The best local restaurants in Seoul have stood the test of time by consistently delivering homemade and inexpensive Korean favourites. Using traditional recipes and cooking methods, these family-owned spots are places to savour must-try local delicacies such as kimchi, a chicken ginseng soup named samgyetang and braised beef ribs called galbi-jjim.
Most of these local restaurants are located in Gangnam and Myeongdong, which are easily reached with Seoul’s efficient subway systems. Best of all, diners can often enjoy a hearty and nutritious meal plus a drink at rather affordable prices. The restaurants that made our list have won rave reviews from locals, seasoned expats and food critics from all over the world.
- 1
Tosokchon
Specialising in a hearty ginseng chicken soup
- Essen
Tosokchon is known for its signature samgyetang, a popular Korean chicken soup with ginseng best eaten during the summertime. A 10-minute walk from Gyeongbokgung Station, it was a favourite spot of South Korea’s late president Noh Muh-hyun, making it an iconic landmark in Seoul.
Tosokchon’s samgyetang is slow cooked for hours for a sweet and nutty flavour. It’s made with a young spring chicken stuffed with chestnuts, garlic, dried jujubes, ginseng, glutinous rice and gingko nuts. Aside from its signature dish, Tosokchon also offers roast chicken tongdak, green onion pancakes with seafood called hae-mool pajeon and agu-jjim, which is a braised spicy monkfish.
Lage: 5, Jahamun-ro 5-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Daily from 10 am to 10 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-737-7444
KarteFoto von Wei-Te Wong (CC BY-SA 2.0) bearbeitet
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Goryeo Samgyetang
An award-winning menu of Korean classics
- Essen
The Michelin-rated Goryeo Samgyetang has been serving quality samgyetang since 1960. This local restaurant is about a 2-minute walk from the City Hall subway station. The menu offers many traditional Korean dishes including roasted chicken goryeo tongdak and jeonbok-juk, which is an abalone rice porridge.
Samgyetang is made by boiling a whole chicken with a mix of dates, garlic, glutinous rice and various Korean medicinal herbs to make a flavourful and energising soup. Goryeo Samgyetang only uses ginseng that’s grown in Geumsan and 7-week-old chicken from local farms.
Lage: 1, Seosomun-ro 11-gil, Seosomun-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Monday–Friday from 10.30 am to 9 pm, Saturday–Sunday from 10.30 am to 8.30 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-752-9376
Karte - 3
Hadongkwan Myeongdong
A longstanding favourite Seoul spot
- Essen
Hadongkwan Myeongdong is a popular lunchtime spot in Seoul for savory gomtang, which is beef bone soup with rice, and suyuk, which is boiled beef. Founded in the early 1930s, Hadongkwan relocated from a quiet back alley near Cheonggyecheon to the popular Myeongdong district.
This city institution is serving a simple classic made to perfection plus excellent kimchi on the side. Hadongkwan opens early and closes when it’s out of beef, so stop by early to get your fill of Seoul’s most true-to-form gomtang.
Lage: 12 Myeongdong 9-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Monday–Saturday from 7 am to 4 pm (closed on Sundays)
Telefon: +82 (0)2-776-5656
KarteFoto von egg (Hong, Yun Seon) (CC BY 2.0) bearbeitet
- 4
Cheongjinok
Serves up a hangover cure that'll pick you right back up
- Essen
Operating since 1937, Cheongjinok is a family-run restaurant that serves haejangguk, a hearty beef broth made by stewing ox blood with generous portions of radish, dried cabbage, beef tripe and a soybean paste named doenjang. Also known as a hangover stew, this flavourful dish is not for the faint of heart.
Cheongjinok also serves various pajeon pancake dishes and donggeurang-ttaeng, a pan-fried beef and vegetable patties. Drinks range from soju and beer to traditional wines like baekseju rice wine and bokbunjaju, a sweet-bitter black raspberry wine.
Lage: 32, Jongno 3-gil, Chongjin-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Daily from 6 am to 9.30 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-735-1690
Karte - 5
Andongjang
Korean-Chinese classics that feed the soul
- Essen
Andongjang is the oldest Chinese restaurant in Seoul. A family business in its third generation, this place is friendly and unpretentious. It has 2 floors of seating, clientele both old and young and serves heaping portions of Korean-Chinese favourites.
If you find yourself struggling to make a choice from the long menu, take a pick from the shortlist of popular dishes on the wall. Jajangmyeon is a crowd-pleaser: noodles in sweet black bean sauce with crisp raw cucumbers. For a mild, nostalgic dish, order the oyster jjamppong. This comforting soup has soft oysters and winter cabbage and doesn’t skimp on the oil.
Lage: 124 Eulji-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Monday–Friday from 11.30 am to 3.30 pm and from 5 pm to 9.30 pm, Saturday–Sunday from 11.30 am to 9 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)22-266-3814
KarteFoto von KFoodaddict (CC BY 2.0) bearbeitet
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Myeongdong Kyoja
Handmade kalguksu delights
- Paare
- Familien
- Essen
Myeongdong Kyoja is a Michelin-starred restaurant renowned for its handmade, knife-cut noodles called kalguksu. Located within walking distance from Myeongdong Station, this beloved spot has been delighting locals and visitors since the 1960s with its simple yet flavourful dishes.
Their menu is short and sweet, featuring only 4 items: kalguksu, mandu dumplings, a mixed noodle dish named bibim guksu and kongguksu, which are bean noodles. Patrons flock here daily for the fresh, in-house-made dishes. With generous portions and affordable prices, it's no wonder this spot is a local favourite.
Lage: 29 Myeongdong 10-gil, Jung District, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Daily from 10.30 am to 9.30 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-776-5348
KarteFoto von (CC BY 2.0) bearbeitet
- 7
Goraebul
A taste of the sea in Seoul
- Essen
Goraebul is an old-style Korean restaurant in the Gangnam district that specialises in raw seafood. Sourcing only the freshest ingredients from Gyeongsang Province on the east coast, this eatery serves some of the tastiest sashimi you’ll find in Seoul, including abalone, red snapper, sea urchin, octopus and gwamegi, a half-dried Pacific herring.
The atmosphere here is quiet and cosy, and there are several private rooms available to couples and groups. Above-average prices are matched by dishes of exceptional quality. While the staff offer a high level of service, do note that the menu here is only in Korean.
Lage: 62, Nonhyeon-ro 79-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Monday–Friday from 11.30 am to 2.30 pm and from 4.30 pm to 10 pm, Saturday–Sunday from 11.30 am to 10 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-556-3677
Karte - 8
Norang Jeogori
No-frills Korean classics
- Essen
Norang Jeogori is a traditional Korean eatery serving homestyle plates in lunch and dinner set menus. You won’t leave here hungry: expect a table filled with banchan and side dishes surrounding mains like grilled mackerel and bulgogi. Scallion pancakes, stir-fried octopus and doenjang jigae, a soybean stew, are among the classic dishes typically served. Expect lightly seasoned, heart-warming dishes and a family restaurant atmosphere.
Prices are reasonable considering the generous portions and Gangman location. Be sure to follow the signs when you enter the building, as you’ll need to take an elevator up to the fifth floor.
Lage: 9 Seocho-daero 73-gil, Seocho-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Daily from 11.30 am to 9.30 pm
Telefon: +82 (0)2-534-5300
KarteFoto von Alpha (CC BY-SA 2.0) bearbeitet
- 9
Busan Sikdang
A tasty combo of soju and spicy fish soup
- Essen
Busan Sikdang is where you’ll see locals enjoying baekban, a set menu of rice, soup or stew and side dishes. Standouts include the cold steamed cabbage with fermented soybeans, cucumbers with hot pepper flakes, soy sauce crabs and kimchi made with ponytail radish.
Do note that rice is cooked to order, so you might need to wait for your meal. Busan Sikdang is also known for its spicy pollock maeuntang, a peppery fish soup that is said to be both a great companion to a glass of Korean soju and a hangover cure.
Lage: 12 Insadong 11-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Monday–Saturday 11.30 am to 10 pm (closed on Sundays)
Telefon: +82 (0)2-733-5761
Karte - 10
Changsin-dong Spicy Pig's Feet
The proud home of one of Seoul's spiciest meals
- Budget
- Essen
Changsin-dong puts 'spicy' in their name for a reason. The braised, heavily seasoned jokbal, or pig trotters, that the restaurant serves are seriously spicy, although they’ll make a less-so-but-still-spicy version upon request. To temper the hot flavours and round out your meal, add rice balls and steamed eggs to your jokbal order.
The restaurant is tucked in an alley and surrounded by shops selling an assortment of banchan side dishes. This low-ceilinged spot has lots of tables but tends to fill up with locals as the evening rolls on.
Lage: 23 Jongro 51-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Öffnungszeiten: Tuesday–Sunday from 10.30 am to 10 pm (closed on Mondays)
Telefon: +82 (0)23-675-9689
KarteFoto von enchobi (CC BY-SA 2.0) bearbeitet