Last night was another lovely LTH event with much eating, lively conversation and some good food. As I always like to do, a rehash of conversation topics overhead: an incongruous twitter-length review of War & Peace, pre-AOL email behavior, a half-million dollar green card, the dangerous nature of pickling, the enigmatic meaning of this emoticom

and, surprisingly, sausage pizza.
I do admit that I came into this dinner with some expectations. But expectations can be unfair: anyone expecting me to pull off a happy_stomach performance was sorely disappointed. But we have to thank her for giving us all reason to get together and to her speedy recovery.
First off, I will join with others in complimenting our joke-cracking, chair-lifting, clean-plate-providing waiter Tom. He and the other restaurant staff (of one?) handled our large party with aplomb, making recommendations, pacing the evening, topping off hot tea and water glasses regularly and dealing piping hot bowls of rice late into the dinner.
My impression of the food was mixed. There were highs (both pajeons, pork & tofu, panchan), lows (seafood casserole) and decided ehhhs (acorn starch, all of the 'grilled' meats).
I did enjoy both of the pancakes (though I don't know if anyone really found any seafood), but fried dough is a crowd pleaser. My favorite dish was also the tofu and spicy pork, although I thought that it could have done with a bit more heat and a bit less sweetness. Nothing billed as "spicy" was overly so, although I'm not sure if we got the regular treatment. Pungent is a fine way to describe the soybean soup we were served towards the end. Funky miso shiru might be another way. I liked this but was a bit too full to appreciate it.
I think the seafood casserole was a disappointment. Much of the seafood was overcooked and it deteriorated quickly with noodles gumming up and the 'spicy' sauce reducing down to a paste. It did include some odd sea creatures, some of which Tom could not identify, didn't necessarily like, but assured us were "from the sea."
I'm not sure we ordered to this restaurant's strengths, to be quite honest. I sure didn't know a lot about the gems of the menu, save for what was posted here. And I had a hard time figuring out which item on the menu was the sundubu jigae, the most praised of the items. Suffice it to say, I think we took some recommendations from Tom (the seafood casserole) and pointed to some menu items that looked interesting (acorn starch). If I gather, this place's best foot might be soups, but these seemed to come in individual sized portions that would have been difficult to share.
Anyway, the bulgogi and kalbi were decidedly average. If you go, I would pass on these in favor of other menu items. I don't have a ton of experience with Korean barbecue, but a live fire usually means a good product. Griddled versions don't really do it for me.
I had a soul-warming meal on a cold, rainy day in Korea that consisted of dolsot bibimbap and a gingery chicken soup with bone-in chicken parts that stands out in my mind - so I can definitely dig non Korean-bbq food. I look forward to returning here as the weather gets colder and diving into some soups and other menu items.