Danmuji

The recipe calls for water, rice vinegar, sugar, turmeric, and, of course, sliced daikon – a hybrid of a carrot and a rolling pin. The turmeric was unexpected, but will give the danmuji its signature neon yellow color and allow “quick pickling.” Okay. I boil the mixture and feel like a fraud in my concrete kitchen in a Lego-house condo in an East Austin development that has its own logo and economics-themed street names. I peek through mini blinds at a smug corgi mix trotting up Stock Avenue on a cheetah-print retractable leash. I am not a streetside eatery with white tiles, orange tabletops, little blue stools. I do not have a giant rice cooker or plastic-wrapped counter dedicated to kimbap construction. My streets are wide and my sidewalk is even. But the pickling juice is boiling, ready. I pour it over the radish slices in an open Tupperware. It sloshes and settles. The steam makes the container feel just a little too malleable. It’s fine. I place it in the fridge next to the pasta sauce and leave a dusting of turmeric on the cutting board, a trail exposing my attempt, and sit, mouth half watering, half waiting to get caught.   Jenna Jaco is a 2015-2016 ETA at Changpyeong High School in Jeollanam-do.

Selfie Contest Winner: Grace Lee

First-year ETA Grace Lee is the winner of our selfie contest! Grace took these selfies with her 6-year-old-cousin. We asked her a few questions:   What was it like meeting your 6-year-old cousin the first two times? I didn’t even know I had a second cousin until I was visiting my uncle’s family on my dad’s side in Busan. It had been two years since my family was able to see my cousin and her family. So I was really happy to meet my second cousin for the first time! His name is 영이. He was shy at first but once I sat down to ask him questions about his Legos and what he had made, he let me play with him. He beat me at car racing! I wanted to take photos with him and didn’t realize he was making silly faces until a few photos afterwards so I played along. I really enjoyed meeting him and I won’t have a chance to meet him again before I leave Korea but I’ll definitely remember our first time meeting each other.   What are five words you would use to describe your cousin Patient, silly, inquisitive, welcoming, and kind. I know sometimes little kids can be shy but he opened right up once he knew I wanted to play with him. We also read an English book together – “Wheels on the bus go round and round,” and it was interactive where he had a “Say Pen,” so when you pressed the pen onto the words on the book, it would narrate the story to you. He sat in my lap and we read and sang the words from the book together.   What has been your most precious moment with your cousin? The most precious moment with him was having him sit in my lap reading an English book was really special to me. Also, just being able to be silly with him with the funny selfies was a lot of fun. He’s a natural behind the camera and I definitely see him being a jokester as he grows older.   A poem by the Editor-in-Chief, inspired by these silly selfies: That first conversation: what should the warm-up question be? What’s this book about? Shall we sing together and read? As the magic “Say Pen” reads the words aloud you imagine the wheels on the bus go ‘round   One day stacking Lego blocks again might remind you of this song you sang when you were young. You might wonder where the tune came from. Where will you be when the song pulls you back to these four pictures? A different selfie-style pose before each screen flicker   As soon as you grow as tall as your laughter, don’t forget what these pictures have captured: that first afternoon in Busan meeting Grace, your cousin smiling after the toy car race you were happy to win.  

Pieces of a Grant Year

Our own Infusion Staff Editor Monica Heilman allowed us to take a look at her grant year through her art and quite literally, allowed us to take a piece of her art home with us. At the ETA Final Dinner, Monica displayed 55 pieces, all done on cardboard cup holders. This is how she describes her work: “Pieces of a Grant Year” is a collection of moments I experienced in Korea, from the mundane (students sleeping during self-study time) to the touristy (Beomeosa Temple, Busan) to the seemly insignificant but actually very influential (squatty potties). Why use coffee cup warmers, also known as cup cozies, java jackets or paper zarfs? Just because? Actually, the materials came before the plan. Thanks to encouragement from our own Hillary Veitch and my frustrated art drive, I began collecting java jackets in January. It wasn’t until many months and paper zarfs later that I decided to draw, paint and paste memories of Korea onto these pieces of cardboard. The concept was broad enough for any number of cup cozies and finding a connection to the material wasn’t too much of stretch. Cardboard cup warmers are always wrapped snugly around your cafe drink-of-choice, but afterward they’re nothing but trash. Cup warmers are insignificant physical tokens, whereas the memories I wanted to capture were meaningful but intangible. Through “Pieces” I give form to these memories, but only in snippets, the same way one might experience memories. The final component of this piece is up to you. The memories here are meant to be applicable to the general ETA experience. Our memories of Korea will eventually grow faint, but I’d like to think you could slip a zarf into your jacket pocket, fly back to America, and later look back on that piece of cardboard with some degree of fondness. So what I’m saying is, if any of these catches your eye, take one because my jacket pockets aren’t big enough for them all. To see more of Monica’s art, visit her website: https://monicaheilman.com/ [slideshow_deploy id=’5054′]