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5 must-have Korean pantry staples for Indian kitchens​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 31, 2025, 09:31 IST
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Must-have Korean pantry staples for Indian kitchens

The rise of K-dramas and YouTube food vlogs has done more than entertain; it has turned Korean food into a global craving. In India, that fascination has found an easy home. Both cuisines love heat, pickles, and rice, making the jump between kimchi and achar, or gochujang and red chilli paste, feel surprisingly natural. You don’t need a fully stocked Korean market to begin experimenting. With just a few core staples, your kitchen can shift seamlessly between Indian comfort and Korean boldness. Scroll down for the basics you can find almost anywhere.

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Gochujang

This thick, brick-red paste is more than spice – it’s fermented, complex, and slightly sweet, thanks to sticky rice and soybeans. In Korean kitchens, it’s the base of tteokbokki and bibimbap. In Indian kitchens, it slips into marinades for paneer or chicken tikka, swirls easily into mayo for wraps, or even adds depth to dal. A spoonful is enough to transform, and once you’ve opened a tub, it lasts for months.

3/6

Gochugaru

Unlike the sharp bite of Indian lal mirch, gochugaru offers gentle heat with a smoky undertone. The flakes are sun-dried, bright red, and less aggressive – closer to Kashmiri chilli in look, but lighter on the tongue. Sprinkle it over fried eggs or stir-fried vegetables, mix it into achar masala for a twist, or blend with sesame oil as a quick dipping sauce. It’s chilli, but with a softer edge that adds warmth rather than fire.

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Soy Sauce

In Korea, soy sauce is the backbone of everyday cooking. Its salty, slightly sweet depth works in soups, braises, and dipping sauces alike. In India, it often gets reduced to “Chinese food,” but it deserves more space. Add a dash to anda bhurji for unexpected savoriness, stir into rajma for roundness, or whisk into salad dressings for an earthy punch. A splash or two goes further than you think.

5/6

Kimchi

Kimchi may seem intimidating, but at its core it’s no different from Indian pickles; vegetables salted, spiced, and left to ferment. The result is tangy, spicy, and alive with probiotics. Beyond eating it straight, it folds easily into fried rice, makes a lively topping for dosas, or even sits well as a side with parathas. For Indians who already love the sour bite of pickled lime or radish, kimchi feels instantly familiar, just dressed in another spice palette.

6/6

Sesame Oil

If ghee is how Indian dal finds its perfect finish, sesame oil plays the same role in Korean food. Dark, nutty, and deeply roasted, it’s rarely used for cooking but almost always for finishing. Drizzle it over hot rice, toss it into sautéed greens, or add a teaspoon to soups for extra depth and warmth. Used sparingly, it’s the quiet, rich undertone that gently rounds out a dish, the way hing might in Indian tadkas.

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Copyright © May 27, 2026, 03.43AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service