[Seoul] Where do I start? South Korea is the land of appetising and affordable street food, that you can find at markets, subway stations and from ‘pojangmacha’ – street carts along popular areas.
Myeong-dong 명동 is one of the key shopping and food districts in Seoul, lined with almost every major Korean beauty shops, department stores and of course, food.
During my last visit, I realised that the number of street food stalls along the key Meyongdong Shopping Street have increased, and there could be at least 80 of them as I walked from one end to another.
I made it a point to try 3 or 4 different ones in the 2 weeks I am there, and surprised to find THIS variety.
Some tips: Prepare change fast, most food items should average about 2,000 – 5,000 Won (SGD$2.40 to $6.00). Bring a waste paper bag along for disposal as the major trash bag points are not that easy to find (and I saw tourists just leaving trash everywhere, so let’s be more responsible to keep the city clean).
Many stalls provide an English menu, and some owners were proficient in Mandarin. Note: I only covered 50, but there were many more. Stalls could change location, or serve varied items depending on the season.
(Read: Daniel’s Food Diary SEOUL Food Entries.)
50 Best Korean Street Food At Myeongdong. Seoul Delicious, Seoul Daebak!
(Click PLAY for the video of the making of a Korean Street Toast.
Korean Egg Toast
The most popular shop at Myeongdong is Issac Toast which can attract queues that last an hour. But you should be able to find these elsewhere. The Korean Egg Toast comes with thinly shredded vegetables, spam and sprinkled with sugar at the end. Korean Street Toast (Seoul)
Korean Grilled Cheese Lobster
Street food goes upmarket. New York has lobster rolls, Seoul has grilled cheese lobsters. Quite an indulgent snack at 15,000 Won (SGD$18.00). If cost is not a major factor, I thought it was quite worth it as the seafood was so fresh and sweet.
Tteokbokki (Spicy Rice Cakes)
Also known as teokbokki, ddeokbokki, topokki, these are cylinder-shaped rice cakes cooked in gochujang – a sweet, spicy red pepper sauce. Can be served in a bowl with ingredients such as egg, noodles or cheese, or in a stick. You almost find Tteokbokki EVERYWHERE.
Odeng / Eomuk Tang
These are fishcake on skewers served with hot broth. Best to have these skewers during the cold weather when you can keep warm by holding a cup or bowl in your hands. Note: “Odeng” is derived from the Japanese word of “Oden”, while “Eomuk” is the native Korean word. “Tang” refers to soup.
Fishcake (Eomuk)
The rectangular seafood skewer is typically made of ground white fish and other ingredients such as potato starch, sugar and vegetables, then deep fried. I liked those with some vegetables for the crunch.
Hotteok (Sweet Korean Pancake)
Pronounced ‘ho-tok’, these are sweet pancakes with brown sugar syrup filling.
Bbopkki (Sugar Lollipop)
A type Korean candy made with caramelised sugar and some baking soda. They can be found with cute with imprinted shapes from hearts to stars, typically made by a ‘ajumma’ sitting on a stool in Myeongdong.
Gyeran-Bbang (Egg Bread)
Steamed little loaves of bread with a whole egg inside, and they usually taste both sweet and fluffy. Some stalls are (much) better than the others.
Hweori Gamja (Tornado Potato)
Spiral-cut potato. Amazing to see how a single potato is cut to a long stick (by a machine). Some stalls offer seasoned powders to sprinkle over such as onion, cheese or BBQ. Fanciful stuff. Used to be much more popular, till it became too common.
Twist Potato with Sausage
The same Tornado Potato with a sausage inside. What?!
Deep Fried Giant Squid (Ojingeo Twigim)
If you love your calamari, wait till you see this. A giant squid deep fried. Typically, the squid will be chopped into pieces and served in a disposable box, sprinkled with a salty powder. Though you can also chew the thing in its entirety. Savage.
Dried Cuttlefish
Some are freshly grilled on the spot, either than a machine or stove. Amazing to watch how they are made on the spot. Surprisingly, I like these Korean ones as they are chewy yet soft, and you do not need to work on your teeth that much.
Gimbap
Gimbap or kimbap is like a sushi roll, made from steamed white rice (bap) and various other ingredients such as vegetables and pickles, rolled in gim and served in bite-size slice. The Korean street version is usually pre-made and wrapped in plastic.
Korean Fried Chicken (Yangnyeom Tongdak)
Double-deep fried chicken pieces further tossed in sticky sauces, from sweet and spicy ones, to soy and garlic. A stick typically goes for 3,000 Won (SGD$3.60) while a more fulfilling cup is at 5,000 Won (SGD$6).
Dumplings (Mandu)
Mandu refers to a stuffed dumpling, similar to the Chinese jiaozi and Japanese gyoza. When are they steamed, they are known as “jjinmandu”.
Korean Pan Fried Dumplings (Goon Mandu)
Meat and vegetables-filled dumplings pan-fried till crisp, juicy on the inside. Sometimes further served with kimchi in a box.
Crispy Crablets
Deep fried crispy baby crabs. I had expected them to taste like the Japanese’s Kanikko snack, but these crabs had a softer body like soft shell crabs.
Baked Cheese
(Don’t quite understand the fascination of this…) Skewered sticks of rice cakes and alternating pieces of mozzarella cheese grilled.
Cheese Butter Baked Scallops
The street stalls at Myeongdong are full of flaming torches. Grilled scallops added with mozzarella and cheddar then torched.
Pork Belly Vegetables Roll
Vegetables such as shredded carrots, bean sprouts and onions wrapped within a thinly sliced pork belly and pan-fried.
Pork Trotters (Jokbal)
Some tourists were trying to make a guess what this is. Pork trotters, braised in a combination of soy sauce, ginger, garlic. Worry not, they look much better sliced. Greasy, but delicious.
Korean Style Yaki Noodles
Pan-fried Korean noodles with bite-sized pork, shredded cabbage, onions and carrots, with some gochujang sauce for the spiciness. 4,000 Won (SGD$4.80).
Bulgogi Beef and Japchae
Korean stir fried beef noodles with vegetables. Japchae is a type of Korean glass sweet potato noodles, stir fried in sesame oil with vegetables, flavoured with soy sauce, and sweetened with sugar.
Takoyaki
Almost like a Takoyaki (wheat flour-based batter and cooked in a special moulded pan) though shaped like a mini-pancake, choose your fillings of shrimps, octopus or bacon. Sprinkled with bonito flakes and drizzled with mayo and sweet sauce before serving.
Tteokgalbi Meatballs
Tteokgalbi is a classic Korean dish made from beef ribs. The meat is minced and pounded on the bone, marinated in a sweet savoury sauce, then rolled into balls then deep-fried. Kind of too starchy for me.
Bacon Wrapped Sausages
Like what? (But I didn’t like many of the sausages around because I thought they contained too much flour in proportion.)
Sausage with Cheese, Hamburg Steak Stewers
While I am still on sausages, this contains alternating pieces of cheese-filled sausages and teokbokki filled beef on the same stick.
Blood Sausage (Sundae)
Don’t freak out. Sundae are made by boiling or steaming cow or pig’s intestines that are stuffed with various ingredients – including coagulated pigs blood with glass noodles.
Grilled Abalone In Butter
You see all kinds of meat and seafood being grilled in the street stalls. But… Abalone? 3 on a stick, and happened to be chewy and NOT elastic. (Though some may comment that abalone does not have much ‘taste’ itself.)
Broiled Eels (Jang Uh Gui)
Unagi? The eels with bones removed are first broiled under high heat then grilled for better texture and colour, marinated in a sweet savoury sauce.
Steamed Octopus Legs
Octopus tentacles are cut into bite-sized pieces, steamed then skewered. Steaming retains the natural, fresh flavours and bouncy texture.
Seafood Pancake (Haemul Pajeon)
A harmony of seafood such as squid, prawns or mussels, leek, green onions and flavorful batter in a savoury pancake. 5,000 Won (SGD$6.00)
Kimchi Pancake (Kimchijeon)
The spicier version made with kimchi (whole or chopped) and meat (sometimes tuna) in an egg and flour batter, served with dipping sauce. 5,000 Won (SGD$6.00)
Korean Style Bulgogi Steak
Often cooked bulgogi steak in which the meat is seasoned with sesame and scallion, using a ‘bulgogi’ sauce in the marinade for that characteristic sweetness.
Cheese Shrimp Rolls
The youth Koreans love everything-cheese, so it is not surprising to find these deep-fried shrimp rolls filled with creamy cheese within.
Jajangmyeon
Jajangmyeon is a Korean-Chinese noodle dish topped with a thick sauce made of chunjang (a salty black soybean paste when unheated), diced pork and vegetables. Liked the sauce of this stall – deliciously spicy!
Omelette Pancake
I have the feeling this is made for Instagram. Just kidding. Fried pork belly (taste almost like bacon) or chicken with cabbage, wrapped in a pancake, then topped with sunny side. Warning: Consumption may be messy.
Korean Spicy Chicken Skewers (Dakkkochi)
A type of Korean chicken kebab served on a stick. The meat is cut into narrow slices, grilled, then brushed on with spicy-sweet sauce.
Deep Fried Battered Shrimps
Like tempura prawns in a stick.
Grilled Shrimps
Similar to above, but grilled in butter.
Steamed Corn
A popular winter food. Some of the corns are just steamed sans any salt and butter, but still taste fresh and sweet because they are from the local farms. Sometimes butter and honey are added.
Roasted Sweet Potatoes
Koreans love their sweet potatoes, and you can find them in anything from latte, to cakes. During winter, the simplest and most comforting way is to have a hot piping and soft roasted sweet potato. Otherwise, have then candied and sweet, called Goguma Mattang.
Mung Bean Pancakes (Bindaetteok)
Korean mung bean pancakes are packed with ground mung beans, and other possible ingredients such as rice, kimchi, pork, vegetables, and egg.
Waffles
Buttery, thick, soft and fluffy, often served with ice cream and whipped cream.
Cotton Candy
Putting cotton candy on top of desserts or coffee is a food trend in Korea, so it is not difficult to find large, fluffy, multi-coloured cotton candy stalls. Not only the children, adults buy them all the time.
Croissant Bungeoppang
Bungeoppang or Boong-uh ppang is called ‘goldfish bread’, a pancake typically filled with red bean. Somewhat like the Japanese taiyaki. A croissant version has a flaky patry dough.
Korean Softserve
32 cm TALL! And cost only 2,000 Won (SGD$2.40). They come in twist flavours of say Chocolate and Vanilla, Greentea and Vanilla or Strawberry and Yogurt.
Strawberry Red Bean Mochi
Like the Japanese’s Ichigo Daifuku, fresh strawberries are wrapped with mashed red ban, and glutinous rice flour on the exterior. Sweet, sticky and refreshing.
Pomegranate Juice
Freshly squeezed by a juicer on the spot, without the hassle. 5,000 Won (SGD$6.00). Juice with high levels of antioxidant and helps clear up the skin – why not?
Grapefruit Juice
I used to see pomegranate juice stalls quite frequently, but Grapefruit Juice stalls at Myeongdong are my first this year. Rich in vitamin C, with sweet-sour taste.
Myeongdong-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul
서울특별시 중구 명동길 (명동1가)
Seoul Subway Line 4 Myeongdong Station Exit 7
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Korean Street Toast (Seoul)
Common Ground (Seoul)
The Halal Guys (Seoul)
Myeongdong Kyoja (Seoul)
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