10 Must-Try Korean Foods for First-Time Visitors

Korea Travel · Food Guide

10 Must-Try Korean Foods for First-Time Visitors

2025 Guide  ·  10 min read  ·  Seoul & Beyond

Korean cuisine is bold, complex, and unlike anything most visitors have experienced. Knowing what to eat before you arrive makes all the difference.


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If you’re visiting Korea for the first time, the food alone is worth the trip. This guide covers 10 essential dishes every traveler should experience — with practical tips on where to find them and what to expect when you order.

01

Bibimbap

비빔밥 · Mixed Rice Bowl

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Mild–Medium
Rice Dish
Traditional

Bibimbap literally means “mixed rice.” A bowl of warm rice is topped with seasoned vegetables, a fried or raw egg, sliced beef, and a generous spoonful of gochujang (red chili paste). You mix everything together before eating. Nothing compares to eating it in Korea — the freshness of ingredients and the quality of the gochujang are on a completely different level.

📍 Where to Try
Traditional Korean restaurants. Try dolsot bibimbap (stone bowl version) in Jeonju-style restaurants across Seoul.
💡 Pro Tip
Order dolsot bibimbap — the sizzling stone bowl creates crispy rice at the bottom that is the absolute best part.

02

Korean BBQ

삼겹살 · 고기구이 · Grill It Yourself

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BBQ
Social Dining
Savory

Few dining experiences are as social and satisfying as Korean BBQ. You sit around a built-in grill and cook your own meat at the table — usually samgyeopsal (thick-cut pork belly) or bulgogi (marinated beef). Wrap the cooked meat in a lettuce leaf with garlic, kimchi, and fermented soybean paste. Messy, delicious, and completely unforgettable.

📍 Where to Try
Any samgyeopsal restaurant — they’re on almost every street in Seoul. Mapo-gu and Hongdae have excellent options.
💡 Pro Tip
Order a round of soju alongside — it’s the classic pairing and an essential part of the experience.


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03

Tteokbokki

떡볶이 · Spicy Rice Cakes

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Spicy
Street Food
Sweet-Spicy

This street food staple — chewy rice cakes simmered in a sweet and spicy gochujang sauce — is the quintessential Korean snack. It’s cheap, filling, and dangerously addictive. You’ll find it at street stalls (pojangmacha) and small storefronts throughout every city in Korea.

📍 Where to Try
Gwangjang Market in Seoul is one of the best spots for tteokbokki alongside other Korean street foods.
💡 Pro Tip
Heat varies widely between vendors. Ask “매워요?” (is it spicy?) if you’re sensitive to heat.

04

Kimchi

김치 · Korea’s National Side Dish

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Spicy
Fermented
Iconic

Kimchi isn’t just a side dish — it’s a cultural institution. Fermented napa cabbage seasoned with chili flakes, garlic, ginger, and fish sauce, kimchi appears at nearly every Korean meal. There are over 200 varieties, but the classic baechu kimchi (cabbage kimchi) is what you’ll encounter everywhere.

📍 Where to Try
It comes with virtually every meal in Korea — you don’t need to order it separately. It’s always included free.
💡 Pro Tip
Visit the Kimchi Museum in Seoul (Insa-dong) to learn about its 200+ varieties and cultural history.

05

Japchae

잡채 · Glass Noodle Stir-Fry

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Mild
Noodles
Vegetable-Rich

Japchae is made with chewy glass noodles (from sweet potato starch) stir-fried with vegetables, mushrooms, and thinly sliced beef, seasoned with soy sauce and sesame oil. It’s lighter than it looks and works equally well as a main dish or side. One of the best options for travelers who prefer milder, less spicy food.

📍 Where to Try
Traditional Korean restaurants and home-style hansik spots. Also commonly served at Korean holidays and celebrations.
💡 Pro Tip
Perfect for travelers who can’t handle spice — japchae is savory and mild with a beautiful sesame aroma.


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06

Sundubu Jjigae

순두부찌개 · Soft Tofu Stew

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Spicy
Hot Stew
Tofu

Korea has a deep culture of stews (jjigae), and sundubu jjigae — silky soft tofu in a spicy broth with clams or pork — is one of the most beloved. Served bubbling hot in a stone pot, usually with a raw egg cracked in at the table. Eat it with rice and the complimentary side dishes (banchan) for a fully satisfying meal.

📍 Where to Try
Specialty sundubu restaurants throughout Seoul, particularly in Insadong and Gwanghwamun areas.
💡 Pro Tip
Want it non-spicy? Ask for anchovy broth-based sundubu — a clean, savory flavor without the heat.

07

Chimaek

치맥 · Fried Chicken + Beer

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Fried Chicken
Sweet-Spicy
Night Food

Chimaek combines chicken (치킨) and maekju (맥주, beer) — one of Korea’s most beloved food rituals. Korean fried chicken is double-fried for maximum crunch, coated in sweet-spicy sauce, served with pickled radish. It’s in a league of its own compared to fried chicken anywhere else in the world.

📍 Where to Try
Chains like BBQ Chicken, Kyochon, and Nene Chicken. For atmosphere: rooftop bars in Hongdae, or Han River parks.
💡 Pro Tip
Order delivery to Yeouido Han River park at sunset. It’s a quintessential Seoul experience you’ll never forget.

08

Naengmyeon

냉면 · Cold Buckwheat Noodles

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Mild
Cold Noodles
Summer Dish

Especially popular in summer, naengmyeon is cold noodles served in a chilled beef broth, topped with sliced beef, cucumber, and half a hard-boiled egg. It sounds simple but the flavor is deeply satisfying — slightly tangy, slightly sweet, and incredibly refreshing.

📍 Where to Try
Woo Lae Oak in Seoul is one of the most historic naengmyeon restaurants, with decades of tradition.
💡 Pro Tip
Scissors are provided at the table to cut the long noodles — it’s completely customary, so don’t be surprised.

09

Haemul Pajeon

해물파전 · Seafood Scallion Pancake

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Savory
Market Food
Seafood

Korean savory pancakes (jeon) are a staple of street food culture. Haemul pajeon is made with scallions, squid, shrimp, and oysters fried into a thick, crispy batter. It pairs beautifully with makgeolli (Korean rice wine) — a combination so classic that rainy days in Korea are colloquially associated with eating pajeon.

📍 Where to Try
Gwangjang Market and traditional markets throughout Korea. Also widely available at makgeolli bars throughout Seoul.
💡 Pro Tip
Order makgeolli alongside — it’s the traditional pairing and one of the most enjoyable food experiences in Korea.

10

Bingsu

빙수 · Korean Shaved Ice Dessert

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Sweet
Dessert
Summer Must

End your Korean food journey with bingsu — finely shaved milk ice topped with sweetened red beans (pat), rice cakes, fruit, and condensed milk. It’s lighter and fluffier than snow cones, and the toppings vary endlessly by season and region. Visiting in summer? Bingsu is non-negotiable.

📍 Where to Try
Dedicated bingsu cafes in Insadong, Bukchon Hanok Village, and Myeongdong. Summer (June–August) has the widest variety.
💡 Pro Tip
Strawberry and mango bingsu are top picks for first-timers. For a traditional experience, try patbingsu (red bean only).

Essential Tips for Eating in Korea

  • Side dishes (banchan) are free and refillable — don’t hesitate to ask for more. They always come complimentary with your meal.
  • Most restaurants have picture menus or display plastic food models outside, making ordering easy even without Korean language skills.
  • Tipping is not customary in Korea — you don’t need to leave a tip at any restaurant, ever.
  • Convenience stores like CU and GS25 have surprisingly excellent ready-made Korean foods — great for budget travelers and late-night snacks.


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