Latest posts
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Street Food: Gyeranppang(계란빵) Story

It was a freezing morning in Seoul. I was rushing to the subway, hands stuffed in my pockets, breath forming little clouds, when a warm, sweet smell stopped me dead in my tracks. There, beside the station entrance, a vendor was pulling golden, puffy, oval-shaped breads from a row of small molds. Each one had
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Street Food: Sundae(순대) Story

The words “blood sausage” may not sound appetizing, but Sundae(순대) defies expectations. Korean blood sausage stuffed with glass noodles, pork blood, rice, and vegetables, steamed until tender. Savory, chewy, and strangely addictive. The third member of the holy trinity: tteokbokki + twigim + sundae. Ingredients and Calories Pig intestine casing with glass noodles, pork blood,
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Street Food: Twigim(튀김) Story

If tteokbokki is the king of Korean street food, Twigim(튀김) is the loyal knight by its side. These crispy, golden, deep-fried treats — vegetables, sweet potatoes, shrimp, squid, boiled eggs, and glass noodle rolls — are the essential companion. Dip a piece into that spicy red sauce and you will understand why Koreans never order
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Street Food: Bungeoppang(붕어빵) Story

Picture a golden, fish-shaped pastry, hot off the iron mold, its belly bursting with sweet red bean paste. That’s Bungeoppang(붕어빵)Korea’s most iconic winter street snack and a direct cousin of Japan’s taiyaki. But in Korea, it’s more than a snack — it’s a cultural touchstone that every Korean associates with cold weather and childhood memories.
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Street Food: Fish Cake(어묵)

On a cold Korean winter day, nothing beats standing at a street stall, wrapping your frozen hands around a paper cup filled with steaming eomuk(어묵) broth. The broth is free — yes, free — and the fish cakes themselves cost just a few hundred won per skewer. It’s the most affordable warmth money can buy.
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Street Food: Korean Corn Dog(핫도그) Story

Forget everything you know about corn dogs. The American original — a hot dog dipped in cornmeal batter and deep-fried — is a fine creation. But Korea took that idea, tore up the rulebook, and created something so wildly inventive that the world can’t stop talking about it. Korean Corn Dogs(핫도그) aren’t just street food
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Street Food: Tteokbokki(떡볶이) Story

There’s a sound that defines Korean street food culture more than any other — the deep, rolling bubble of thick red sauce simmering in a wide, flat pan. You hear it before you see it, and you smell it before you hear it. Sweet, spicy, and utterly magnetic. That’s Tteokbokki(떡볶이), and once it pulls you
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Street Food: Hotteok(호떡) Story

Imagine walking through a narrow Seoul alley on a freezing December evening. Your breath hangs in the air like little clouds, your fingers are numb, and the cold bites at your ears. Then you catch it — a wave of warm sweetness drifting from a tiny cart ahead. The sizzle of dough hitting hot oil,