
One of the mental scars from my trip to Seoul in March 2023 was not being able to eat at Namdaemun Market‘s Hairtail Alley—an enclosed section of the market that features many, many small restaurants that specialize in galchi jorim or hairtail/beltfish/cutlassfish stew and other related dishes. I hasten to add that it’s not that some external force prevented me from eating there; only the rare exercising of personal good judgment. At that point in that trip I had eaten several excessive meals by myself and was not up to the task of eating an order of galchi jorim by myself. And so I left it to the Feb/March trip when I would have lots of company. Well, I am happy to say that I did go back to Hairtail Alley with lots of company on this trip, and that I ate galchi jorim (and other related dishes) and it was good. Herewith the details. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Namdaemun Market
At Namdaemun Market, Pt. 2: Eating (Seoul, March 2023)

Here is my third report from the place that was my second favourite to visit in Seoul on my trip in March: Namdaemun Market. I went there three days in a row and ate lunch there on all three days. My first report was of my lunch there on the second visit, eaten at their famous Kalguksu Alley. My second report was a broader look at the market, focussing on the dry and wet market sections and their other famous food alley: Hairtail Alley (I did not eat there on this trip). This report gives you a look at the other food vendors of the market—the ones who are set up, formally or informally on the market’s main drags. A few are restaurants; some have restaurant’ish spaces attached; some are counters—you eat standing there; some are street vendors—you take your food and eat it somewhere else. Continue reading
At Namdaemun Market, Part 1

Back to Seoul, back to Namdaemun Market. My first report from the market was of an excellent lunch in the market’s famous Kalguksu Alley. I ate there on the day of my second visit to the market. I visited the market on three consecutive days and ate lunch there on three consecutive days. Why didn’t I eat at Kalguksu Alley on the first day? Well, I couldn’t find it. On that first visit I was also unable to find the market’s other famous food “alley”: Hairtail Alley; the specialty here is galchi jorim or braised/stewed hairtail fish. The main reason I was unable to find these alleys is that I didn’t know what I was looking for. I’d not really done any research on the market and had lazily assumed that everything would be very visible. Well, the market itself is quite obviously visible but there’s no signage for the food alleys—you kind of have to know where you’re going and what you’re looking for. In my post on that Kalguksu Alley lunch, I told you how to find it; in this post I offer a broader look at the market and finally a look at Hairtail Alley, which I more or less accidentally found myself in while wandering around after lunch in Kalguksu Alley. Continue reading