CuisineNorth Korean noodles
Price₩₩
NeighbourhoodJung-gu
HoursDaily 11:00-21:00

Signature dishes: Bibim naengmyeon, Mul naengmyeon

Must order: Bibim naengmyeon: chewy potato starch noodles tossed in a sweet-spicy red sauce with cold beef and a soft-boiled egg.

Tip: Hamheung noodles are chewier than Pyongyang style; cut with scissors at the table if you prefer shorter strands.

Location

Address: 108 Mareunnae-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul

More casual dining in Seoul

Vegan Insa ★ 4.3

Vegan Korean₩₩Jongno and InsadongVaries, check current schedule

Vegan Insa in the hanok lanes of Ikseon-dong is consistently rated one of Seoul's best vegan restaurants: purely plant-based Korean food in a traditional.

Signature: Vegan bibimbap, Banchan set

Order: Fully plant-based Korean banchan and rice: the spread of side dishes is the kitchen's strongest statement, each prepared without any animal product.

Tip: Ikseon-dong is a 10-minute walk from Insadong and worth the detour for its traditional atmosphere.

Dongdaemun Bonga Seolleongtang ★ 4.1

Korean traditionalDongdaemunDaily 24 hours

Open 24 hours, Bonga near Dongdaemun cooks its seolleongtang in traditional cast-iron pots from ten beef cuts for 24 hours: the bowl that market traders.

Signature: Gamasot seolleongtang

Order: Gamasot seolleongtang from the iron cauldron: 24-hour broth from ten beef cuts, ordered at any hour of the day or night.

Tip: This is the best late-night beef broth in the city; order extra rice to soak the last of the bowl.

Maru Jayeonsik Kimbap ★ 4.2

Vegan KoreanJongno and InsadongDaily

A traditional Korean lunch counter in Insadong serving plant-based kimbap and banchan, rated 4.5 stars across 400+ HappyCow reviews for consistent quality.

Signature: Vegan kimbap, Organic banchan

Order: Vegan kimbap (seaweed rice rolls) with seasonal vegetable fillings: no fish, no meat, just clean vegetable rolls at a counter price.

Tip: Arrive early; the seating is limited and the queue forms quickly at lunchtime.

EID Halal Korean Food ★ 4.1

Halal Korean₩₩Itaewon and HannamDaily

EID on Usadan-ro near Seoul Central Mosque is the city's most respected halal Korean restaurant, run by a Korean Muslim family since the 1990s.

Signature: Halal Korean BBQ, Bibimbap

Order: Halal bibimbap or Korean BBQ platter: the same dishes as the mainstream Korean restaurant, prepared according to Islamic dietary law by a Korean Muslim family.

Tip: The mosque alley on Usadan-ro has several halal Korean options side by side; EID is the one with the longest-running local reputation.

Makan Halal Restaurant ★ 3.9

Malaysian halal₩₩ItaewonDaily

Makan brings Malaysian halal cooking to the Usadan-ro mosque strip, with nasi lemak, rendang and satay that have built a devout following from Seoul's.

Signature: Nasi lemak, Rendang

Order: Nasi lemak: coconut rice, sambal, fried anchovies and egg, halal-certified and one of the most popular dishes in this stretch of Itaewon.

Tip: Usadan-ro climbing toward the mosque is the centre of Seoul's halal food scene; walk it end to end before choosing.

Yang Good ★ 3.8

Halal Korean BBQ₩₩Gangnam and CheongdamMon-Fri 16:00-22:00, Sat until 21:00, closed Sun

Yang Good in Gangnam is a halal-certified Korean BBQ restaurant specialising in lamb, one of the few halal dining options south of the Han River.

Signature: Halal lamb BBQ

Order: Halal lamb BBQ: lamb cuts grilled tableside, halal-certified, in a neighbourhood-friendly format rare south of the Han River.

Tip: Gangnam has far fewer halal restaurants than Itaewon; Yang Good is the most convenient option for visitors staying south of the Han.

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