Korean Food Guide 2026 — for Indians — APS Travels

Korean Food Guide 2026 — What Indians Should Try in Seoul (+ Veg Tips)

Riding the Korean wave? Beyond K-dramas and K-pop, Korean food is a highlight of any trip to Seoul. Here’s what Indian travelers should try — and how to navigate spice and vegetarian needs.

Dishes to try

  • Bibimbap: A colourful rice bowl with veggies, egg, and gochujang — easy to make vegetarian.
  • Korean BBQ (gogigui): Grill-at-your-table meats with lettuce wraps and side dishes.
  • Kimchi & banchan: Fermented sides served free with most meals.
  • Tteokbokki: Chewy rice cakes in a sweet-spicy sauce — a street-food favourite.
  • Bulgogi & japchae: Marinated beef and sweet-potato glass noodles (japchae is often veg).
  • Korean fried chicken & hotteok: Crispy chicken and sweet stuffed pancakes.

Navigating spice

Korean heat comes from gochujang and gochugaru (chili). It’s flavourful but can be intense — say “an maewoyo” (not spicy) where possible. Many comfort dishes (bibimbap, japchae, mandu) are mild.

Tips for vegetarians

  • Watch for anchovy/beef broth, fish sauce, and shrimp in soups, kimchi, and sides.
  • Temple cuisine (Korean Buddhist food) is excellent and fully vegetarian.
  • Reliable veg picks: bibimbap (no egg/meat), japchae, veggie mandu, kimbap (specify no ham), and tofu stews (ask about broth).
  • Seoul has growing vegan cafés and Indian restaurants in areas like Itaewon.

Where to eat

  • Street markets: Gwangjang and Myeongdong (Seoul) for hands-on street food.
  • Look for busy local spots; many show picture menus.
  • Convenience stores (CU, GS25) are surprisingly good for cheap quick bites.

Start with milder dishes, embrace the banchan, and Korean cuisine quickly becomes a trip highlight.

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