Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun) Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Ji Yoon Yoo

Adapted by Leslie Kaufman

Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun) Recipe (1)

Total Time
15 to 20 minutes
Rating
4(184)
Notes
Read community notes

Featured in: For Dinner (and Fast), the Taste of Home

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:2 to 4 appetizer servings (3 pancakes)

    For the Dipping Sauce

    • 3tablespoons rice wine vinegar
    • 3tablespoons soy sauce
    • teaspoons sugar, optional
    • Pinch of hot red pepper flakes

    For the Pancakes

    • 2teaspoons vegetable oil
    • 2large eggs
    • ½cup all-purpose flour or rice flour
    • ½teaspoon salt
    • ½cup very finely chopped vegetables asparagus, broccoli, green beans, scallions or chopped cooked leftover meat chicken, beef, pork or both

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (3 servings)

175 calories; 7 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 20 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 8 grams protein; 928 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.

Powered by

Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun) Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. For the Dipping Sauce

    1. Step

      1

      For dipping sauce: In a small bowl, combine vinegar, soy sauce, sugar (if using) and red pepper flakes. Mix well and set aside.

    2. Step

      2

      For pancakes: Fill a pitcher or glass with ice and ½ cup or more cold water; set aside. Place a small (6- to 8-inch) nonstick or well-seasoned skillet over medium-low heat. Coat bottom with vegetable oil and allow to heat.

    3. Step

      3

      In a medium bowl, whisk eggs just until frothy. Add flour and salt and whisk to combine. Add vegetables or meat and stir to blend. Add ½ cup ice water and mix again to blend.

    4. Step

      4

      Fill a ½-cup measuring cup with batter; pour into hot pan. Allow to sit until browned and crispy on bottom, about 2 minutes. Flip pancake and cook another 2 minutes. Place on a serving plate and keep warm (or set aside to serve at room temperature). Repeat with remaining batter. Serve with dipping sauce, tearing or cutting off pieces of pancake to dip in sauce with fingers or chopsticks.

Ratings

4

out of 5

184

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Jennlynn

I have been eating this for years and I think all I want to add is the type of flour you use does make a huge difference in the pancake texture. When I have extra kimchi I put it in alone with plenty of scallions and shrimp. Fish sauce just a little works too.

jp

The dipping sauce is supposed to have a punchy vinegar flavor, but you can probably use half the amount & add more to taste. Best vegetables to use for these are julienne carrots, zucchini or scallions. Koreans do not use asparagus or green beans in any dishes. Rice flour is preferable, but if you have a Korean market in your area, you can buy a pre-made flour mix.

Rachel Goodman

This is a very useful recipe. I have been using a lot less salt and packing in at least twice as many vegetables-makes great snacks.

LizzieMac

This either didn't work for me, or wasn't what I was intending to cook. I think I was looking for a more traditional, thin and crispy scallion pancake (but took an easier route with this recipe). Used rice flower with scallion, shallot and 1/2 jalapeno. Meh. Will not make again.

Nancy Hogan

I made this on a whim, was craving something easy and healthy. I made the recipe exactly as written. The batter was sooo runny, so I’ll cut down the ice water as others have done, and maybe use potato flour that I have instead of plain old flour. I love that I thought to add a bunch of diced shish*to peppers straight from my garden; home-grown zucchini too! The best news is my husband liked it! Into the rotation it goes.

Edward in Paris

This recipe has been revised by the Times, I am pretty sure. Some observations from the previous version. The other used potato flour and I used that with this recipe with the same measurement. Very light, but it seems you can use either. Try making this in a waffle iron. It gets a but crisper (its really not very crips) and I think easier. Good either way. I have never added meat. It sounds good, but for me it has been all vegetarian and very good as just that. (I am a meat-eater.)

Lauren

I really liked this recipe, but I preferred a different dipping sauce: 1 TBSP Rice vinegar, 2 TBSP soy sauce, 1 green onion, and a pinch of red pepper flakes.

sandra

This was good. Was looking for something to do with bean sprouts (who knew that they grew 10 fold when sprouting) and thought of Korean pancakes, for some reason. Was just me, so 1/4 c rice flour and water, and one egg. Added the bean sprouts and a couple chopped green onions and voila. This might be a go to 'single' lunch or dinner. A few chopped shrimp would have been good. 1 T each soy sauce and rice vinegar was more than enough for dipping sauce.

beddy

I used the full amount of water. The batter is runny, but makes lovely thin but slightly spongey pancakes. I used rice flour. For vegetables I used carrots and scallions, which my kids loved because it is so much like a fried rice recipe I often make (but better!). I like the comment about kimchi--I will try that next time. I also find that I need to double the recipe--it goes fast. At any rate, this is a new household favorite. Thank you.

Ginni

I used cassava flour for a gluten-free version. I needed to add a lot more vegetables to make sure it didn’t get to floury and dry. Still delicious though! Grated ginger in the sauce is also lovely.

Maria

I agree with jp. No one Korean uses asparagus or broccoli in Pajun. Don't do that. In regards to vegetables, we traditionally use chives (flat leaf), zucchini or kimchee. I have no idea where the random chopped vegetables in this recipe came from.

monique

Only add the amount of water needed. If you add the amount in the recipe your batter will be runny

copro

Used all rice flour and added shrimp. Did not need all the water. Just added enough to make a batter that was just thicker than pourable.

jp

The dipping sauce is supposed to have a punchy vinegar flavor, but you can probably use half the amount & add more to taste. Best vegetables to use for these are julienne carrots, zucchini or scallions. Koreans do not use asparagus or green beans in any dishes. Rice flour is preferable, but if you have a Korean market in your area, you can buy a pre-made flour mix.

Susan

This recipe looks nothing like the photo. As you can see there is something red in the pancake and the side sauce looks like a paste but the way the recipe reads its simply a dipping sauce. The recipe is quite vague and doesnt look anything like the photo. I used regular flour, maybe that makes a difference but unlikely. NYT should make sure the photo looks somewhat like the recipe. It was quite flat in flavor and texture. Good luck

Dan

I tripled the recipe since I was cooking for four. Taking cues from some of the other comments I only added 1/2 cup water instead of 3 times that amount. I also took someone else's advice and added 1 teaspoon of baking powder. The pancakes were great, but we all thought that the dipping sauce was too vinegary.

Jeremy

I just tried this recipe for the first time. I thought the batter was a little thin? Maybe use less ice water in the mix.

Rachel Goodman

This is a very useful recipe. I have been using a lot less salt and packing in at least twice as many vegetables-makes great snacks.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun) Recipe (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Tuan Roob DDS

Last Updated:

Views: 5583

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Tuan Roob DDS

Birthday: 1999-11-20

Address: Suite 592 642 Pfannerstill Island, South Keila, LA 74970-3076

Phone: +9617721773649

Job: Marketing Producer

Hobby: Skydiving, Flag Football, Knitting, Running, Lego building, Hunting, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Tuan Roob DDS, I am a friendly, good, energetic, faithful, fantastic, gentle, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.