Snapshots from South Korea: Rice Cake and Dumpling Soup from Koong
Earlier this month I visited Seoul, South Korea, for the first time. Here's a look at something I ate from my one-week trip.

One of my favorite foods in the world are Asian dumplings in all shapes and forms. After hearing my plea to eat mandu, Korean dumplings, my friend Rob brought me and a friend to Koong in Insadong. That the front window looked onto a dumpling-making station seemed like a good sign. Another potentially good sign was the prominent photograph of a old woman and her granddaughter outside of the restaurant, if I am to equate "grandmother" with "tasty home-style cuisine." The story behind the restaurant is that this woman fled from North Korea to South Korea during the Korean War and brought her recipe for mandu (among other dishes) with her. A very good recipe, I would find out.

The meal starts off with three kinds of kimchi: the standard cabbage, radish (ggakdugi), and watery, non-spicy radish (mul kimchi).

The boiled Kaeseong-style (North Korean) mandu are substantial pouches stuffed mostly with ground pork, tofu, and chives. Although fat and plump, they're not heavy; the skin is quite thin with just a bit of chew, and the filling is satisfyingly light. They're easily the best mandu I've ever had.

But the best part of the meal was the combination of mandu and rice cakes (tteok/ddeok/dukk/etc.) in choraengi tteokguk, another Kaeseong-style dish of rice cake and dumpling soup in a cloudy vegetable and beef broth. It was the first time I ate rice cake shaped like little marble-sized balls—kind of like the tapioca balls in bubble tea. They were soft and chewy, although a bit less chewy than other savory Korean rice cakes I had tried. I wouldn't have changed anything about the broth; the flavor was balanced and the texture was just a bit rich. Asia News has more information about this dish and the story behind the rice cakes.
Koong's choraengi tteokguk was one of my favorite dishes out of my whole trip. I had only eaten rice cake dumpling soup once before and Koong's version was so much better that it didn't remotely compare to what I had eaten at home.
Koong
30-11 Gwanghun-dong, Jongro-gu, Seoul (map; more specific directions at GOnSEE Korea)
02-733-9240
koong.co.kr
Add a comment:
Previewing your comment:
HTML Hints
Some HTML is OK: <a href="URL">link</a>, <strong>strong</strong>, <em>em</em>
Comment Guidelines
Post whatever you want, just keep it seriously about eats, seriously. We reserve the right to delete off-topic or inflammatory comments. Learn more at our Comment Policy page.
If you see something not so nice, please, report an inappropriate comment.


5 Comments:
ooh! I def. have to go there!
MattKim at 12:47PM on 05/27/09
Looks great. Roboseyo has pretty good tastes. Too, bad I'm going to have to hurt him later. (sorry inside joke).
Robyn, I haven't actually gone to this place and now that I've seen your post, I will definitely have to go.
Dan
Seouleats at 5:59PM on 05/27/09
@MattKim: Let me know what you think if you go!
@Seouleats: Doesn't even have to be an inside joke; I'd hurt him too. HAHA..jk, I hug.
Hope you like Koong, and if not, you should take it up with Rob. ;)
roboppy at 6:29PM on 05/27/09
Dan, you've never been to Koong? i should have taken you there. keke it is lovely and authentic -- their ggakdugi and choraengi tteokguk are the best. and the tea house across the alley is the perfect next stop. Thanks, Serioius Eats for the wonderful photos.
shinmiryeo at 7:25PM on 05/27/09
Dan thinks he can hurt me. He can't even find the best dumpling soup in Seoul on his own.
Good write-up, actually. I'm so glad I got to take you there, and as places at which to fill up on the first stop, leaving no room for the other places one is planning to visit during an afternoon of eating, Koong is not a bad choice.
(diagram that sentence if you will)
Take it easy, bud.
-Roboseyo
to understand the inside joke between Dan and me, check this out. It's about halfway down:
http://roboseyo.blogspot.com/2009/05/photo-dump-gyeongju-hi-seoul-festival.html
roboseyo at 11:54AM on 06/01/09