Most days, I am bored in Korean class, which is sad but true. I already know some of the grammar, so that’s part of it, but the class just bores me to tears. The class syllabus is very synthetic, meaning that we learn grammar points independently and are then expected to synthesize them ourselves for communicative purposes. Ugh, it’s so, so painful, but there isn’t much I can do. It’s too late to move to another level, and it’s not as if my Korean is really that good. I’m just bored with the format.
So it was exciting to go on a cooking field trip on Thursday where we made bulgogi and japchae in an instructional kitchen classroom. We also learned what a trashcan is:
I loved our teacher’s haircut. Should I cut my hair while I’m here? Thoughts?
It became immediately clear who had experience in the kitchen and who didn’t. I held my breath a few times, preparing to spring into action if a classmate chopped off her finger or spilled boiling water all over himself.
Pouring soy sauce is a job for four people:
Alright, Tarita, let’s sautée the shit out of these vegetables:
I kind of love the frumpy Korean-style aprons. I might have to get one.
Here are the fruits of our labor. I did not eat the bulgogi, but I heard it was tasty:
Here’s my whole class. Mercifully, my classmates are pretty cool, so if I have to suffer, at least I’m not alone. Sorry for the awkward cleavage shot.
Today, I did a fair bit of cooking as well in preparation for homestay dad’s mother’s (homestay grandmother’s) birthday. The apartment went into psycho mode, which was a little bit stressful to be a part of.
Homestay mom made a ton of food: bulgogi, pork, fried shrimp and vegetables, rice, noodles, salads, kimchi (many kinds), sponge cake, stir-fried sardines, etc.
Homestay mom asked me a few weeks ago to make the same yellow cake with chocolate frosting for the party. It was received with moderate success, though many people chose to leave some on their plates in favor of watermelon. (This is always going to shock me.)
As you can see, the dog was very helpful.
In case you have questions about the dog, imagine that we are having a face-to-face conversation about it. This is how I would look; hopefully, you know me well enough to read through the lines.
Tomorrow, I have to buckle down and learn a lot of vocabulary and review grammar points that I have forgotten because our midterm is this week. (Can I make it another six weeks? I might perish of ennui!)
No, that’s not true. In my free time, I’ve been dreaming up ambitious projects, planning my life for the fall semester, trying to sing songs from Wicked without knowing the words, and devouring books on my Kindle. Free crappy romance novel? Sure, I’ll bite.









good lord, that is a shit-ton of food. jesus.
sorry things are kind of dull. Enjoy the down time while you can, because you never know when life will again deal you boredom instead of stress and suckage!
you should plan a trip to Michigan in there somewhere. or at least some place on the way here so we can do a sprint triathlon or something. If anything, it’ll be another spur-of-the-moment multisport fun fest.
and yeah, yippy dogs that just make themselves nuisances annoy the hell out of me. I will never own one.
Whoaaaa… a lot of food! It’s always like that, right? Interesting how many dishes do the Korean prepare for each meal. Do they spend a lot of times in the kitchen or is it pre-heat food?
They prefer fruits to cake? Wow! So healthy!
That table looked empty. Also, boobs.
Those are literally my two favorite Korean foods!!!! Can you share the recipes or is that too annoying? Also: there is more than one type of kimchi?! (Korean food novice, sorry!)
Sorry class is being so annoying
I am so bad at putting two and two together in a language setting like that so at least you are miles ahead of where I would be in that situation… for the record, I’d be in the corner. Crying.
I think you should definitely take advantage of getting a new hair cut while in Seoul. Why wonder who can cut your texture of hair in the states when you can get it done by someone who has seen THOUSANDS of heads of hair like yours!?
You could just grab someone on the street, ask to take a photo, and take it to the stylist– your options are endless! Do it, do it!