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Korean Corn Dogs

Recipe by Connie Veneracion
Jumbo hotdogs are skewered, coated with a light yeasted dough, rolled in panko (then in sesame seeds, optionally) and deep fried until golden and crisp. It's the ultimate snack. Have two and it's a full meal.
Note: Disposable bamboo chopstick is the traditional choice for the skewer. We use shorter bamboo skewers so that the corn dogs fit comfortably in our largest wok.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Resting time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Course Snack
Cuisine Korean
Servings 12 Korean corn dogs
Home cooked Korean corn dogs with sesame seeds

Equipment

  • bamboo skewers

Ingredients
  

  • 12 jumbo hotdogs or a combination of hotdogs and mozzarella (see notes after the recipe)

Dough

  • 1 ¾ cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons instant yeast
  • 1 cup lukewarm milk (water is okay too but it still has to be lukewarm)

To complete the corn dogs

  • 1 ½ cups panko (you may need more)
  • 2 tablespoons sesame seeds (optional)
  • cooking oil

To garnish

  • Japanese mayo
  • plain mustard
  • ketchup

Instructions
 

  • Take the hotdogs out of the freezer.

Make the dough

  • In a shallow bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, salt and yeast.
  • Make a well in the center and pour in the milk (or water).
  • Mix until everything just comes together (the dough will be soft, wet and lumpy but it will smoothen after resting).
    Dough for making Korean corn dogs
  • Cover the bowl and leave the dough to rest for an hour.

Prep the hotdogs

  • Place the hotdogs on a plate line with a stack of paper towels.
  • Cover with more paper towels and press to remove surface moisture.
  • Thread each hotdog into a skewer.

Fry the Korean corn dogs

  • In a wide frying pan, pour in enough cooking oil to reach a depth of at least three inches. Start heating the oil (it takes time to heat up that much oil).
  • Take a skewered hotdog and lower sideways until it touches the rested dough.
  • Start twirling the hotdog until the dough sticks to it then lift a couple of inches and continue twirling until completely covered with dough (do not overdo this because the dough will still expand during frying).
    Coating skewered hotdog with batter and panko
  • Roll the dough-covered hotdog in panko (pressing the crumbs lightly into the dough helps make them stick better) and, optionally, in sesame seeds.
  • Fry the hotdogs in batches (two to three per batch depending on the width of your pan). With cooking chopsticks or tongs, roll them around the hot oil for even cooking. It takes three to four minutes for the dough to get cooked through.
  • Rest the cooked Korean corn dogs on a rack and continue frying the rest.
  • Serve your home cooked Korean corn dogs immediately.

Notes

The cheese variant is a little trickier to cook. We use mozzarella (that's what you see my daughter, Alex, eating in one of the photos above) that's cut into roughly the same size as a jumbo hotdog. Because cheese melts during frying, it may seep through the dough. To prevent this from happening, skewer the cheese, cover in dough and panko, and freeze for about half an hour. DO NOT THAW before frying.
Can fully cooked Korean corn and cheese dogs be stored and reheated?
Yes. There are just four of us in the family and it's not possible to eat a dozen corn and cheese dogs in one go. So, we have stored corn and cheese dogs in the fridge fully wrapped in cling film. We just reheated them in the oven toaster.
Korean corn dogs with black sesame seeds
How long do they stay good in the fridge? Two days. They should last longer in the freezer but since we haven't tried freezing cooked Korean corn and cheese dogs, I'd rather not make a guess about how long they can stay there before the texture of the bread deteriorates.
Keyword Street Food