Tag: Seafood

  • The New Guide to Noryangjin Fish Market

    The New Guide to Noryangjin Fish Market

    One of the best places to visit in Seoul is Noryangjin Fish Market. It’s like an aquarium where you can eat the exhibits. Unlike a lot of fish markets around the world, many of the fish are still alive in tanks. Because of that, it doesn’t smell as rank as other markets.

    This is a new guide because Noryangjin has gone through a transition from the Old Building to the new one. 

    Let Us Take You There

    If you want a fun guide and eating companion, book our Noryangjin Fish Market Experience. We can take you to Noryangjin Fish Market and other great finds only local foodies know.
    Noryangjin 7

    When To Go

    This isn’t like many fish markets around the world. Many of the fish are living in aquariums. They’re not decaying on a counter. The freshness of the fish is the same all times of the day.

    The only things I’ve observed over the years is that it will get busy Friday and Saturday in the late afternoon and early evening. Groups of salary workers and seafood partiers are venturing out to get their catch for an evening of Neptunian bacchanalia.

    Getting There

    Noryangjin Station is one of Seoul’s most confusing. The reason is that there are two unconnected stations on two different lines. There are TWO EXIT 1s!

    ARRRGH!!

    The original station connects to Line 1, the dark blue line. The new station connects to Line 9, the gold line, the only privatized subway line in Seoul.

    Line 1 Method

    If you’re coming from Line 1, you’ll be above ground. The least confusing way is to go out Exit 2. Go up the stairs from the platform. You’ll see a lot of street food vendors in the station. Head right and go out the turnstiles. There should be a convenience store and a coffee shop with an escalator and stairs. Go down the stairs and continue going straight, following the road. 

    You’ll pass exits 8 and 7. Keep going. There will be a tunnel on your right. Go through there, and you’ll make it to the market.

    Line 9 Method

    Resurface at exit 7. Go straight, following the road, and turn right into a tunnel. There will be vendors sitting on the ground. That’s a sign you’re getting close. You’ll get through the tunnel and find yourself at the entrance to the main market.

    A NOTE ON THE VENDORS
    They’re not aggressive. They’re assertive. They’re competitive. The shellfish and live “swimming fish” vendors are most so. It’s rude to play with the seafood without buying. Always smile and be polite. Don’t let them push you around, though. Just move on.

    Don’t worry about getting cheated. There are Noryangjin apps in Korean that keep up to date with seafood prices. I’ve found that the Noryangjin vendors generally sell their wares a hair higher than the places that cater exclusively to restaurants. They don’t fleece tourists. They’re good folk.

    On the right, outside, you will see a soccer field. That’s where the old building stood until 2022. 

    Bizarre Foods was filmed in the old building in August 2008. Read my blog post about the filming here.

    Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern
    Andrew Zimmern loving the penis fish

    The New Building

    New Noryangjing. From Korea Tourism Organization.

    The old building was open air and rougher. It had a lot of charm. The new building seems more like a shopping mall. The positive change is that the restaurants are cleaner.

    New Building 1F

    Take a look at the map.

    The main landmark to orient yourself on the first floor is the escalator. There aren’t many vendors in the green area.

    Noryangjin Escalator

    The vendors are similar to what you saw in the Old Building. Maybe more lobster. Just wander here. I wouldn’t buy any seafood yet. There’s so much exploring to do.

    MAP KEY

    Green – Fresh but dead seafood

    Lavender – Frozen

    Blue – Live fish

    Orange – Shellfish

    ABOUT THE AUCTIONS
    This isn’t like the fish market in Tokyo. I’ve seen auctions in various markets. They aren’t as exciting. Kinda subdued. Beside, we have all this live seafood in the area. It’s just as fresh at 6 p.m. as it is at 4 a.m.

    After a good wander, go up the escalator.

    New Building 2F

    The second floor is where I do business. I buy my foods and eat them here. I like the restaurants. They’re so much cleaner than they were in the Old Building. I don’t have to be on the watch for cockroaches. Many of the restaurants are connected to specific vendors. They’re mostly named after famous seafood areas in Korea. The move to the New Building has made it possible for new types of restaurants and pubs to spring up.

    Highlights

    This is what I usually like to do and see.

    Knife Shops (Section D)

    At the top of the escalator are the knife vendors. These are good for souvenirs, around W45,000 to hundreds of thousands. Just make sure that you put the knives in your checked luggage. These are good quality sashimi knives that will shave the hair off your arm.

    Salted Seafood Marketplace

    This is my favorite part of the whole market. All these fermented salted seafood. These are used to make kimchi, muchim (salads), to put on steamed pork wraps, and to just eat on the side. There are toothpicks available to try samples. The fun is just trying things. Don’t even try to guess what they are. I’ve had guests on my tours like some things so much, they bought a small pack to bring back to the hotel. One of my guilty pleasures is the spicy smothered raw oysters with some buttery Ritz or Zec crackers. It helps to have a bottle of water with you.

    Live Octopus Corridor (Section H)

    If you want to try the squirming octopus, you can ask for it here. In the past, the vendors have set us up with an impromptu table with chopsticks and dipping sauce.

    Ask for SAN NAKJI 산낙지. <– useful Korean word

    Fried Shrimp Stand

    They sell not only fried shrimp. Other fried goodies and bottled craft beers occupy the menu. THIS is the new Noryangjin.

    Other Notable Restaurants

    Jian and I checking out the Japanese restaurant
    Jian and I scouting the Japanese restaurant

    In section F, there are a fried seafood drinking spot and a Japanese sushi restaurant. They are both great. If you don’t want to deal with the vendors, you’ll have just as good of a time in any of those places.

    Second Floor Vendors (Sections C & G)

    This is where I usually get my seafood. The dotted circle is the specific vendor I go to out of habit. I’ve dealt with them before, and they know what I like. There’s a woman selling octopus and shellfish and a man selling live fish. Many vendors have restaurants. The guys I buy from are connected to Haeundae 해운대, which is named after Busan’s most famous beach. A live fish will run you W30,000 to W50,000. Just point and gesture how many of fish and shellfish you want.

    NOTE ON KOREAN SASHIMI
    Korean “sashimi” is called “hwe.” The vendors will say, “Sashimi,” because that’s the word they know tourists know. Unlike Japanese sashimi and sushi, it’s not aged. It’s fresh. It much firmer than sashimi and has a clean ocean taste. The most common hwe are flounder/sole, rockfish, salmon, and tuna.
    Korean sashimi hwe
    A typical Hwe platter

    Oh, you want some Korean words? Here you are.

    Common Swimming Fish

    I’m including the official romanization and a rough pronunciation guide in parentheses.

    Flounder – Gwang-eo (Gwahng-uh) 광어
    Rockfish – U-reok (Oo-rock) 우럭
    Salmon – Yeon-eo (Yuhnuh) 연어 <–not sold live
    Tuna – Chamchi 참치 <–not sold live

    Common Shellfish and Other Critters

    Shrimp – Sae-u (SEH-oo) 새우
    Oysters – Gul (Gool) 굴
    Clams – Jogae 조개
    Scallops – Garibi (GAHreebee) 가리비
    Abalone – Jeonbok (John-boak) 전복
    Sea Worms (the penis fish) – Gaebul (GEH-bool) 개불
    Sea Cucumbers – Haesam 해삼
    Eel – Jang-eo (JAHNG-uh) 장어

    Korean Seafood Restaurant

    After you choose and pay for your catch, someone will guide you to the connected restaurant. They’re pretty much all the same, so don’t resist. They’ll likely want to get you going before your fish is dispatched and sliced up. If you want to watch the gruesome sight of how animal becomes food in five minutes, stick around.

    When you enter the restaurant, the server at the front likely will ask you how you want everything set up. They’ll know right away which one is sashimi. For the other things, if you don’t know, just nod and agree. I’ve had great surprises that way.

    Many times the shellfish will be steamed (jjim 찜) or grilled (gwee 구이).

    Salt Grilled Shrimp
    Salt Grilled Shrimp

    I particularly ask for the shrimp to be salt grilled (sae-u sogeum gwee 새우소금구이). The result is a shell so brittle that you can eat the shrimp shell and all.

    Butter Grilled Scallops
    Butter Grilled Scallops

    The scallops are good steamed. Sometimes you can get them grilled in butter, called “Butter Gwee 버터구이.”

    The squirming live octopus, again, is called San Nakji 산낙지. I don’t recommend trying to eat one whole. In fact, the server likely will refuse to serve it that way because it’s too dangerous. In a way, it’s crueler than quickly chopping it up with a knife. Even though the chopped octopus is squirming, it’s no longer alive. I’ve timed it twice. It takes fifteen full minutes to eat an octopus whole. Get it chopped.

    After they take your catch, they’ll guide you to a table. Order your drinks. Soju is the traditional choice, but I also like to have some beer (maekju).

    You’ll have some sauces set out for you.

    • Soy sauce and wasabi — The classic
    • Vinegared chili sauce (Cho-gochujang) – This is the typical Korean style dipping sauce. I like mixing it with wasabi, making it taste a lot like cocktail sauce.
    • Pohang sauce – It’s a mix of fermented bean paste (Doenjang), chopped garlic, chopped green chilies, and sesame sauce. It originates from the southeastern port of Pohang. Mix it up. It’s great!
    And that’s it!

    Sit back and enjoy. You deserve it.

    Oh, one more thing…

    Mid-way through your meal, ask for Maeuntang (MAY-oon-tahng) 매운탕. It’s a spicy boiling soup made with the bones and head of your fish, along with healthy greens. I like taking some of the leftover sashimi and dipping them in the soup like shabu-shabu. This is the traditional way to end a proper Korean hwe meal.

    BONUS

    I always have bonus extras.

    Cup Rice Street

    One of my favorite secret corners of Seoul is Cup Rice Street (Cup Bap Geori 컵밥거리), right on the other side of Noryangjin Station. It’s a row of streetside vendors catering to students studying for professional exams. Cheap. Lots of variety. Unique. And Good.

    Pho
    Vietnamese Pho
    Ogane Pancake
    Ogane Pancake (something new)
    Shrimp Steak?
    Did it say “Shrimp Steak?”

    Be on the lookout for the infamous Bomb Rice (Poktan Bap 폭탄밥). It’s a super spicy variation of Bibiimbap.

    Bomb Rice
    Bomb Rice

    Here’s how to get there.

    Cup Rice Street Map
    Click to enlarge

    Exit the Fish Market and head towards a tunnel. Exit and walk east to the subway station. Cross the main road and follow the street. Pass a McDonald’s and a gas station before you get there.

    ONE MORE NOTE

    I want to thank Dino for pushing me to create this guide.

    Please leave more tips in the comments

  • Visiting Jackey’s Seafood at Jagalchi Market, Busan

    Visiting Jackey’s Seafood at Jagalchi Market, Busan

    If you visit Busan 부산 and skip Jagalchi Shijang (Market) 자갈치시장, you haven’t really visited Busan at all. The market opened in 1924 and gets its name from the nearby pebble beach—jagal 자갈 means pebble or gravel. In other words, Pebble Beach, Calif., is not the only famous pebble beach in the world.

    On a mid-May visit to Busan, Hubby and I had snacked our way through  ssiat hotteok 씨앗호떡 and  mandu 만두 stands in Busan International Film Festival Plaza then crossed the  Gudeok-ro 구덕로 thoroughfare to Jagalchi Market.

    jagalchi market nampo view

    Busan is blessed with easy access to all kinds of fresh seafood. The best deals come from those selling fish in the outdoor part of the market. But unless your Korean skills are as fresh as the fare, you’ll find it difficult to bargain or ask for what you want.

    Already having walked off the hotteok breakfast, we went into the six-story market building. There are a number of restaurants on the second floor. To the uninitiated, one restaurant area can blend into the other, but waymarker signs help you orient yourself and find your way around.

    In section C1, is a restaurant called  Dwejichobap 돼지초밥, also known as Jackey’s Seafood. Jackey starred in a couple of food shows on the KBS TV network and displays screenshots from those appearances around his section of the floor.

    Don’t worry about finding this place; Jackey probably will see you first and introduce himself in English. He has a teaching aid with him at all times that has photos of which fish and seafood items are in season and can help guide you to the best choice. He can also offer you either Korean style seating (on the floor) or Western style seating (on chairs).

    grilled flounder
    Grilled flounder at Jagalchi Market, caught and grilled the same day, can’t get much fresher than that. (Jeff Quackenbush photo)

    Jackey’s is best-known for sushi — chobap 초밥 is the Korean term for the vinegar-flavored rice used in sushi. We weren’t in the mood for raw fish, so Jackey recommended grilled flounder, since it was in season at the time.

    Served with banchan, the meal cost ₩40,000 (roughly $40) for two people. It was grilled and seasoned with lemon. A simply prepared fresh fish is much more delicious than a overly seasoned fish any day.

    Dwejichobap (aka Pork Sushi)

    37-1 Nampodong 4(sa)-ga, Jung-gu, Busan, South Korea

    중구 남포동4가 37-1, 부산광역시

    Directions

    1. Take Busan subway line 1 to 자갈치역 Jagalchi Station, and use Exit 10. Alternatively, get off at 남포역 Nampo Station, and use Exit 2.
    2. From Exit 10, walk straight (east).
    3. At the second street, 자갈치로37번길 Jagalchi-ro 37-gil, turn right. You will walk under the Jagalchi Market sign over the road.
    4. Walk for three blocks. The road will curve to the left in front of the market.
  • Jumunjinhang 주문진항

    Jumunjinhang 주문진항

    Location: Mapo-dong
    Cuisine: Korean (South Jeolla Province)
    Reservations: Accepted. Especially need them on weekend evenings.
    Suggested Items: MulHui, Hui DeopBap

    Other Amenities:

    Phone: 02-714-1233

    Website:

    Location

    Jumunjinhang1

    More pictures on Flickr.

    * Please help complete this review by adding information in the comments

  • The Korean King Crab Experience

    The Korean King Crab Experience

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    I pass by these restaurants with the giant crabs on them all the time in Korea, and I’ve seen them in Japan. I haven’t gone to one yet because they are prohibitively expensive. I’ve had what Koreans call dae ge 대게, or big crab. That was from a street vendor (one of the earliest Food Journal entries) and wasn’t that good in hindsight. Eun Jeong just said, “Let’s eat king crab,” last Sunday. I think she saw them on a program, and she couldn’t get them out of her mind.

    The one she had originally wanted to go to had closed and re-opened as a SeollongTang joint. I knew of another one that I pass by every day on my commute. This was one of the larger restaurants and had the largest king crab tanks I’ve seen in Korea thus far.

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    Before we sat down, they led us outside to choose our crab. The crab man took one out and weighed it.

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    Around 2 kilograms. That came out to–get ready for it–76,000 won.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lU_kwvA8B7s]

    “I’m an expensive little mo fo–you’d better leave me alone. Hey, where are you taking me?”

    I didn’t get to see the rest.

    They led us back inside to a private room. They laid out the banchan and advised us not to eat much. The crab was going to be a lot. We were both hungry and couldn’t resist, though. The banchan was all good. It better be for that price.

    n705585728 732957 56101

    There was some Japchae,

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    an herb salad with an arugula-like herb I’ve been meaning to find the name of, water kimchi 물 김치, a simple salad with (for once) a decent cream dressing, and

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    radish kimchi with fresh oysters.

    n705585728 732962 71451

    Mmm… oysters…

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    The crab finally arrived. As you can see, they hacked it up into easy-to-handle parts. They even reserved the “good stuff” in the head shell–the crab butter.

    n705585728 732966 84401

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    If you’re squeamish about the crab butter then you’re a wuss and don’t know what you’re missing. That’s the best part.

    imgp69592.jpg

    There are no awkward crab crackers at Korean crab restaurants. There’s a more practical solution–scissors. Why squeeze a shell and get juice in your eye with bits of cracked shell in your meat? You can easily and cleanly open the shell with scissors. There also was a convenient crab fork for pulling out the other parts. Eun Jeong went crazy for the crab meat immediately.

    n705585728 732969 94041

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    There was no drawn butter. I love that with crab and lobster. But they did have a good dipping sauce that was sweet and tart and oniony–very similar to some Cajun hot sauces I liked back home. We both dispensed with the sauce. It was better by itself.

    n705585728 732971 191

    Besides, the best sauce was in the head shell itself.

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    We ate a good bit of it. The side dishes worked well with the crab. Being a deep sea denizen, it’s full of white creamy fat and gets rich on the throat quickly. The astringent Korean side dishes helped balance it. We asked the staff to wrap it up for us but not before they did this.

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    They took the head shell and the yummy stuff inside and made a fried rice topped with flying fish roe. Accompanied by a good kimchi, it was amazing.

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    We finished all the rice, and they packed up the rest of the shells. The next evening, I was able to finish them off–this time with butter.

    Here is some more Korean king crab footage I found on YouTube.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQq_00vtAXE]
    Cutting up a King Crab (teachingenglishseoul)

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0i38wC5TlL8]
    King Crab Night! (alexfung23)