Aeri's Kitchen


Canned Tuna Jeon

참치전, ChamChi Jeon


This tuna pancake is a type of lunch box side dish in Korea. I think that some foods match better with others for taste, texture, or nutritional value. Canned tuna is a great match with sesame leaves (perilla) in that point. So, the tuna, sesame leaves, and mayonnaise (or ketchup) are sometimes used together in some Korean dishes. Simply mix the tuna with some other vegetables and fry, and then dip in ketchup or mayonnaise for a great taste. :D

Yield: 2 Servings

Short Korean Lesson: *^^*

  • KkaenNip (깻잎) = Perilla (Sesame Leaves)
  • ChamChi (참치) = Tuna

Main Ingredients

  • ½ Cup Canned Tuna
  • 6 Sesame Leaves (Perilla) or about ¼ Cup
  • 2 Eggs
  • ½ Cup Onion
  • ½ Tbsp Hot Pepper (Optional)
  • 3 Pinches Salt
  • Some Mayonnaise, Ketchup, or Mustard for Dipping

Directions

 

Prepare ½ cup of tuna from the can. Break it with a fork to make fine pieces.

 

Finely chop 6 sesame leaves (¼ cup), ½ cup of an onion, and ½ Tbsp of hot pepper.

 

Combine the tuna, chopped vegetables, 2 eggs, and 3 pinches of salt.

 

Mix them all together.

 

In a generously oiled and heated pan, place a spoonful of the mixture and make a round shape.

 

Fry them until both sides of the pancakes become golden brown on medium-high.

 

Depending on your tastes, dip the pancake in mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, or a combination of each. Enjoy! :D

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21 Comments

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  1. Lily Kim

    I made it, it was delicious. Thank you for the recipe! I added some flour because my cakes kept falling apart. ^.^

    • Aeri Lee

      hi Lily Kim,
      Hehe.. thanks :) I’m happy you liked it. Try other recipes too… and i will love to see your Korean food pictures too.

  2. cathy

    Hi Aeri! I tried this one, and it was really great! I didn’t find sesame leaves so I used Petchay (Chinese white cabbage) instead.

    I posted a picture of what I came up with on my blog and linked back to your website for the recipe.
    http://periwinkleconfessions.blogspot.com/2010/09/yummy-tuna-and-veggies-fritters.html

    Yummy! Thanks for sharing! :wink:

    • Aeri Lee

      hi cathy,
      Thanks.. loved to see your picture. You have a very cute website. ^^ please try more of my recipes and share your pictures with me. hehe

  3. kushibo

    You don’t need any kind of 가루 mix for this? The egg is enough to hold it together?

    I think I’ll try this. Mahalo!

    • Aeri Lee

      hi kushibo,
      You are right.. the egg is enough to hold it together.. try it someday.. ^^

  4. Cynthia

    this looks great! just a question, instead of perilla leaves is there another subsititute if i can’t find those leaves?

    • Aeri Lee

      hi Cynthia,
      Perilla leaves make this dish tastes good and unique..but since you can’t find them… hm.. green onions.. garlic chives.. minced garlic.. or green hot peppers.. (my husband just said..”mint”-I’m not sure about that because I’m not familiar with herbs..but he thinks that can be good substitute..;) ) ..if you like kimchi.. you can add some chopped kimchi also. thanks

  5. Rebecca

    Aeris,
    Another winner! Not only is it a winner because it tastes great, but because there’s no flour (I can’t have four) and so both my husband and I can enjoy this together. Thank you.

    Looking forward to more recipes.^^

    • Aeri Lee

      hi Rebecca,
      That’s great.. thanks for your review. I will think of more recipes that you don’t need flour then.. how about rice flour. you can’t eat that either ??? ^^

  6. lethi

    wow i want to try this …. thanks for sharing us

  7. Scott

    I made this today for my family and they loved it!

  8. layping

    aha..another way to use perilla leaves. my girl will love this….cos you have tuna in this recipe!!

  9. sirdanilot

    I have a Perilla (sesame leaf) plant in my garden with huge leaves! I might try this for my lunch. Hm… tuna…
    Can we also use the Red Sesame leaf (perilla), or only the green one? I have both in my garden.

    • Aeri Lee

      hi sirdanilot,
      Common Korean sesame leaves are green.. so try with green ones.. WOW..I envy you.. you have lots of sesame leaves in your garden.. one of my Korean friends gave us 3 plants of sesame leaves 2 years ago.. first year it was okay..but the next year ..it didn’t grow that healthy..and this year we didn’t get any… huk..@.@ We need new plants…hehe

  10. farleen

    OH EM GEE ~ i LOVE this!!! this is perfect for my daughter’s lunchbox! she’s getting tired of the sandwiches i make for her jkjkjk :p :)

    one question though…do you drain the water/oil from the tuna first?

    love you!!! xo

    • Aeri Lee

      hi farleen,
      haha.. Oh Em Gee… I like that..
      Teach me how to make sandwiches for school lunch box … so I can make bryson get tired of it too… hehe yes.. I drained the water or oil.. ^^ love you.. xo xo xo

  11. Bubbles

    Hi, Aeri! This pancake looks so good, but I have a question: where can I buy sesame leaves.. are they available at Korean/Asian grocery store? Thank you!

    I’ve been reading your blog for a while. This week I’ve tried your recipes for Jeyuk Bokkeum and DakBokkeumtang, and they were both really delicious!! So, so perfect, especially for a spicy food lover like me.

    • Aeri Lee

      hi Bubbles,
      Usually you can find the sesame leaves in a Korean grocery store..but it has season.. you will not find it in the late fall and winter.. thanks :D

  12. Lisa

    That’s mine, Aeri. =D

    • Aeri Lee

      Hi Lisa,
      SURE ~~ :) hehe thanks

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