (1947)

Soigne ton Gauche (1936)

Evening Classes (1967)

*The three shorts will be screened successively for the price of one ticket.

Features:

The Big Day (1949) – No English Subtitles

Mr. Hulot’s Holiday (1953)

My Uncle (1958)

Playtime (1967)

Trafic (1971)

Parade (1974)

For screening information, please visit http://cinema.piff.org/main/theater/month_list.asp

Jokbal: Pigs Feet



Recently I’ve been worried my posts are getting a little pedestrian. Who wants to read about pork skewers, I thought to myself, Internet users vote with their feet and if you’re not careful Danny boy, they’ll surely leg it somewhere else instead. You’ll never get a foothold in the blogging game if you carry on like this, do something different you idiot!

Ok, before I get carried away and really put my foot in it, I’ll dispense with the puns and get on to the post’s real topic. Jokbal is a dish made by simmering pig’s feet (hair removed) in leeks, garlic, ginger, rice wine and water until tender, before being slicing it up and serving with a variety of condiments. I bought mine at our local market where whole joints of Jokbal wrapped up in cellophane compete for space at several different stalls. In addition to a generous tray of Jokbal, my 5,000 won also bought me a tray of sliced onion, sliced chili, a smudge of wasabi and two little bags of soy sauce and bean paste, as well as a tub of spicy sauce and another of saeujoet (fermented shrimp sauce.)



The slices of Jokbal were thick and cold, reminded me of the cold cuts of ham and roast beef left over after Christmas dinner, with clear seams of fat swirling through them at seemingly random intervals. The overall result was an even distribution of fat through a meaty, fibrous slice of pork. Had there been a little pastry involved the whole thing could easily have passed for a Heston Blumenthal deconstruction of a pork pie, such was the easy familiarity of it. The only place where it differed to what I’m used to at home was with the skin. Here it was thick, undisguised and a little chewy, though didn’t put up enough of a fight to be a problem.

Among the condiments, the saeujeot really made me sit up and take notice. Tiny tiny shrimp with big black eyes floated around in a salty, briny liquid concoction that is apparently one of the key ingredients of Kimchi. When introduced to the Jokbal, the saeujeot provided a good counterweight to the greasiness of the pork. The same could be said for the vinegary soy sauce and wasabi, which is fast becoming my favorite dipping sauce ever.



Although Jokbal may initially sound a little alien to the western palate, there’s really nothing strange about it. In my opinion Jokbal would find a great home underneath a lid of pastry or between two slices of bread and compared to some of the other pig bits I’ve tried recently, it’s a real walk in the pork.

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