Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the best things about Korean food is soluntang (sp?). It is a bone broth soup that is whitish and you add in course-grain sea salt and finely chopped scallions, as well as rice,at your table, and you eat it with kimchee. I remember when I lived in NYC there was a specialty restaurant in midtown that sold only this soup. I want to think, with NOVA's huge Korean population, that we'd have something like this here. Does anyone know of a place like this?
Google around in Annandale and Rockville.
Probably more places in Annandale than Rockville. There should be plenty OP. This is very common food in traditional Korean restaurant. Of course, you can also make it at home. Relatively easy soup to make.
It may be common Korean food, but I find that many Korean restaurants cater to westerners, so it's mostly Korean bbq. Not a lot of Korean restaurants actually serve oxtail soup.
I just started making it at home. It's a long process, but my kids love it. This is the problem with K food, though... good food takes a while to prepare. It's why I don't cook a lot of K food. I don't know how my mother did it with four kids and working.
You mom was not on DCUM probably.
Anonymous wrote:Gom Tang E in Falls Church - https://edencenter.com/stores/gom-tang-e/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the best things about Korean food is soluntang (sp?). It is a bone broth soup that is whitish and you add in course-grain sea salt and finely chopped scallions, as well as rice,at your table, and you eat it with kimchee. I remember when I lived in NYC there was a specialty restaurant in midtown that sold only this soup. I want to think, with NOVA's huge Korean population, that we'd have something like this here. Does anyone know of a place like this?
Google around in Annandale and Rockville.
Probably more places in Annandale than Rockville. There should be plenty OP. This is very common food in traditional Korean restaurant. Of course, you can also make it at home. Relatively easy soup to make.
It may be common Korean food, but I find that many Korean restaurants cater to westerners, so it's mostly Korean bbq. Not a lot of Korean restaurants actually serve oxtail soup.
I just started making it at home. It's a long process, but my kids love it. This is the problem with K food, though... good food takes a while to prepare. It's why I don't cook a lot of K food. I don't know how my mother did it with four kids and working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the best things about Korean food is soluntang (sp?). It is a bone broth soup that is whitish and you add in course-grain sea salt and finely chopped scallions, as well as rice,at your table, and you eat it with kimchee. I remember when I lived in NYC there was a specialty restaurant in midtown that sold only this soup. I want to think, with NOVA's huge Korean population, that we'd have something like this here. Does anyone know of a place like this?
Google around in Annandale and Rockville.
Probably more places in Annandale than Rockville. There should be plenty OP. This is very common food in traditional Korean restaurant. Of course, you can also make it at home. Relatively easy soup to make.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the best things about Korean food is soluntang (sp?). It is a bone broth soup that is whitish and you add in course-grain sea salt and finely chopped scallions, as well as rice,at your table, and you eat it with kimchee. I remember when I lived in NYC there was a specialty restaurant in midtown that sold only this soup. I want to think, with NOVA's huge Korean population, that we'd have something like this here. Does anyone know of a place like this?
Google around in Annandale and Rockville.
Anonymous wrote:One of the best things about Korean food is soluntang (sp?). It is a bone broth soup that is whitish and you add in course-grain sea salt and finely chopped scallions, as well as rice,at your table, and you eat it with kimchee. I remember when I lived in NYC there was a specialty restaurant in midtown that sold only this soup. I want to think, with NOVA's huge Korean population, that we'd have something like this here. Does anyone know of a place like this?