π± Korean Fermented Soybean Stew β Vegetarian/Vegan Version
Cook Time: ~30 minutes
Serves: 2β3
Level: Easy, but soulful
WHY YOU’LL LOVE THIS SOUP
The moment doenjang hits the pot, everything changes.
The kitchen fills with a deep, fermented richness β like earth after rain. Then comes garlic, gochugaru, and scallions β adding warmth, heat, and a toasty zing. As the vegetables soften and tofu soaks in the broth, the stew becomes more than a meal β it becomes a comfort ritual.
Doenjang jjigae doesn’t scream for attention like spicy kimchi jjigae. Instead, it wraps around your senses, warm and grounding, like a well-worn sweater or your favorite book on a cold day.
π INGREDIENTS β SIMPLE, HONEST, POWERFUL
π₯£ Broth Base:
- 2.5 cups vegetable broth (or homemade dashima broth β kombu + dried shiitake simmered in water)
- 2.5 tablespoons doenjang (Korean fermented soybean paste)
- 1 teaspoon gochugaru (optional, for gentle heat)
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil

π₯¬ Vegetables (feel free to customize):
- 1/2 zucchini, sliced into half-moons
- 1 small potato, peeled and cubed
- 1/4 onion, sliced
- 1/2 cup tofu, cubed (soft or medium firm)
- 1/2 cup mushrooms (shiitake, oyster, or enoki)
- 1 stalk green onion, chopped
- Optional: a few slices of Korean radish, a handful of spinach, or a bit of chopped napa cabbage

πͺ STEP-BY-STEP WITH SENSORY DETAIL
1οΈβ£ Prepare the Broth β Build the Foundation
If using dashima broth:
- Soak a 2″x2″ piece of dried kombu and 2 dried shiitake mushrooms in 3 cups of warm water for 20 minutes.
- Simmer for 10 minutes, then remove solids. You now have a rich, umami base.
π Smell: The steam smells like a forest in the rain β earthy, mushroomy, and calming.
2οΈβ£ Add the Doenjang β the Soul of the Dish
- Scoop 2.5 tbsp doenjang into a ladle.
- Dip the ladle into the hot broth and use chopsticks to dissolve it gently.
- Stir it back into the pot.
- Add garlic, gochugaru, and soy sauce.
π₯ The broth now turns cloudy and golden-brown β pungent, nutty, and earthy.
π Aromas:
A rich, fermented funk. Not harsh β more like aged miso mixed with garlic and toasted barley. Itβs deep and comforting, almost primal.
3οΈβ£ Add the Hearty Vegetables
Add in this order:
- Potatoes β they need the longest to cook.
- After 5 mins: onions, zucchini, radish (if using), and mushrooms.
Simmer gently on medium heat. Let the vegetables absorb the broth, not just float in it.
π The aroma is savory and sweet now β like roasted garlic mashed with mellow miso and garden vegetables.
π The broth thickens slightly, small bubbles rise and pop gently β the sound of something stewing with purpose.
4οΈβ£ Add the Tofu β Silken Contrast
- Gently place tofu cubes into the pot.
- Simmer another 3β5 minutes until everything is tender.
- Add chopped green onions.
- Turn off the heat and finish with a drizzle of sesame oil.
π Final aroma:
A balance of fermented depth, garlic sharpness, toasted sesame, and clean vegetable sweetness. It smells old and familiar, like something you’ve always known.


π HOW TO SERVE
- Ladle the stew piping hot into a stone bowl or deep dish.
- Serve with steamed short-grain rice and kimchi on the side.
- Optional: top with seaweed flakes, extra gochugaru, or even a few drops of chili oil.


π§ TASTE PROFILE β A BOWL OF WISDOM
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Umami | From doenjang, mushrooms, soy β deep and rich |
| Sweetness | From onions, zucchini, and potato |
| Saltiness | Balanced, mellow soy and fermented paste |
| Spice | Optional warmth from gochugaru |
| Texture | Soft tofu, tender vegetables, silken broth |
π§‘ The stew is humble but powerful. You taste the fermentation, the earth, the garlic, the time. It’s not flashy, but it lingers β in your mouth, your nose, and your memory.
π§ OPTIONAL VARIATIONS
- Add rice cakes (tteok) for chewiness

- Add perilla leaves for herbal aroma
- Use white miso + tahini if you donβt have doenjang (not traditional, but similar vibe)

π FINAL WORD
Doenjang jjigae isnβt just food.
Itβs grandmother energy. Itβs the scent of home after a long trip. Itβs the stew that says, βYouβve had a hard day β sit down, eat, rest.β
Itβs a hug in a bowl, brewed in fermentation, aged in love, and meant to be shared.


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