For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (2024)

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To tame the sweetness of these Korean banchan-inspired glazed carrots, we burn the honey and spike the sauce with chile pepper, ginger, and a splash of vinegar.

By

Sasha Marx

For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (1)

Sasha Marx

Senior Culinary Editor

Sasha is a senior culinary editor at Serious Eats. He has over a decade of professional cooking experience, having worked his way up through a number of highly regarded and award-winning restaurant kitchens, followed by years spent in test kitchens for food publications.

Learn about Serious Eats'Editorial Process

Updated September 28, 2020

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For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (2)

Why It Works

  • Blooming honey to the point of being slightly burnt imparts pleasant bitterness to balance its natural sweetness.
  • Cooking carrots with stock, butter, and honey at a rapid boil with plenty of stirring and swirling provides the mechanical agitation necessary to build a strong emulsion.
  • Soy sauce and fish sauce give the dish savory depth, while gochugaru provides floral heat, for an assertive banchan-style side dish that can hold its own with other components of a large meal.

Glazed carrots are a classic vegetable side dish that employs a trés French technique called glaçage, for which vegetables are cooked at a rapid boil with stock, butter, and a sweetener such as sugar or honey until tender and the liquid has reduced to a glossy emulsified sauce. Agitation from the boiling, along with swirling and stirring the pan that the vegetables are cooking in, provides the mechanical action required to build a stable emulsion for the glaze (just as you would for a silky pan sauce or properly finished pasta). Inspired by Korean sweet soy-glazed potato banchan, this version of glazed carrots pairs Bugs Bunny's vegetable of choice with an assertively seasoned glaze made with gochugaru (Korean chile flakes) and burnt honey that strikes the perfect balance between savory, sweet, and spicy.

One recurring problem with glazed carrots (and other root vegetables) is that the dish can easily veer into too-sweet territory, making them more of a pre-dessert than savory side dish. Carrots are already high in natural sugars—in order to survive cold conditions, carrots convert starch to sugar to act as natural form of anti-freeze. Chef Dan Barber of Blue Hill at Stone Barns is well-known for farming "high-Brix" (read: super-sweet) carrots by leaving them in the soil through multiple freezes before harvesting, to push the vegetable's sugar content to the limit. So, it's no surprise that combining a naturally sweet vegetable with an added sweetener like honey or sugar in a glaze can make for an overly saccharine dish.

For these glazed carrots, we combat this problem by first intentionally burning the honey, blooming it in a saucepan until it darkens to a molasses shade of dark brown. This imparts subtle bitterness, balancing the honey's natural sweetness. Gochugaru is then added along with the carrots, minced ginger, and garlic. The floral heat of the Korean pepper flakes and fresh ginger complements and tempers the sweetness of the carrots and honey. Stock, butter, soy sauce, and fish sauce are then added to the mix and brought to a boil.

The carrots get covered and cooked until just tender and the liquid has emulsified. For the final couple of minutes, the carrots are cooked uncovered, to allow the glaze to reduce to a glossy coating. The finishing touch is a dash of rice wine vinegar and sesame oil off-heat, to lend acidity and bolster the toasty, subtle bitterness of the burnt honey. This is a quick-cooking vegetable side that is anything but an afterthought, and fits in just as well with a weeknight meal as with a holiday feast.

Celebrate the Sides With a Korean-American Banchan Thanksgiving

Recipe Details

Glazed Carrots With Burnt Honey and Gochugaru Recipe

Active5 mins

Total15 mins

Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons (30ml)honey

  • 12 ounces (340g) carrots, peeled and cut into 2 1/2-inch-long by 1/2-inch-thick batons (about 6 small carrots)

  • One 1-inch piece fresh ginger, peeled and minced (about 2 teaspoons; 12g)

  • 2 medium garlic cloves (10g), minced

  • 2 tablespoons (14g) coarse ground gochugaru (Korean chile flakes)

  • 1 cup (240ml) homemade chicken or vegetable stock, or store-bought low-sodium stock, plus extra as needed

  • 2 tablespoons (28g)unsalted butter

  • 2 teaspoons (10ml)soy sauce

  • 1 teaspoon (5ml)fish sauce

  • 1 teaspoon (5ml)unseasonedrice wine vinegar

  • 1 teaspoon (5ml) toastedsesame oil

  • Thinly sliced chives, scallions, or garlic chives, for garnish

Directions

  1. In a 3-quart saucier or saucepan, add honey and cook over medium-high heat, stirring constantly with a rubber spatula, until honey darkens and takes on the color of molasses, 2 to 3 minutes.

    For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (3)

  2. Add carrots, ginger, garlic, and gochugaru, season lightly with salt, and continue to cook, stirring constantly, until mixture is very aromatic, about 30 seconds. Add stock, butter, soy sauce, and fish sauce, stir to combine, and bring to a boil. Cover saucepan with lid or round of parchment paper, and adjust heat as necessary to maintain rapid boil. Cook, stirring and swirling saucepan occasionally, until carrots are tender and give very little resistance when poked with a cake tester or paring knife, 7 to 9 minutes. If liquid drops to below 1/2-inch during cooking, top up with additional stock or water.

    For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (4)

  3. Remove lid and continue to cook carrots at a rapid simmer, stirring and swirling constantly, until sauce is reduced to a syrupy glaze, about 1 minute. If at any point the glaze over-reduces and the emulsion breaks (a visual indicator of this is fat separating and making the liquid look greasy), add water or stock, 1 tablespoon (15ml) at a time, stirring and swirling constantly, until emulsion is stabilized once more. Remove from heat, stir in rice wine vinegar and sesame oil, and season with salt to taste. Divide between small individual serving dishes, sprinkle with chives or scallions, and serve.

    For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (5)

Special equipment

3-quart saucier with lid

Make-Ahead and Storage

Glazed carrots are best served right away, but they can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Reheat in a saucepan over medium-high with 2 tablespoons (30ml) additional water or stock. Bring to at a rapid boil and cook, swirling constantly to re-build the glaze emulsion, until carrots are warmed through.

This Recipe Appears In

  • Celebrate the Sides With a Korean-American Banchan Thanksgiving
  • Carrots
  • Stovetop Vegetables
  • Vegetable Sides
  • Thanksgiving Side Dishes
  • Winter Sides
Nutrition Facts (per serving)
182Calories
9g Fat
24g Carbs
3g Protein

×

Nutrition Facts
Servings: 2to 3
Amount per serving
Calories182
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 9g12%
Saturated Fat 5g25%
Cholesterol 20mg7%
Sodium 607mg26%
Total Carbohydrate 24g9%
Dietary Fiber 4g13%
Total Sugars 16g
Protein 3g
Vitamin C 13mg65%
Calcium 54mg4%
Iron 1mg5%
Potassium 413mg9%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.

(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

For Better Glazed Carrots, Add Burnt Honey and Some Chile Heat (2024)

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