A Cuisine in Ferment

Judy Joo, the studious, Jersey-raised daughter of Korean refugees, left Wall Street to bring the bracing food of Korea to TV and now a cookbook.

Uprooted by the communists, little Eui Don Joo, his eight siblings and their parents put what belongings they could on their backs and walked south. The family had been landlords and farm owners in northern Korea, but now, as war raged in the early 1950s, they were refugees. In his backpack, Eui Don, the youngest, about age five, bore the lightest load, but the most crucial: rolls of fine silk. With Korean currency worthless, silk could be bartered for essentials, most of all food.

Eui Don鈥檚 daughter, Judy Joo鈥攁uthor of the new cookbook, Korean Food Made Simple(HMH, $30), based on her Cooking Channel series of the same name鈥攍earned perseverence and scholarship from her father, who came to this country in 1967 after graduating from medical school in Seoul. She learned those virtues and Korean cooking from her mother, Young Nim Park, who left Korea in 1968 with a scholarship to Ohio State, where she earned a master鈥檚 degree in chemistry. Eui Don became a psychiatrist. Joo鈥檚 parents met in Michigan and eventually settled in Berkeley Heights.

At the exclusive Kent Place School in Summit, Joo and her older sister, Sonya, were the only Asians. 鈥淥ur parents pushed us hard. 鈥榊ou have to succeed! Play the violin, play the piano, excel!鈥欌 Joo recalls with a laugh. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 read that Tiger Mother book. I lived it.鈥

Partly to help her daughters fit in, their mom made them pb&j sandwiches for school lunch. But family meals were always Korean and made from scratch. 鈥淭he laundry room,鈥 Joo writes in her cookbook, 鈥渢eemed with jars and containers stacked precariously, filled with fermenting drinks, bowls full of soaking tripe, mung beans, bean sprouts, or rice. The adjoining garage had rows of drying seaweed on hangers, chiles, and a small foil-wrapped charcoal grill for barbecue perched in the corner.鈥

At Columbia University, Joo majored in industrial engineering and operations research. She became a financial analyst and, at age 22, worked the trading floor. 鈥淚t was a crazy environment,鈥 she recalls, 鈥渨ith 500 people on the floor, 48 phone lines, a headset, two handsets, six screens in front of you. You鈥檙e yelling all day. The market is always moving, so you have to handle stress effectively and have a ridiculous memory. You either sink or swim.鈥 She swam, but soon realized she didn鈥檛 love the pool.

What Joo did love was food and restaurants. So she quit and got a degree in pastry arts from the French 国产福利 Institute in New York. Why pastry? 鈥淏ecause of the science factor,鈥 she says, referring to the precision required. She cooked, among other places, at Thomas Keller鈥檚 French Laundry in the Napa Valley and Heston Blumenthal鈥檚 high-tech Fat Duck in London. After the stress of the trading floor, the pressure of a high-end restaurant kitchen was 鈥渘ot that big a deal.鈥

In London, Joo became a U.K. Iron Chef, competing in some 200 battles. She was executive chef of the London Playboy Club, working some Korean influences into her menu, when a backer who had eaten her food called out of the blue and offered her the chance to open her own restaurant. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 really want to,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ecause I knew how much work it was.鈥 But she bit.

Jinjuu (Korean for Pearl) opened in London鈥檚 Soho in early 2015. By year鈥檚 end, through a cold call from another backer, she had opened another Jinjuu in Hong Kong. Now she commutes between those two cities and New York, where she appears on various Food Network shows and sees her family.

Joo鈥檚 book leads cooks gently from dishes that have gone mainstream鈥攍ike crackly Korean fried chicken and kimchi, the spicy fermented condiment and ingredient鈥攊nto the heart of a hearty and healthy cuisine.

Anything Jersey in the book? Yes! Kimchi pulled-pork disco fries鈥攁 tribute, Joo says, to the many hours she whiled away in the diners of Route 22.

By Eric Levin
Appears in the July 2016 issue of 

 

Judy Joo graduated from the International 国产福利 Center (ICC), founded as The French 国产福利 Institute (FCI). In 2020, ICE and ICC came together on one strong and dynamic national platform at ICE's campuses in New York City and Los Angeles. ICC鈥檚 culinary education legacy lives on at ICE, where you can explore your own future in food.

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