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| The mandu at Bukchon Kalguksu is the most famous in Seoul. | 
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| The chefs are making the mandu right in the entry way. | 
    There  is always a line out the door at Bukchon Kalguksu where everyone wants  to get their chopsticks dug into giant dumplings (mandu in Korean).  Bukchon Kalguksu was the only restaurant that my Korean friends and I  ate at 
twice during a two week scholarship program I was part of  back in 2009. We simply couldn't stop talking about those dumplings and  with such a convenient locations beside Gyeongbukgong Palace we headed  back  a second time to pig out in one of their private rooms upstairs.
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| Don't let the size of the mandu in the picture fool you, its giant. | 
    Now that I am living in Korea I have had plenty of  chances to sample mandu. Even the famous Sikdorak pork mandu street  vendors since 1969, that people line up for over an hour on Saturdays in  Namdaemoon can't compare to Bukchon's. The restaurant specializes in  giant dumplings filled with pork and tons of vegetables. Upon entering  the restaurant you can see the mandu being made fresh on a table  directly across from the cashier. The giant bucket of pork magically  disappears as the cooks quickly stuff giant teaspoons of filling inside  of fresh dough.
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| This soup is perfect on a cold winter day! | 
    Don't bother ordering anything else on the menu. The  dumpling soup costs 9,000 won and is enough to feed two people. One  person can finish it alone, I have personally done so, but I couldn't  move for about an hour and was in a complete food coma. I truly think  the fresh dough and the perfect blend of ingredients is what makes the  mandu so delicious. These are Korean style dumplings with thin dough,  not the Chinese style with that are thick and more bread-like. In  addition to the dumplings, the kimchi is some of the best I have tasted  in Seoul. It is truly homemade fresh everyday, which is something to be  said because I never eat kimchi.
    Ideally the best time to go to the restaurant is during the week  between normal meal times. So at 2pm the lunch crowd should be gone.  Otherwise plan on waiting for up to an hour in line. If you do end up  waiting it will be worth every second, or you can complain about it on  my blog!
    Getting there is really simple, take exit No. 2 out of Anguk Station  and walk straight about 6 minutes until you see the palace walls across  the street and a pagoda-like structure in the middle of the road  (pictured below). Turn right here and you will see Hank's bookstore on  your right hand side. Walk straight until you get to the first big  intersection. Take a right on this street and you will see the  restaurant on your left. For a detailed picture map of the restaurant's  location visit the maps page of 
iTourSeoul.  Or Exit Gyeongbukgong and walk straight. If you are looking straight at  the palace turn right and you will see the giant pagoda-like structure  straight ahead. Then cross the street where you will see Hank's  Bookstore ahead and turn left. 
If you have any questions or comments about "Seoul Food  Girl: Eat the best Korean style dumplings in Seoul at Bukchon Kalguksu"   please leave them in the comment box below or email goneseoulsearching@gmail.com
  Gone Seoul Searching by 
Marie Webb is licensed under a 
Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at 
goneseoulsearching@gmail.com.
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| The entrance of the restaurant on a snowy day. |  
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| The pagoda-like structure where you should turn down the street. |