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May 19, 2010

Restaurants: Jungsikdang: New Korean

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Written by: Daniel
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Milano Seafood Jjim

I’ve been meaning to put up the rest of my pictures from my most recent visit to Jung Shik Dang. Their new restaurant is over by Shindang near Samwon Garden. You can find directions to their location on their website. I went to this restaurant with Chef Nick Flynn from the Intercontinental and my friend Terry. Good company and very…creative cuisine. This is my third visit to Jungsikdang and I have to say that I am a bit worried about the franchise.

The food is beautiful. The setting is stylish and beautiful and the staff and service is top notch. Oh, they have a great wine list as well. In the past, I have criticized the service at this restaurant. Now they have really taken this to another level. The service and atmosphere is actually worthy of a Michelin Star.

The food is, well…did I use the word creative already?

Let me explain. When Jungsikdang first opened they had a variation of their current signature menu with the foie gras pate with pistachio shaving, pork jowl with yuzu, kimchi consomme, etc. The “first” signature menu was great, but then they followed it up with their “nuevo menu” and then opened up two restaurants.

I feel that Jungsikdang is rushing ahead (they have opened up a bar, a fine dining restaurant and plans to open a new restaurant in New York City) with only a few fully complete menus; I worry for their success.

I found his “nuevo” menu to be a mixmash of too many influences- the chef is like a kid that learns a new technique and gets fascinated with it- he doesn’t “own” the skill yet. I wish he would sit down and hone his techniques like a fine artisan or athlete and become a master of his craft before jumping to a new project.

The food, for me, had a hint of saccharine, sweetness that dulled the flavors. I was looking for a stand out dish, but I couldn’t really find it here. I ordered the “Nuevo Dinner Tasting Menu (120,000 won + tax). The only dishes that I really thought were surefire successes were the Milano Seafood Jjim and the Tomato Sujebi. The Milano Seafood Jjim looks like the Kracken- brilliant shocks of green stood out among the white fleshed fish. The taste reminded me of Holden’s dream in the book Catcher in the Rye: I was in a green field of rye that overlooked a cliff.

The Tomato Sujebi were a chewier, Korean version of bowtie noodles with tomato sauce. I liked it.

So…is Jungsikdang worth it? Of course it is. I mean I wouldn’t eat their everyday, but if you have a business dinner meeting in the afternoon, the 60,000 lunch tasting menu is perfect for entertaining guests. Even the dinner at 100,000 and 120,000 per person is an excellent bargain. (When I say bargain, I mean you get 10 course meals with coffee, after dinner treats- all inclusive.) The food is fun; it’s creative; it’s beautiful; it’s tasty; it’s just not quite ready for NYC prime time. 

Jung Shik Dang
567-28 Sinsa-dong, Gangnam-gu Seoul, Korea
02-517 4654 (English Spoken)
http://jungsikdang.com/

Bread
Kimchi Consomme
I believe this was their tomato salad
A Grasshopper on a Spring Hill

Oyster
Champ-Elysee Rice Bowl
Tomato Sujebi
Seabass
Palate Cleanser: Omija
Excellent Wine Selection at Jungsikdang
Rack of Lamb
Five Sensation Pork Belly overpowered by the spicy peppers
Su jeong gwa
Green Tea Cremeux with Sable
Interior Shot
Fin


About the Author

Daniel
Daniel Gray is a Korean adoptee that returned to Korean in 2005 because he wanted to try and find his birth mother and to learn about Korean culture. He started a restaurant review blog in 2007, www.seouleats.com, that became a local and international hit. He and his blog has been featured in the New York Times, Monocle Magazine, The Kimchi Chronicles, Bizarre Foods, Rudy Maxa, Olive Magazine, Euronews and much more. He now is a partner at O’ngo Food Communications (www.ongofood.com), which is a culinary tourism and consulting company that offers Korean cooking classes and restaurant tours to travelers. Their food tours and cooking classes are ranked as one of the top attractions in Seoul according to tripadvisor.




 
 

 
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3 Comments


  1. voyage2atlantis

    Off-subject
    I'm back in the states trying to remember this korean dish. it is a soup similar to ha jung kuk. But I believe it is more peppery but maybe that was the restaurant. You can get it with the brown gelatin looking things, just the dried green veggie, the pork parts that looks weird like they are white long pieces with jagged white pieces hanging from it(kind of chewy), or with other pork parts. It was so good. I tried ha jung kuk here and it was good but it seemed to lack that extra umph that the other dish had. can you help me? thanks

    hope you understand my descriptions.


  2. jp

    Sounds like haejangguk. The brown, gelatinous stuff is blood, and the white, chewy stuff is tripe. There are many kinds of haejangguk. The one you want is seonji haejangguk. Seonji means blood.


  3. Must Love Movies

    ok thanks.



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