Jeon Is a Korean Favorite for a Reason. Here’s Why.

Making these pan-fried fritters is a labor of love, timeless, joy-inducing and effusively Korean.

Squares of gamja jeon sit on a pale plate. A pair of chopsticks dip one piece into a sauce.
Gamja jeon, Korea’s answer to the potato pancake, is crisp on the outside and chewy on the inside.Credit…Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini.

I had never noticed jeon in my youth, not like I do now. Maybe because they were always there, at every party, holiday, Tuesday night dinner. While the mothers gathered in the kitchen to fry up brimming platters of the Korean fritters — with ingredients like meat (wanja jeon), kimchi (kimchi jeon) and cod (daegu jeon) — the fathers played cards in the dining room, drinking soju and beer, and we children ran amok upstairs playing video games. The smell in the air, fried oil, was singular.


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