Crispy Korean Stir-Fried Anchovies That Stay Light, Not Hard
Korean stir-fried anchovies, or myeolchi bokkeum, are one of the most useful side dishes to keep in the refrigerator. The trick is to remove moisture first, coat the anchovies lightly with oil, and add the sweet syrup at the very end so the texture does not turn rock-hard after cooling.



Quick answer
Toast small dried anchovies in a dry pan, shake off the crumbs, stir-fry them with garlic oil and nuts, then briefly season with soy sauce, sugar, and cooking wine. Turn off the heat before adding oligosaccharide syrup or corn syrup for a glossy finish.
Why anchovy stir-fry gets hard
If the sauce is boiled too long, the sugar hardens after cooling. If anchovy powder remains in the pan, it burns easily and leaves a bitter taste. Dry-toasting and straining the anchovies first makes the final dish cleaner and lighter.
Ingredients
- 100 g small dried anchovies
- One handful of nuts
- Sliced garlic and optional chili pepper
- soy sauce, sugar, cooking wine, sesame oil, and syrup
Cooking flow
Dry-toast the anchovies for two to three minutes, then shake out crumbs. Toast the nuts briefly. Add oil and garlic to the pan, then stir-fry the anchovies and nuts until lightly crisp. Add the soy sauce mixture briefly, turn off the heat, and finish with syrup and sesame seeds.
Final tip
For lunch boxes or rice balls, keep the seasoning slightly lighter and avoid overcooking the syrup. This helps the anchovies stay easier to pick up even after refrigeration.
More Korean home-cooking ideas
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