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Sunday, February 04, 2007(Rest #9) Burgers at NashvilleHung out at Nashville with Michael Hurt (Scribblings of the Metropolitician, SeoulGlow) yesterday. It's the oldest restaurant/bar in Itaewon, opening its doors in the basement in 1982 1. Now it owns the third and fourth floors and even the roof. The upper levels are drinking areas. The basement is for serious food. Michael likes the burgers there. I do too. For one thing, they are not as expensive as the other quality burger joints. They're also slightly smaller. The big kicker is that they cook your meat to your desired temperature. Those of us who put their culinary lives in their own hands and treat dining as an extreme sport know the pure divinity of a rare hamburger. It's worth the risk to some of us. I ordered mine medium. It was perfect. I hadn't had a hamburger with intentional pink in it for years. The tenderness. The juiciness. The pure caveman thrill of eating bloody raw meat. Haw-haw-haw! The chili is not too bad at Nashville either. It's a little sweet and has ample meat. It reminds me a bit of Wendy's™ chili. It comes with a few slices of processed cheese and some saltines on the side. Now, I didn't try Nashville's steaks, which are one of their big claims to fame, but I found a secret that makes Nashville worthy of frequent visits: the french fries. They are perfect. They remind me of the pommes frites I used to eat in Germany. Perfectly crispy. Not a limp one in the bunch. And almost hollow inside. Light and airy. Like eating clouds with crispy coatings. They even stood their ground after we dumped the bowl of chili on top of them. After a few beers, I thought I'd try their apple crumble. It comes with either ice cream or custard. I opted for the ice cream. This is good stuff that reminds me of school cafeteria lunches. Say as you may about school cafeterias. There were some items that were pretty darn good that I haven't had for a long time. The crumble was accented by orange zest, giving it a more grown up flavor. Nashville's also played action movies on their TV. This makes it not really the place to take a date but to hang out with the guys. 1. (2002) Salmon, Andrew and Jinny. SeoulFoodFinder. Cookand. p. 57 Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Sunday, January 28, 2007(Rest #8) hOOters -- I Really Came Here for the WingsAs far as I can tell, this is the first site to review the first Hooters in Korea. I know reviewing a restaurant within two weeks after opening is not an accurate account. Yet I'm sure that we'll be back a few times for updates. My history with the Hooters franchise has been mixed. It was cool to go there in high school for my best friend's seventeenth birthday. Yet as an adult, I feel like a stupid male being duped through my most base instincts. The last time I had visited a Hooters was when I was working a Flash design contract in Jacksonville, Florida. There weren't many restaurants near the hotel, and I chose to go to the Hooters by myself for a Buffalo Chicken Sandwich. There's little worse than the look of pity on a Hooters Girl™ when you're dining alone. On a positive note, the Hooters method of frying their chicken has been a major influence on my constantly evolving fried chicken technique. And I really dig their wings. I've mentioned before that I grew up on the northern Gulf Coast (Gulf of Mexico, that is), in the Mobile Bay area. The cuisine in the region is a mix of French New Orleans and Spanish Florida combined with West African rooted soul food. I'm blessed. Despite what people say about Hooters, it has been the closest I've come to having Floridian/Gulf Coast food in a Seoul restaurant thus far. You can order them breaded or naked. When I was in Jacksonville, it seemed that most wing places served them breaded. Is this Florida style? Don't know, but I like them this way. We ordered the hottest flavor, the 911. They weren't as hot as Korean bul dalk (fire chicken) or the Krazy Korean wings at Sh-wing, but they had a good spicy kick. Hooters uses a buttery hot sauce that adds an extra richness. And the method they use for breading the wings keeps them crispy. Another plus is that they have blue cheese dressing. They have ranch too, but THEY HAVE BLUE CHEESE DRESSING!! Our only complaint with the wings was that they didn't come with celery or carrots. We don't know if that's a Hooters Korea thing or they just messed up our order. It wouldn't be the last time. Being the first few weeks of operation, you can expect a restaurant to have a few kinks, especially with service--especially especially with a service style that is almost alien to Korea. A lot of us have grown used to waitresses only coming to our tables when called for. We had forgotten about the Western style of having a waitress visit us every so often to check up on us. Shia, our waitress (Korean name, Yu Jin 유진), was trained well. I had seen that Hooters had flown in a whole staff of trainers from the States to get the Korean staff ready. No really, there's a video of it. I must say she was trained very well, all the way down to the "lean over" to take our orders. The bartenders looked like they were trained by the same school of bartenders who trained me when I worked at Chili's--they did the same tricks I learned. Honestly, I have always been resistant to the Hooters Girl™ thing, but the Korean Hooters Girls™ just do that little Korean agassi thing that gives it that special Koreanness. Cute Korean charm mixed with American sass. It's all part of the show. They also treat the female guests like they're old sorority pals. Woo hoo! Got my picture! Now back to the food. I couldn't resist ordering up a dozen oysters on the half shell (15,000 won). Shia couldn't understand me at first. She hinted that the only English she knew was from training. So I said, "Seng gul 생 굴." That was enough. It took a while for the oysters to arrive. I myself used to be an oyster shucker at a redneck bar, and I had made tons of these platters. They involve some work, but they aren't that hard to make. The oysters come the way I remember them at Gulf Coast bars--served on a bed of ice with lemon wedges, a pack of crackers, and a simple cocktail sauce of ketchup and horseradish. Next came a sampler platter with king crab, steamed shrimp, buffalo shrimp, and some more wings. The crab was good with the accompanying butter. The buffalo shrimp also were good, even though they seemed a bit cold and soggy. After another round of wings, I ordered something more substantial--the Hooters Cheeseburger (12,000 won). It came on a nice roll with an ample amount of beef. The only sides were condiments and some baked beans. It did the job, though. It was a good burger. What's that? Oh, a birthday. Hey, mine's next month. What do I get? Oh well, I'll have to wait. Next up was our order of beef nachos. Again, they're still working out the kinks. Look closely at this picture. We looked closely too. Now, everyone together... "Where's the beef?" A quick mention of this, and we were given a plate of beef on top of our nachos. That's more like it. I'd say the nachos were ho-hum. Not as good as the wings and the burger. Pie was much better. Key lime pie, in fact. I'm not a big fan of citrus pies, particularly lemon merengue. This key lime pie was a good balance of sweet and sour. It wasn't too harsh on a stomach reeling from hot wings and beer. A quick look behind revealed that a line was forming. We had shown up at 3:30 on a Saturday and were seated almost immediately. It was then almost 7:00, and the crowd was looking hungry and restless. At Sh-wing we're not used to the crowds. We're used to claiming a table for the whole night. We decided to stop ordering, take one last picture with Shia, and call it a night. There was even more of a crowd outside. One funny little anecdote, though. While I was taking pictures of this line, a nicely dressed woman with her date asked me if I wanted her to take my picture for me. I told her it was okay, but, you know, that was really nice. Now, we usually go to Sh-wing in Apgujeong. During the summer, Sh-wing really let us down by cancelling their All-you-can-eat wing special, bumping up their prices, and being laughably stingy with their limp vegetables. Since then, Sh-wing has restored the All-you-can-eat special on Thursday nights, and their veggies are of better quality (they actually use cuts of celery from the stalk itself, not the leaves). Nonetheless, Sh-wing has finally found some competition. I said in the title of this piece, I really came to Hooters for the wings. It's because wing places are very rare in Seoul. We really only know of Sh-wing--and now Hooters. It's hard to believe that a food culture that loves spicy chicken hasn't embraced buffalo wings. Granted, grilled fire chicken and scorching chicken feet are great Korean contributions to the drinking food landscape--if only they served them with some blue cheese. Until then, we'll definitely make a return trip to Hooters. That made Injoo happy. Update: Michael Hurt at Scribblings of the Metropolitician has photos and a podcast interviewing a trainer and a waitress at Hooters Korea. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Friday, November 17, 2006(Rest #7) Kimbap Nara -- DECODED! Mary at maryeats has done the world a great service. She has gone through, translated, and provided descriptions to the menu at Kimbap Nara.Kimbap Nara, Kimbap Cheonguk, Kimbap Sarang -- these places are the heart of daily life Korean food. The food is cheap, usually fast, and satisfies your Korean fast food cravings. And they're everywhere, packed with students, blue collar workers, office drones, families, and grandmas. It is also likely the most accessible place for a newbie in Korea to start his surviving skills in ordering food. Even though there are pictures in most restaurants, the menus are all in Korean. Hangeul (the Korean alphabet) is easy to learn, but even a newbie who knows Hangeul (as I was) still can't read an entire menu in an efficient amount of time. This is where Mary has come in and provided this public service to help the new foreigner adjusting to the Land of the Morning Calm and to make those of you outside the peninsula just drool and wish you were us. MWA HA HA HA HA HA! Here is Mary's menu translation. Oh, and remember, as with all Korean restaurants, side dishes are free. Also, for any fans of the Kimbap restaurants, there's a decent thread on them at the GalbiJim forums. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Friday, July 14, 2006(Rest #5) Sloppy Joes at the Smokey SaloonThe hunt for a decent burger in Seoul has led me to the Smokey Saloon in Itaewon. It's to the right behind the Hamilton hotel, underneath Chakraa Indian Restaurant. I went there with the gang on one of my mega-eating tours. I had already eaten a steak and Guiness pie at Gecko's, and the Smokey Saloon was our second stop before taking a taxi to gorge on wings at Sh-wing in Apgujeong. What made me stop there was the allure of the Sloppy Joe they advertised. Considering the fate of my name, this dish was frequently cooked in my home while growing up, along with the obligational puns. Yet I really like a good Sloppy Joe. I usually eat them face up with a knife and fork. In recent years, I had started garnishing them with cheese and onions. The Sloppy Joe at the Smokey Saloon is done sandwich style. It's a bit pricey, as most Western food is in Korea. You pay for the burger itself, and fries are a la carte. It's dressed with some melted cheddar and a pickle and tomato on the side. The sandwich itself was great. The bun was butter grilled, the meat filling had a heavy chili flavor, and the sandwich lived up to its name. It was goopey. The Smokey Saloon serves other mammoth-sized burgers as well. This is a burger with BBQ sauce and something else. I forget. It wasn't my burger. This was another eye popper. Fried onion rings piled high on a thick juicy grilled hunk o' meat. Those were the best burgers I have had in Korea -- but there's another one that is running pretty close. More on that later. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Sunday, May 14, 2006(Rest #4) Indio: How to Begin a Friday NightOur friend Injoo is great at finding deals. One night he said, "Let's go to Indio. Three dishes for just 11,000 won." I was suspicious, but it turned out to be great. Since then, I've been introducing more and more people to this place. It's the perfect place to kick off a Friday night. First of all the menu is extensive. Pick three things from the menu. It's all in Korean, but if you can read just a little hangeul, it's not hard. I haven't checked, but they may have an English menu available. Really, you could just blindly pick three things and chances are that it'll all be good. The food isn't fancy. It's good grubby bar food. And it comes in big enough proportions to feed three people easily. We've made it a goal to go down the menu to try as much as we can -- something different each trip. Bacon vegetable stir-fry. Potato gratin, which is different types of fries and tater tots with cheese sauce and ketchup. Dang good. Some spicy crap I can't remember. Deokbokki (chewy rice cakes) with beef -- lots of black pepper. More greasy spicy food. The beer is pretty cheap at Indio. 2,000 won for 500cc draft beer. That's another bonus. The other interesting deal for drinks is their list of soju cocktails, which include lemon, peach, apple, grape, and -- yogurt. I saw that on the menu and HAD to try it. It's soju mixed with drinking yogurt and lemon lime soda. And I found a new favorite drink. We're gradually going down the list of soju cocktails. We did the apple. Pretty nice. And the peach. Reminded me of being back in Atlanta. This is also the home of the best "shake-em-up" dosirak box I've tried. Indio also seems to be the hot spot for the younger crowd. It's a lively boisterous atmosphere that's different from other Korean restaurants and bars. It's more my type of place. It's not super brightly lit like a lot of restaurants are. It's not one of the pretentiously fake blacklit whiskey bars. It's relaxed. And there are frequent appearances of Soju Man. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Wednesday, March 01, 2006(Rest #3) Globing It in ItaewonMy birthday was Monday. On Sunday, a handful of friends met in Itaewon for an Indian buffet dinner at Chakraa. Yes, it's the same Chakraa that ran the Valentine's Day promotion. As I mentioned before, I'm on their email list. I knew of a special buffet promotion that weekend. In fact, they had knocked down the price even more when we got there. Earlier that day, my girlfriend suggested we meet in Itaewon earlier. She wanted to get me fitted for a suit she was buying me for my birthday. Get it? Birthday suit? Nevermind. Her job as a tour guide made her an hour and a half late. So I killed time by wandering around, trying to find new businesses (read: restaurants) in Itaewon. If you don't already know, Itaewon is the neighborhood next to the U.S. Army base. It's set up as a special global tourist village. In reality, it's like a foreigner ghetto. It's not a tourist spot in the sense that Disney-sponsored Times Square is a tourist spot. It's more like the Mos Eisley space port from Star Wars. You know, the one that prompted Obi Won Kenobi to proclaim, "You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villany." Nonetheless, it is the place to go to get your international food fix. There was one place that I was looking for and couldn't find. Taco Amigo. It may be the second or third Mexican place in Itaewon, and it's fairly new. I welcome any Mexican alternative to Pancho's, the major Mexican restaurant on the strip. I've eaten at Pancho's twice, and both times the service and food got me depressed. Taco Amigo was supposed to be a fast food taco joint. As always, I found it right when I gave up looking for it. It's down the street from Burger King, behind Gecko's and Memories German restaurant. The menu is pricier than Taco Bell. But again, the ingredients are much harder to come by. And they are much cheaper than Pancho's. I bought a beef fajita and a beer. While I waited for my order, a Western looking man with a North American accent walked in and talked to the staff. He looked at me and asked, "What are you reading?" "Beef fajita." "No, what are you reading?" "Oh, reading." One. So I may not have to get frozen dried out tortillas shipped in from overseas. He had to leave before I could probe his brain more as to how to get my hands on these domestic tortillas. The fajita itself was pretty good. Wayne supplied me with a handful of hot sauces that are difficult or impossible to get in Korea, particularly the chipotle sauce. The restaurant offers basically tacos, quesadillas, burritos, and fajitas in beef, chicken or veggie varieties. I personally would like to see pork as an option. Pork is heavily used in Mexican cuisine, and I've grown to prefer Mexican food using pork, good fatty pork. And I'm sure it would be a much more affordable menu item in Korea. Taco Amigo is definitely going to be a regular Itaewon stop for me. I had a few more minutes to kill, so I picked up some lamb at the Foreign Food Mart. It's near the mosque, next to What the Book. It's muslim owned and is a great source for inexpensive Halal lamb. I have noticed that their variety of Halal meats has increased, along with foreign goods outside of Middle Eastern/Pakistani/Indian traditions. Eun Jeong was hungry when we met. I coaxed her into going for a quick snack at another restaurant I wanted to try, Ali Baba. Ali Baba is up the street towards Thai Orchid. It's an Egyptian themed restaurant with nice decor. We ordered a falafel sandwich and a tabouleh salad. The tabouleh, to my surprise, had no grains in it. It was nice and light, though. The falafel sandwich exceeded my expectations. It was light and spicy with a great sauce. And it won by also being cheap. Eun Jeong had never tried Middle Eastern food, but she was impressed and said she would go by there again for lunch, since her office was next door. The service, though, was slow and a bit sloppy. I didn't feel too welcome there, like we were disturbing their lazy Sunday. We finally met all our friends at Chakraa. I had been here once before, way back when John Kerry was running for President (remember that name?). The floor manager waited all the tables himself, and he was very patient and personable with our group. The food was good and spicy, not toned down too far for the Canadian clientelle (cheap shot). And there was an endless supply of naan bread. I particularly liked the chick peas and the lamb. I could barely take advantage of the buffet because I had eaten the cuisines of two other countries before arriving. But I did give it a good shot. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Sunday, December 04, 2005(Rest #2) Yeontan Kalbi -- Ansan![]() There is a restaurant I discovered late in my first year in Korea. Actually, I had known it existed, but I heard from someone it was a vegetarian restaurant, so I steered clear of it. ![]() Jeremy and Liz then informed me it was a kalbi restaurant, and a good one at that. I never walked on the side with the sign. I guess that's a signal of my own laziness, if anything. This is a cool place. It looks like a log cabin hunting lodge. In the middle is a stove filled with burning logs, which heats the place. In the winter, the open air windows are covered with thick plastic. The inside has a hickory smoky atmosphere with a dirt floor and high ceiling. ![]() Eun Jeong, my girlfriend who has a bit of a snobby side when it comes to restaurants, doesn't like this place, which is exactly why I like it. One thing she does like about it is that they roast sweet potatoes in the fire stove. Okay, now location. This is located in Ansan, in between Handaeap (Hanyang University at Ansan) and Seongnaksu stations. It's behind the Seowon Tourist Hotel. It's not a convenient walk from any of the stations, so get a taxi to take you to the hotel. At the hotel, just look for a log cabin looking building. It's funny because it seems to cater to high-paying hotel guests, and I have seen many business types there. But it also has the feeling of the dive at the edge of nowhere. Jeremy and Liz have been known to adopt some of the stray cats that frequent the place.Recently, we went back to Ansan for a Friday night dinner. Injoo asked where to go. I insisted on this place, and everyone agreed it was a good choice. Injoo said it was good because it was one of the places that used charcoal fire for the meat. The atmosphere was great, but the food was underwhelming a year ago. This time, though, the food had noticeably improved. The kalbi has more flavor, and they were generous with the daenjeong chigae. The kimchi was also very good, which is always the mark of a quality Korean restaurant. The service was a bit slow, but they explained to us that they were making everything fresh for us. The soup was being made from scratch. I was so ecstatic over the daenjeong chigae that they gave me another bowl for free. We finished the meal with some of the famous roasted sweet potatoes. They were very hot and charred. That was great on a cold winter evening (it started snowing later). Injoo said that the best way he remembered from his childhood to eat these was to put kimchi on them. Lars and I tried this experiment. He liked it. I felt it tasted like, um, kimchi and sweet potatoes. Eun Jeong later said it was a very country thing to do. And what's wrong with that? ![]() Labels: Restaurant ................................................... Sunday, October 16, 2005(Rest #1) Sh-wing!![]() Sh-wing is a small restaurant in Apgujeong that serves American-style buffalo wings. It is one of our favorite spots. Because it's far away from most of us, we tend to go only once every one or two months. We usually go during their all-you-can-eat wings time slot. The staff there is great, especially the spunky waitress who runs the place. They have made some changes in the past year. New wings have been added to the menu, including Oriental BBQ and Garlic Teryaki. I like them, and they break what used to be a monotony of hot, hotter, and hottest choices of flavors. They have also recently changed their dipping sauce from ranch to blue cheese (yea!). Still, their claim to fame is a wing flavor called the "Krazy Korean." These are particularly evil. It's not that they're hot -- they're sneaky. ![]() Many times a person will eat one and not think it's very hot. So he eats two more. Then the volume on the heat starts turning up at the back of the tongue and travels to the lips, where the victim starts drooling uncontrollably and tries to drink beer and suck in breath to allieve this new suffering brought upon him. It is our tradition to start each night of wing-eating by eating at least one Krazy. It christens the evening. The beer flows. We help ourselves to more wings and more dipping sauce. And we watch the pretty women walk by outside. It's a great evening. There's also a good video from November 2004 of Sh-wing. Labels: Restaurant ................................................... |
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