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  • (chopping) (upbeat music)

  • - Hi everybody, this is a yuja.

  • Yuja, citrus fruit.

  • Really good smell.

  • I'm in Yeosu, Korea, which is my hometown.

  • I got this yuja in this market.

  • I paid the 10,000 Won, which was $10 for five.

  • But you know, when I was in Korea,

  • this is such an expensive fruit,

  • but these days prices are kind of a little

  • less expensive than before.

  • So I'm going to make a delicious tea out of this.

  • (happy violin music)

  • Hi, everybody.

  • I came back from the market with my yuja.

  • Look at this yuja, it's so pretty.

  • I weighed this, each one, it's more than half a pound.

  • Heavy and huge.

  • As soon as I saw this yuja in the market,

  • I couldn't help buying this

  • because I missed this taste a lot!

  • In America I can't find good yuja.

  • Sometimes in a Japanese market,

  • They call this yuzu.

  • But we Koreans, we always, you know, yuja.

  • Luckily I'm traveling in Korea, this yuja season.

  • So this is really, really exciting.

  • I like to go back home with yuja tea.

  • You know that through the customs

  • we are not allowed to bring fresh fruits to America,

  • but I like to make tea,

  • and probably they won't give me hard time.

  • But meanwhile, I can't help eating this.

  • This is so simple recipe.

  • You can get the yujacha.

  • Yuja already pre-made yuja tea

  • in Korean market in the United States.

  • Their quality can't be compared with real yuja tea

  • made with fresh yuja, so I'm going to show you.

  • Even though you cannot find the yuja

  • in America or North America.

  • But still I like to let you know about the real

  • Korean yuja tea, how I make this.

  • By the way, I'm going to sit here and I'll never stand up.

  • I'm going to all the work, finish filming

  • my yuja tea here.

  • What do you think?

  • You guys can sit right just in front of me, okay?

  • So everybody we're all sitting together.

  • You remember my knife?

  • I brought this knife from New York.

  • Cut this in half.

  • Oh, my, smells so good!

  • See, there are lots of seeds here.

  • This smells very unique.

  • Really smells like some perfume, really good good,

  • and totally different from any other citrus fruit.

  • This yuja, very thick, thick skin.

  • But really taste it, we eat all, except for the seeds.

  • I cut it this way.

  • Slice thinly.

  • Sometimes the seeds can be broken, but it's okay.

  • This is the way we make yuja tea.

  • Oh, my God, I missed this smell!

  • From one yuja we got this, a little more than one cup,

  • and these seeds.

  • These guys are going to be removed here.

  • Maybe some of you guys think,

  • "Maangchi, bring to America.

  • "You can just, you can plant this and make yuja tea.

  • "Homemade yuja tea all the time!"

  • But it has to be grown in the wind from the ocean,

  • and also certain kind of a soil.

  • And also, to get this yuja fruit,

  • it takes years and years.

  • One more yuja I'm going to make

  • so that I can make this one jar.

  • When I lived in Korea a long time ago,

  • around late fall season, this is yuja season.

  • I always used to buy huge amount of yuja

  • and then made a huge jar filled with my yuja tea.

  • My family could eat for months and months.

  • Then next year, again yuja season, I used to make it again.

  • Some of you guys may think, "Maangchi, what about

  • "I don't have any yuja.

  • "You know, how can I,

  • "How can I make any other, some replacement?"

  • Yes, a lemon!

  • I make lemon tea this way.

  • thin, slice really really thinly

  • and then this way you make this lemon tea.

  • Seeds are only left here.

  • All we are going to use this.

  • Okay, that's it.

  • Beautiful!

  • Two yuja, more than two cups.

  • So around two and maybe two and a half cups to

  • Two plus one third cup? (laugh)

  • But I'm going to use this two cups of sugar.

  • Ratio is one to one.

  • I will use two cups of white sugar.

  • You guys are thinking maybe what about

  • instead of sugar, can I use honey?

  • You could use honey.

  • I have honey, but if I use honey,

  • the color is kind of a honey color,

  • brownish color.

  • I like to enjoy this like a clear white, yellow tea.

  • Honey flavor is too strong and then

  • I cannot enjoy this yuja flavor.

  • One cup.

  • Two cups.

  • I cannot wait to drink my yuja tea, I'm boiling water.

  • I'm still sitting, I'm not going to stand! (laugh)

  • Okay wow! look at this!

  • All look like some sticky,

  • sticky gooey stuff in here.

  • It's going to be a lot of juice coming out.

  • This is the real yuja tea.

  • I never like the taste of that commercially made.

  • Like this.

  • If you happen to visit Korea around yuja season,

  • yuja season is November and December,

  • Buy this yuja at the market.

  • Any open air market, any fruit market.

  • And make this.

  • When you go home you can take this home.

  • Or just enjoy while you are here,

  • you can make your own yuja tea just like me.

  • (boiling water)

  • This.

  • Just mix well.

  • Let me taste!

  • Oh, first yuja tea in Korea.

  • I use this glass but you can use just any cups.

  • Oh my, so good.

  • And also you can eat this just right away like this.

  • Just like fruit, serve this as a dessert.

  • Really delicious.

  • Yuja aroma is difficult to explain,

  • but taste by itself it is sweet and sour, tangy.

  • This flavor is yuja flavor.

  • unique, unique aroma.

  • You can make this and keep in the refrigerator,

  • and until it runs out you can eat it.

  • I miss the yuja tea for long time.

  • I have a little kinda funny story about yuja tea.

  • Yuja is known as a really precious and expensive fruit

  • because it takes a long time to grow,

  • and also certain area is only grown.

  • People from island, they usually grow yuja.

  • One of my friends, who used to live in America for 10 years,

  • she went back to, she came back to Korea.

  • And then she is suddenly, even though it's

  • her own country, she doesn't know what's going on.

  • All things are new.

  • She went to a market.

  • open-air market.

  • The yuja seller, old lady squatting

  • in front of her basin, filled with yuja.

  • like this.

  • The lady came from America.

  • She asked, "How much is this yuja?"

  • And the old lady say, "Oh 5,000 won."

  • "oh, 5,000 won for all together?"

  • she asked,

  • The old lady, yuja seller,

  • she just looked at her like this,

  • "What are you talking about?

  • "Are you coming from the chimney?"

  • "gool ttook eh seo na waa sseo?"

  • "gool ttook" is a chimney.

  • "Are you coming from chimney?"

  • That means that you don't know

  • anything about what's going on,

  • You are a frog in the well?

  • She was very embarrassed because

  • she didn't know how expensive the yuja was!

  • Today I introduce you to yujacha, Korean yujacha.

  • Enjoy my yujacha recipe.

  • See you next time. Bye!

  • I made a little nice ball yuja tea.

  • Filled with yuja tea.

  • It's like a really plastic container

  • and also very hard.

(chopping) (upbeat music)

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