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The Last Days of the Seagrove Tour
Pottery on The Grounds – East Meets West
East Meets West Reception Part 2
Our guests were pretty impressed. What did they buy? Cherries, cheese, Yuengling beer, and hot dogs. Jeff prefers Hoppyum IPA or Jade IPA from Foothills brewery, here in North Carolina. They thought it was a little too “hoppy” so the Yuengling was just right for them.
That’s all for today. I have some studio clean up to do, while the entourage is in Southern Pines giving a slide show and tea ceremony demo at the senior center.
East Meets West Exhibition
Geonbae!
The Count Down Begins!
Our potter guests from South Korea will be here tomorrow afternoon! We are just about ready for their arrival. Our office/photo shoot/packing room looks like a bedroom. The second bath has been painted, and the tub caulked. A few gallons of kimchi are fermenting in crocks… I will let you imagine what the house smells like. I am sure it will make our guests feel right at home.
These are a few more pots from the last firing. The gingko leaf pots will go the show in Southern Pines. The mug was an extra from a wholesale order.
Firing #4
I have had so many irons in the fire that I didn’t even post the results of the fourth firing of the new gas kiln. Well let me tell you, I was a great one!
Remember Jeff’s tea bowl made with the clay in our yard? Here it is finished. I think it’s just “Wow!” I am quite sure that he will send this one to the show as well.
That’s all for now, gotta get moving towards the studio. I have bowls that are ready for carving.
How Dry I am…
The little town of Seagrove has an alcohol referendum on the ballot, next election. This is the sign in our yard…
A Day Off
Dak Galbi is a spicy chicken and vegetable dish. It really is very simple to make. The vegetables are rough chopped cabbage, Korean sweet potato, onion, carrot, sesame leaves.
I think the main reason I wanted to try this dish is that it also includes tteok! Tteok is rice cake. Think of it as a dense pasta. Totally yummy, especially when covered in a spicy sauce. While it is called rice cake, it does contain wheat so it is not gluten free.
In Korea, Dak Galbi would be cooked in a very large cast iron pan. Mine isn’t big enough, but this deep skillet got the job done. The ingredients are layered in a hot pan, with a thin layer of vegetable oil. Chopped, boneless chicken thighs on the top, then a hot pepper paste spread over it. Some recipes marinated the chicken in the paste.
As the vegetables cook, they release their liquid and create a delicious sauce as the pepper paste is incorporated into it. 20-30 minutes and it’s done!
At a Korean restaurant, everyone would eat from the large pan, sometimes wrapping their food in sesame leaves. Once the pan is empty, the cook quickly fries some rice in the sauce that is left in the pan. Since we had some leftover rice in the fridge we did just that. DELICIOUS! It was the perfect ending to a Sunday off.