This is Korean food at its best. Galbi jjim(갈비찜) /Kalbijjim was certainly one of my favorites as a kid and is still very much at the top of my list to this day. As a kid, I loved to eat just Galbi jjim, rice and Kimchi. It was a perfect balance of flavors for me. The combination of sweet yet savory, juicy yet melt in your mouth tender beef ribs with a great depth of flavor and the crunchy, spicy cabbage Kimchi to break up that little hint of fat was simply just too delicious for my figure. haha.. Even when all the ribs were gone, I savored every last drop of the remaining Galbi jjim sauce by mixing rice and the sauce together.
Koreans traditionally make this dish for great holiday occasions such as New Year’s and also for their most honored guests. So if you have visited many different relatives homes during the New Year’s, you do kind of get sick of it towards the end. Sadly, very few Korean restaurants (both abroad and in Korea) serve this dish anymore so you may not have been able to taste this at all. If you like Korean BBQs like bulgogi or kalbi, then you must try making this dish.
Kalbijjim is also a great party dish because you can make ahead of time. You just reheat when guests arrive. Kalbijjim, rice, kimchi, lettuce salad and any kind of jeon makes a fabulous party menu anytime.
Among the various beef cuts, Korean beef ribs are perhaps the most expensive cut and is certainly not something average Koreans eat or make often. When I went shopping to buy beef ribs (갈비 Kalbi) from our neighborhood market, I was told that it’s not a beef cut they normally carry because it’s so expensive. The butcher told me to come back during New Year’s or Chuseok holiday.
** Cool Galbi jjim overnight for best results.
Have an Instant POT? CLICK HERE for my IP recipe
Galbi Jjim (갈비찜) – Korean Braised Short Ribs
Servings 6 Time: Prep 15 min + Cook 2 hrs Difficulty: Moderate
Ingredients
- 4 lbs (1.8kg) beef short ribs (갈비)
- 5~6 large dried or fresh shitake mushrooms
- 10 oz (300 g) Korean radish (daikon also works) – about 1 1/2 C cut up
- 2 carrots
- 12 chestnuts, peeled (canned chestnuts is ok)
Ingredients for Galbi jjim sauce
- 3/4 C + 3 T (add later after tasting) dark soy sauce
- 1/2 C sugar
- 1/2 C mirin or sake
- 2 T honey (+ 1 tsp as a finish)
- 2 T sesame oil + 2 T (add right before finish)
- 1/2 tsp sesame seeds
- 1/8 tsp black pepper
- 2 ~ 3 T chopped garlic
- 2 T chopped green onion + 1/2 stalk for broth
Directions
- Soak dried shitake mushrooms in warm water. Fully immerse mushrooms in water by adding weight on top. This will help reconstitute mushrooms quicker.
- Peel and cut radish and carrots into roughly into 1.5 inch pieces.
- Rinse ribs in cold water to get rid of any bone fragments. (I bought these short ribs from emart. They are imported from Canada.)
- Trim any excess fat and score center of the ribs so that the meat will cook faster and also absorb the sauce more readily.
- Add cleaned and trimmed ribs to a large enough pot and fill with cold water. Bring water with ribs to a quick boil and flash cook the ribs for 3~5 min. This is to get rid of any gamey taste that beef ribs can sometimes have. This step is optional.
- Turn off heat. Drain and discard all liquid.
- Make the sauce by mixing all sauce ingredients listed above EXCEPT for 3 T soy sauce, 1 tsp honey, 2 T sesame oil. You will be adding the additional soy sauce, honey and sesame oil to taste later on.
- Add sauce to pot. Turn heat to med-high and cook ribs in sauce for 5 min.
- Add 5 C water and bring back to boil.
- Add radish and additional green onion for extra flavor. Simmer for 30 min.
- Mushrooms should be fully soaked by now. Rinse and quarter shitake mushrooms like so.
- If using canned chestnut, just drain. If not, you will have to peel your own.. 🙁 Nice thing about Korea, many markets peel raw chestnuts for you for free when you buy a bag. Here’s how they look –
- After simmering for 30 min., add carrots and mushrooms. Continue to simmer.
- After 20 min or so, add chestnuts. Optionally add dried jujube dates.
- Simmer for another 1 hr or so (total 1:50 min~ 2 hrs) until the meat is fully tender. Best way to check the tenderness is to tear a little piece off and taste.
I am holding up this piece of Galbi with tongs after simmering for 90 min. You can see that it’s not falling off which means it still has another 20~30 more mins to go.
- When it’s almost done, taste the meat to see how you like it. Add more soy sauce (up to 2 T) and touch of honey (1 tsp) to taste.
- Galbi jjim produces a LOT of fat and you need to skim the fat before you serve. My tip for trimming off fat is to cool the stew in the fridge for several hours or in colder climates, leave it outside.
Now just break off fat pieces and discard them. You can easily remove fat from Galbijjim or any other stew or meat stock using this method without a lot of fuss.
Yup – that’s quite a lot of fat…good thing we removed it all. 🙂
- After removing the fat solids, add 2 T sesame oil and reheat Galbi jjim before serving.
So here is the final closeup of my yummy Galbi Jjim (Kalbi Jjim).
Galbi Jjim (Korean Braised Short Ribs)
Ingredients
- 4 lbs beef short ribs (갈비)
- 5 cups water
- 5-6 large dried or fresh shitake mushrooms
- 10 oz Korean radish (daikon also works) (about 1 1/2 C cut up
- 2 carrots
- 12 chestnuts (peeled, canned chestnuts is ok)
Ingredients for Galbi jjim sauce
- 1 cup soy sauce (jin ganjang)
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1/2 cup mirin or sake
- 2 Tbsp honey (+ 1 tsp as a finish)
- 4 Tbsp sesame oil (add 2 Tbsp right before finish)
- 1/2 tsp sesame seeds
- 1/8 tsp black pepper
- 2-3 Tbsp garlic (chopped)
- 2 Tbsp green onion (chopped)
- 1/2 stalk green onion (whole for broth)
Instructions
- Soak dried shitake mushrooms in warm water. Fully immerse mushrooms in water by adding weight on top. This will help reconstitute mushrooms quicker.
- Peel and cut radish and carrots into roughly into 1.5 inch pieces.
- Rinse ribs in cold water to get rid of any bone fragments.
- Trim any excess fat and score center of the ribs so that the meat will cook faster and also absorb the sauce more readily.
- Add cleaned and trimmed ribs to a large enough pot and fill with cold water. Bring water with ribs to a quick boil and flash cook the ribs for 3~5 min.
- Turn off heat. Drain and discard all liquid.
- Make the sauce by mixing all sauce ingredients listed above EXCEPT for 3 T soy sauce, 1 tsp honey, 2 T sesame oil. You will be adding the additional soy sauce, honey and sesame oil to taste later on.
- Add sauce to pot with ribs. Turn heat to med-high and cook ribs in sauce for 5 min.
- Add water and bring back to boil.
- Add radish and additional green onion for extra flavor. Simmer for 30 min.
- Mushrooms should be fully soaked by now. Rinse and quarter shitake mushrooms like so.
- If using canned chestnut, just drain. If not, you will have to peel your own
- After simmering for 30 min., add carrots and mushrooms. Continue to simmer.
- After 20 min or so, add chestnuts. Optionally add dried jujube dates.
- Simmer for another 1 hr or so (total 1:50 min~ 2 hrs) until the meat is fully tender. Best way to check the tenderness is to tear a little piece off and taste.
- When it’s almost done, taste the meat to see how you like it. Add more soy sauce (up to 2 T) and touch of honey (1 tsp) to taste.
- Galbi jjim produces a LOT of fat and you need to skim the fat before you serve. My tip for trimming off fat is to cool the stew in the fridge for several hours or in colder climates, leave it outside. Then skim off the hardened fat from the top.
- After removing the fat solids, add 2 T sesame oil and reheat Galbi jjim before serving.
Tips & Notes:
- Freeze leftovers for later. It will reheat nicely. Vegetables will be a bit mushy though.
- Save every bit of leftover Galbijjim liquid and make Kimchi Jjigae with it. You will end up with a very hearty Kimchi Jjigae~
Nutrition Information:
In my opinion..
- Most Korean recipes will tell you to soak the beef in cold water and let it bleed out. Recipes say that the meat will smell bad otherwise. But in my opinion, you don’t need to do it unless the beef is especially gamey tasting. I think this was the case in the old days because many beef in Korea was from cows that worked the field which means they had a lot of muscle and was grass fed. I never really followed the advice for the last 20 years in the US and never had a problem. And the same here in Korea so I think I can say it’s safe to ignore it.
- Some Galbi jjim recipes add gingko nuts. Personally I don’t like the taste of it but you are welcome to try. It’s supposed to be good for your brains!
Storage
- Freeze leftovers for later. It will reheat nicely. Vegetables will be a bit mushy though.
Tip
- Save every bit of leftover Galbijjim liquid and make Kimchi Jjigae with it. You will end up with a very hearty Kimchi Jjigae~
Enjoy!
Ruby says
When you say you can use the juice in making kimchijjigae, how do you recommend I use it and by how much?
JinJoo says
So when making Kimchi jjigae, I would start by adding about 1/4 cup to a pot full of Kimchi jjiage. See how it taste to you. It is going to taste sweet but really good in its own way. If you don’t like it sweet, add more kimchi juice and water. If you like it more sweet, add a bit more galbijjim juice. Hope that helps. Enjoy!
Koriri says
Cooked this for my family, and they said it was so good and authentic! Love this recipe so much, thank you for sharing it!
JinJoo says
So glad you enjoyed it! Thank you!!
Analie says
Hi! My husband, my daughter and I love Korean food. When we went to L.A., we ate Galbi Jjim in one of the korean restaurants, but the color of the sauce was red, which seems like they added either chili sauce or tomato sauce, and they also added some slices of potatoes without shiitake mushroom and radish. Anyway, your recipe looks good and I would like to try it when I have all the ingredients.
JinJoo says
Hi Analie,
Apologies for the late reply – I was on vacation the last few days. There is a spicy version of Galbi jjim which adds dried red chili peppers to the sauce which makes is spicy and not red. But if you say the color was red, they probably added gochujang to it which should still work well. I also have an Instant Pot version if you have an IP that makes it even quicker to make. Good luck and thank you for leaving me a comment!
Jennifer J says
Thank you, JinJoo! I made this today to celebrate New Year’s Day with my family and everyone from my nieces, to sister-in-law, to my parents loved it! It was a hit! I missed not having this dish at special events and decided to make it myself. I’m so glad I found your blog! Here’s to more Korean cooking in 2018. Happy New Year! 🎊
JinJoo says
OMG this is the best New Year present for me!! You are most welcome Jennifer! So glad your family enjoyed it. Here’s to many more delicious events for 2018!! 😍👍🎊
Sandra says
I only have 2.5 pounds of meat, should I scale back the sauce or would it make a difference in flavor? I like extra sauce anyways but if it would make too salty I would like to adjust. Thanks for the help.
JinJoo says
I would recommend scaling back. You will have enough sauce. Thanks for asking! Enjoy!