What started as a lunchtime yearning for soba noodles or a tasty donburi ended in a delicious meal of hwe dup bap at Tampopo this afternoon.
I had never eaten at a Korean-run Japanese restaurant, although I've frequented plenty of similar "fusion cuisine" places, mostly in San Francisco, like the venerable San Tung, or countless Cantonese-run restaurants with Vietnamese menu items.
Aside from a bilingual English-Korean menu, a selection of sojus, and some Korean-language signage, Tampopo certainly doesn't advertise its Korean identity to westerners. And not many mainstream reviewers (including, surprisingly, the Reader's resident Korean expert Mike Sula) pick up on it, either. Only by employing my rudimentary Hangul skills did I realize what I had dismissed as chirashi at first glance was, in fact, hwe dup bap. I ordered it by name, and my dining experience was transformed instantly into a Korean one, complete with a restrained selection of panchan, chili paste, and a long metal spoon. I almost feel like had I just ordered "number twenty four," I would have gotten chirashi.
Although I like to think that I'm pretty well-versed in Korean cuisine for a non-native, this experience left me a bit baffled and very much intrigued. My question is this: what other fabulously interesting Korean-styled, Japanese-inspired dishes are out there and, more generally, what are the defining characteristics of such a cuisine?