The calendar might indicate Autumn but here in southern England we’re having a glorious run of dry and warm weather that is almost evocative of summer. A British summer at any rate, where a few days of 25°C temperatures count as a record heat wave. Still, while not quite on par with the steamy summer I’ve just experienced in Seoul (100% humidity, daytime temperatures in the upper 30s and nighttime ones not much cooler), it has been warm enough for me to start craving a dish that I first had there this summer: bingsu (빙수), which is often translated as “shaved ice” (the Chinese characters literally mean “ice water”).
Seoul is inundated with cafes selling bingsu but I’d never ventured into one until a friend insisted I had to try it. So off we went to a branch of “Sulbing” in the trendy neighborhood of Hongdae. We ordered the “traditional” house special which turned out to be shaved ice, rice cakes (tteok; 떡), toasted soybean powder and a syrup of some kind (condensed milk as it turned out). Some versions, known as patbingsu (팥빙수), have red beans (adzuki). It was absolutely delicious and a very welcome treat at that time of year.
Alas, Oxford isn’t exactly awash in bingsu cafes. So I decided to take matters into my own hands and make it at home. From scratch. Instead of shaved ice I took some creative license and made an easy soft-serve “ice cream” from frozen fruit using a recipe I’d seen in Food & Wine magazine recently. As for fresh rice cakes, in Korea and Japan (where they are known as tteok and mochi, respectively) these are readily available, but many households also have a counter-top machine that does everything for you. All it really takes though is glutinous rice, a steamer and a wooden mallet (I used a rolling pin). Of course, if you’re not feeling all that ambitious feel free to cheat a bit – or a lot – and buy things ready made and simply assemble the pieces. To quote Julia Child, who’s going to know?!
Alternatively, you could just make the rice cake, cut it up into pieces and coat with honey and toasted soybean powder (see picture below). This is a popular, traditional dish in both Korea (where it is called injeolmi) and Japan (kinako dango). You can find soybean powder (called kinako – literally, “yellow powder” – in Japanese) at any Korean or Japanese market, or, nowadays, even in some health stores.
Yield: 4 servings
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes (plus 12 hours to soak rice)
Soft-serve: Justin Chapple, Food & Wine magazine Injeolmi: A Korean Mother's Cooking Notes, Sun-young Chang (link)