Sheet-Pan Kimchi Fried Rice

Published June 15, 2022

Sheet-Pan Kimchi Fried Rice
Bobbi Lin for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Sue Li. Prop Stylist: Sophia Pappas.
Total Time
45 minutes, plus rice cooking time
Rating
4(984)
Comments
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Kimchi fried rice doesn’t need a weeknight makeover — it’s already so easy. But this oven method maximizes the surface area of the dish by using a sheet pan, increasing the potential for that coveted nurungji, or scorched rice. By baking this dish, you can start with fresh rice (no need for day-old), as the dry oven heat draws out the moisture from the moist grains and turns them crispy-chewy, plus the only active cooking required here is stirring together the ingredients. The oven handles the rest, which means no actual stir-frying. Eggs cracked on top, gently baked to silky perfection, are a necessary finish, as the runny yolks sauce the gochugaru-stained rice.

Featured in: Eric Kim’s Essential Korean Recipes

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Ingredients

Yield:4 to 6 servings
  • 2cups uncooked medium-grain white rice
  • ¼cup toasted sesame oil
  • ¼cup gochujang
  • ¼cup napa cabbage kimchi juice, plus 16 ounces kimchi, coarsely chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 3tablespoons soy sauce
  • 2teaspoons granulated sugar
  • Salt
  • 1large onion, cut into medium dice
  • 3tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
  • 20grams gim (often labeled as roasted seaweed), crushed
  • 6large eggs
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

483 calories; 21 grams fat; 7 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 7 grams monounsaturated fat; 5 grams polyunsaturated fat; 60 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 14 grams protein; 957 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place the rice in a sieve and rinse it under cold running water, shaking constantly, just a few seconds. Add the rinsed rice and 2 cups cold water to a rice cooker or medium pot and soak for 10 minutes. If using a rice cooker, turn it on and cook rice until soft and fluffy. If using a pot, bring the water to a simmer over high heat, then reduce the heat to very low, cover and continue simmering, without peeking, for 20 minutes; remove the pot from the heat and let the rice finish steaming, still covered, until the grains are soft, distended and a little shiny, about 10 minutes. Uncover your cooked rice, fluff with a fork and set aside.

  2. Step 2

    Position a rack in the middle of the oven and heat to 425 degrees.

  3. Step 3

    In a large bowl, whisk together the sesame oil, gochujang, kimchi juice, soy sauce and sugar. Season generously with salt, then stir in the chopped kimchi and onion. Add the cooked rice, butter and seaweed and stir to combine. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt.

  4. Step 4

    Transfer the rice mixture to a large rimmed sheet pan and spread out loosely. Bake until the top of the rice is crispy and chewy but not burned, 25 to 30 minutes, opening the oven door halfway through (to check on it, but also to let excess moisture out during the cooking).

  5. Step 5

    Remove the pan from the oven. Using a spoon, create 6 shallow depressions in the rice. Crack the eggs into the depressions and place the pan back in the oven until the egg whites have just set, 3 to 6 minutes. Serve immediately, while the eggs are still runny.

Ratings

4 out of 5
984 user ratings
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Comments

If you are meal prepping/cooking for one, just skip making the eggs and store the rice. Then, when you are ready to eat, heat one serving on a plate in the oven and add an egg on top once it's hot. Delicious!

I believe 20 grams is accurate. I made this yesterday as directed, but only purchased a 10 gr packet of gim, since I had never tried it before. It's delicious on it's own, but it seemed to get lost amid the flavor of the other ingredients. Perhaps the full 20 grams would have made a difference. BTW gim is also called laver nori, and may be easier to find under that name.

Costco sells 17g packs of “Organic Roasted Seaweed Snack”, it was the perfect amount for this recipe.

To demonstrate how useful this recipe is in cleaning out your fridge I am sharing my adaptation of this recipe. I used leftover coconut turmeric jasmine rice and added Swiss chard, celery, carrot, fresh banana pepper and fresh shallot because I didn’t have an onion. Next time I will bake it with convection setting to get it crispier. Instead of eggs I topped with leftover trout and some smoked salmon candy I needed to use up. Eggs would have been better because it would add a creaminess. To compensate I added lots of lime juice at end with cilantro leaves. I’m sure the original recipe would be better but ours was darned good.

No idea why but my eggs took much longer to cook - maybe 8 min? I think b/c the rice had cooled down some when I added the eggs. But will try this again and maybe reduce oil a little in rice and add to pan as definitely things were sticking. Added pancetta to top - cooked separately. Definitely a comfort food flavor bomb! (Eric you are the best!)

Making this right now! I will say that the eggs have taken twice as long to cook as it says in the recipe because after the first five minutes they were nowhere near set. I covered the pan with foil and baked an additional five minutes, and they're perfect. Next time, I'll just fry the eggs.

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