“Soju Party is a fun and heartfelt guide to Korean culture through food and drink. Whether you’re a soju-tornado master or new to Korean culture and flavors, this book has a little bit of something for everyone. With as many stories and fun facts as there are drinks to pour and dishes to eat alongside them, Irene will have you saying ‘Geonbae!’ in no time.”
—KRISTEN KISH, host of Top Chef, restaurateur, author
“The ritual of drinking in Korea is a national pastime, an intricate set of rules and traditions developed over centuries. It is both ancient and modern, confusing and entertaining, and this book provides an apt blueprint of how to navigate this world like a pro while enjoying all the Korean recipes that are indispensable to a night of drinking soju.”
—EDWARD LEE, chef and author of Bourbon Land
“The memory triggers come so fast you might forget you are reading or lose your place, but go back for the stories here as well as the recipes, as they are pure gold. Knowing, clear, intimate, goofy, a perfect gift to yourself or others, hopefully to kick off many nights of fun. And soju.”
—ALEXANDER CHEE, author of How to Write an Autobiographical Novel
“Soju Party is an invitation to accompany Irene Yoo and her friends for an epic night out, which spills into the haze of a hangover the morning after. The organization of the book is joyously deployed to situate contemporary Korean food and drink recipes, historical anecdotes, pop cultural insights, and idiosyncratic hospitality traditions in their ideal venue. At a time when alcohol is being villainized (again), I’m thrilled to see a no-holds-barred guide that shows how soju and other Korean beverages function as a lubricant that reveals and holds together kaleidoscopically complicated social structures gleefully under the artful eye of an exuberant host.”
—JIM MEEHAN, author of The Bartender’s Pantry, Meehan’s Bartender Manual, and The PDT Cocktail Book
“More than just a cookbook, this is the ultimate Korean drinking experience, with Queen of the Soju Tornado Irene Yoo as your guide. In Korean culture, drinking is about bonding . . . and eating, and by the time you finish this book, you’ll want to throw your own soju party!”
—JAMES PARK, author of Chili Crisp, @jamesyworld