Photo-Enhanced Counter Intelligence: Ginseng Soju and Other Images You Didn't See In the Original Review of Koreatown Goat-Soup Specialist Bulrocho

koreatown-gingseng soju-bulrocho2.jpg
Anne Fishbein
Revealed: ginseng soju

"If you're lucky," wrote Jonathan Gold in his Counter Intelligence review "In the Midnight Hour: Late-Night Goat Supper at Bulrocho -- Dispensing Chile-Red Comfort in a Bowl of Koreatown Goat Soup," "you may be offered a taste of the house soju, a tea-colored cordial flavored with steeped fresh ginseng."

Now we here at Squid Ink are offering you a look at the same ginseng soju that our Mr. Gold sipped. Few people outside of Squid Ink circles realize that in addition to the one or two photos that appear with Mr. Gold's reviews in the pages of the LA Weekly, longtime Counter Intelligence photographer Anne Fishbein usually shoots many more images than can fit on the page. What follows are some of our favorite unseen images from the Bulrocho shoot, with comments pulled from Mr. Gold's review. To see a slideshow of all of the Bulrocho images Fishbein has made available, click here. And to read Mr. Gold's full review, click here.


koreatown-goat-platter-bulrocho.3249519.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
It's obvious: Bulrocho's goat platter

"The most obvious order," Mr. Gold writes, "is probably the goat platter, available in sizes to feed 2, 4 or 8, an arrangement of sliced goatmeat served in broth on a ceramic plate, like a Korean goat pot a feu, that seethes over a Sterno inferno."

koreatown-goat-in leaf-at-bulrocho.3249522.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
Ready to roll

"You pick out a piece of goat, keeping or discarding the rubbery but delicious skin that adheres to it, and season it to your liking, smearing it with yellow bean paste perhaps, dipping it in a mixture of soy and hot mustard, heaping on a little of the house condiment of chopped herbs bound with tart chile sauce and the fiery chile paste gochujang, or wrapping it in a pungent leaf of kkaennip, Korean perilla, with a slice or two of jalapeƱo and a clove of raw garlic."

kkaennip at-bulrocho.3249523.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
Kkaenip, unadorned

"How did you know we serve goat?" asked the puzzled waitress, handing us a copy of the elaborately bound photomenu.

"The big picture on the sign outside?'' I said.

"Oh -- that's right. Goat is our specialty.''

koreatown-goat sign bulrocho.3249526.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
All signs point to ... goat.

"At 8 p.m., you would probably never notice the restaurant Bulrocho, yet another storefront in a huge Korean minimall, flanked by specialists in Korean rice cakes, blood sausage and puppies (the last is a pet store), literally in the shadow of Park's, which at the moment is probably the best Korean barbecue in town. YongSuSan and the Dragon are just across the street; A-Won and Kobawoo are steps away. Even if the place seemed like your kind of restaurant, its lack of an English sign, sparsely populated tables and mild but distinctly gamy aroma might cause you to shrug and look for a branch of BCD Tofu instead, where, unlike Bulrocho, you probably won't be confronted with huge flatscreens streaming tape of the North Korea missile launch every few minutes on YTN, Seoul's version of CNN, 24 hours a day.

"After midnight though, when it is beginning to look like a meal of screaming teenagers and indifferent ddukbokkum at Hodori is inevitable, Bulrocho starts to look pretty good -- a clean, well-lighted room, solicitous waitresses, and a backlit sign outside highlighted by a mammoth portrait of a handsome black goat."

koreatown-missile launch-bulrocho.3249525.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
And the rocket's white glare

"If you've come this far, you might as well try Bulrocho's famous dish, an herb-infused goat soup served bubbling in a ceramic pot, a complex, red concoction of soft goat meat and deep, long-simmered broth, handfuls of chiffonaded greens and tiny, crunchy mustard seeds, and half a dozen other things that only a student of Korean traditional medicine could identify without a handbook. Jewish chicken soup makes you feel better after eating it; just sniffing Bulrocho's soup makes you feel healthier.

"And if you're of that sort of mind, you can always contemplate the song http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksIsr89iSvA' from Inquisition's classic Magnificent Glorification of Lucifer album. Me, I'd rather just have another bowl of soup.

koreatown-goat-soup-at-bulrocho.3249527.56.jpg
Anne Fishbein
Hot tonic

Like this Story?

Sign up for the Squid Ink'd: Sign up for our weekly food newsletter, which features top local food news and events, plus interviews with chefs and restaurant owners, dining tips and a link to our print review.

Privacy Policy
Sign up for free stuff, news info & more!

Tools

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy