Buldak Pizza (Korean Fire Chicken Pizza)
Updated Sept. 23, 2022

- Total Time
- 50 minutes, plus overnight resting
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1tablespoons neutral oil, such as vegetable, canola or rice bran
- 6medium garlic cloves, minced (about 2 tablespoons)
- 3coin-sized disks of fresh ginger
- 1tablespoon tomato paste
- ¼cup gochujang (hot or mild, depending on your heat tolerance, see Tip)
- 3 to 4tablespoons gochugaru (hot or mild, more or less, depending on your heat tolerance, see Tip), plus more to finish
- 1tablespoon coarsely fresh ground black pepper
- 3tablespoons sweet rice syrup or light corn syrup
- 3tablespoons soy sauce
- 2tablespoons toasted sesame oil
- ½cup chicken or vegetable stock, or water
- ½cup crushed tomatoes
- 12ounces boneless, skinless chicken thighs (2 to 4 thighs, depending on their size)
- 425grams/about 3 level cups bread flour, plus more for stretching and dusting pizza skins (15 ounces)
- 12½grams/about 1 tablespoon sugar (.4 ounces)
- 12½grams/about 1 tablespoon kosher salt (.4 ounces)
- 6grams/about 1 teaspoon instant yeast, such as SAF or Fleischman’s Instant Yeast (.2 ounces)
- 28grams/about 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil (1 ounce)
- 12ounces coarsely grated full-fat dry mozzarella
- 6garlic cloves, very thinly sliced
- A handful of pickled chiles (such as pepperoncini or banana peppers)
- A bunch of thinly sliced scallions
- Roasted gold or black sesame seeds (or a mix)
For the Marinade, Sauce and Chicken
For the Pizza Dough (or Use Store-bought)
To Finish
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare the marinade: In a large saucepan, heat the oil over medium until shimmering. Add the garlic and ginger, and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 1 minute. Add tomato paste, gochujang, gochugaru and black pepper. Stir until homogenous and a light film starts to form on the bottom of the pan, about 1 minute. Add rice or corn syrup, soy sauce and sesame oil. Bring to a simmer and remove and discard ginger slices. Using a ladle, transfer half of the mixture to a large bowl and set aside.
- Step 2
Prepare the pizza sauce: Add stock and crushed tomatoes to the remaining mixture in the saucepan, stir to combine and simmer until reduced to about 1¼ cup, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a container, allow to cool and refrigerate until ready to use.
- Step 3
Add the chicken to the marinade in the bowl and toss to thoroughly coat. Transfer to a sealed container and let marinate for at least 1 night and up to 3.
- Step 4
Meanwhile, make the pizza dough: In a heavy-duty food processor (see Tip) fitted with a dough blade or regular blade, combine flour, sugar, salt and yeast. Pulse a few times to mix thoroughly. Add the oil and 270 grams/9.5 ounces lukewarm water (about 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons). Run the food processor until a cohesive ball of dough forms and starts to ride around the blade. Let the processor continue running for 30 seconds, then shut it off.
- Step 5
Transfer the dough ball to a bowl at least double its volume. Cover tightly with plastic wrap or aluminum foil, then transfer to the refrigerator for at least 1 night and up to 3.
- Step 6
On the day you’re ready to bake, remove the dough from the refrigerator. Transfer to a lightly floured work surface and, using a bench scraper or knife, divide the dough in half. Using floured hands, form each half into a tight ball, gathering the dough to a point on the bottom and pinching it shut to form a sort of stretched “skin” around the ball. Transfer each ball to a lightly oiled bowl at least thrice its volume. Cover the bowls (you can use a cutting board or pot lids, plastic wrap or aluminum foil) and let them rest at room temperature until doubled in volume and quite slack, at least 2 hours and up to 6.
- Step 7
When ready to bake, adjust an oven rack to a few inches below the broiler, place a baking stone or steel on it, and heat the oven to the highest temperature it can muster (500 to 550 degrees, preferably) for at least 45 minutes. If you have convection, use it.
- Step 8
Spread the marinated chicken on a rimmed, foil-lined baking sheet. Place the baking sheet directly on the pizza stone and cook the chicken until cooked through and charred in spots, 7 to 8 minutes. Transfer the chicken to a cutting board and, when cool enough to handle, roughly chop it into pizza topping-sized pieces.
- Step 9
Turn a single dough ball out into a bowl of flour and turn to coat. Transfer to a well-floured wooden pizza peel or the bottom of an overturned baking sheet. Using your fingertips, dimple the center of the dough repeatedly, pushing the dough out into a circle about 8 to 10 inches in diameter, leaving the outer rim higher than the rest. Using flat hands and dusting underneath or on top with flour as needed, stretch the dough out into a 12- to 14-inch circle.
- Step 10
Working as quickly as you are able, using the back of the spoon, evenly spread half of the sauce on top of the dough, leaving a rim around the edge. Spread half of the chopped chicken on top, followed by half of the mozzarella. Add half the garlic slices and half the pickled chiles. With clean, dry hands, pull the edges of the pizza out to stretch it a bit. Shake the pizza peel to ensure the pizza moves loosely.
- Step 11
Slide the pizza onto the baking stone and bake until the crust and cheese are as cooked as you like them, typically 5 to 8 minutes, though this timing can vary a lot depending on your oven and your taste. Keep an eye on the pizza and turn it a few times as it cooks if necessary.
- Step 12
Using a thin metal pizza peel or large spatula, retrieve the pizza and slide it onto a cutting board. Top with scallions and sesame seeds. Cut into slices and serve immediately.
- Step 13
Repeat Steps 9 through 12 with the remaining ingredients.
- In a well-stocked Korean or Asian market, you’ll find gochugaru (Korean chile flakes) and gochujang (a fermented chile and wheat paste) in varying levels of spiciness. In this recipe, you can vary the heat level by using the hot or mild versions, varying the amounts or adding ground cayenne or hot sauce. Once the sauce base is made, adjust the heat level according to taste before dividing it at the end of Step 1.
- Alternatively, make the dough by hand or in a stand mixer: Combine all the dry ingredients, add the wet ingredients and mix until the dough just comes together. Let rest for 15 minutes, then knead 10 minutes at medium-low with a dough hook, or 15 to 20 minutes by hand. Proceed to Step 5.
Private Notes
Comments
I didn’t have time to marinate chicken, so I cooked it, chopped it up and tossed in a lightened up version of the marinade before putting on pizza. This was so delicious and I can’t wait to make again! Red onions worked well too!
Cheese Buldak is one of my favorite dishes, so I'll definitely try this. But... I'll start with 1/2 teaspoon of black pepper in the marinade (same as in Maangchi's Cheese Buldak recipe here on NYT Cooking), not 1 tablespoon. Gochujaru and gochujang aren't what make buldak hot -- the pepper does. I'd cook the chicken as per the recipe, taste, then add more pepper if it seemed necessary.
I am preternaturally excited by this dish & recipe—guess I am expecting a spicy a fall! 1) love that you can really making 2 dishes in one—so a bit of extra chicken, and you’ve got a chicken dish— 2) it’s great that it can marinate 1-3 days, so both a fun project & a make ahead decadent meal for a busy day. 3)however, the clear & flexible shortcuts (I may try w/my own go-to quick pizza dough upon 2nd attempt) outlined here also make it inviting! Yes to red onions! —& maybe chili crisp!?
One comment said the flavours were not balanced and too salty. I agree when it comes to the marinade, which I’ve adjusted each of the three times I’ve made it. I now add 2 tablespoons water to the marinade to thin it slightly and used agave syrup in place of corn or rice syrup. It worked much better this time. I make the pizza dough in a Kitchen Aid stand mixer and it’s so easy.
This is absolutely delicious and well worth the prep. I shaved off some time by using pizza dough from a local bakery. Subbed honey for the rice/corn syrup. Used a little less gochugaru and black pepper than called for. We loved every detail!
Pizza was pretty disappointing. It was unbalanced, and sauce was too salty. I don't think this is the recipe's fault, though, just that the concept itself is impossible to pull off. Buldak itself is a pretty heavy dish, and generally relies on a reliable supply of banchan (side dishes) to balance the greasiness and heaviness of the dish itself and to cleanse your palette. I think putting something greasy and heavy like this on pizza dough is only going to make it more heavy and more unbalanced.
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