Crash-landing on our plates
Brunch|July 27, 2024
Bulgogi or baked bread? Kimchi or corn dogs? India serves two distinct types of Korean food. Which one is better? That depends on which Korea you know
Shirin Mehrotra
Crash-landing on our plates

Gung The Palace, the three-storeyed Korean restaurant in Delhi's Green Park, has traditional seating - low tables (with a pit to dangle the legs), curtained dining booths, subdued colours, low music, and a 21-page menu featuring meaty barbecue, seafood stews and octopus casserole. At Mr K Ramyun Café, also in Green Park, the colours are more vivid, mukbang videos play on screens, the menu is only six pages long, the shelves are stocked with packets of Buldak Ramyun. How did we get to a point where Korean dining in India can mean such vastly different things?

The answer is a little complicated. It draws on history, geography and a bit of economics. And restaurants of both kinds are popping up across India Chennai has 30, Pune has pre-order dining rooms, Mumbai has dedicated cafés. It's a distinction that says as much about India as the Asian nation, far, far away.

First, the history

Of course, the K-Pop and K-drama craze of the last decade has something to do with it. But India had a handful of Korean restaurants that were thriving much before we got hooked on to BTS. They operated quietly in cities and business districts that had a significant Korean expat population.

This story is from the July 27, 2024 edition of Brunch.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the July 27, 2024 edition of Brunch.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM BRUNCHView All
No. Wait. She did what?
Brunch

No. Wait. She did what?

These mean girls are self-centred, bratty, and can make your life hell. But they stole the show. Read on, loser. And tell us how it wasssss

time-read
3 mins  |
September 07, 2024
Are you seeing spots too?
Brunch

Are you seeing spots too?

Jyoti Bhatt's serigraphs use traditional symbols in modern ways, creating art that is slyly clever and full of little stories

time-read
2 mins  |
September 07, 2024
Leave us to our own devices
Brunch

Leave us to our own devices

Instead of banning gadgets, restaurants should ban people that are actually disturbing the peace

time-read
2 mins  |
September 07, 2024
Siam Siam, but different
Brunch

Siam Siam, but different

The reason Indians feel instantly at home in Thailand is because their mix of Hindu and Buddhist traditions so closely mirrors our own, creating a comfort zone abroad

time-read
3 mins  |
September 07, 2024
30 things to know before you turn 30 The LOVE EDIT
Brunch

30 things to know before you turn 30 The LOVE EDIT

Simmer or sizzle? Forever or for the moment? Escape or endure? Break up or make up? 30 tips, thoughts, tidbits for those who can't help falling in love

time-read
7 mins  |
September 07, 2024
The high score in your ear
Brunch

The high score in your ear

Homegrown video games are adding a local musical touch to match the play. Sitar riffs, chants, choruses - it's a new level of immersion

time-read
3 mins  |
September 07, 2024
Turned down, turned sour
Brunch

Turned down, turned sour

Stalking, sarcasm, squabbles about money. Who'll teach the dating crowd about handling rejection better?

time-read
2 mins  |
September 07, 2024
Stretch out, soften up
Brunch

Stretch out, soften up

What do you get when you elongate the Thar and add two doors? An SUV that Roxx and gives city folks an off-road fav

time-read
2 mins  |
August 31, 2024
Show them your best side
Brunch

Show them your best side

There's always a right time to visit a city to catch it in its best moments. Festivals, monsoons, and spring are a few shortcuts

time-read
2 mins  |
August 31, 2024
A wok to remember
Brunch

A wok to remember

For us, no food is as comforting as Indian Chinese. But even the most familiar dishes travelled the world before they went local

time-read
3 mins  |
August 31, 2024