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    Una Canción Coreana - Sopa de kimchi, sopa de achuras, tortilla de habichuelas y acompañamientos (arroz, kimchi, nabos)

    Una Canción Coreana

    4.6(35 reviews)
    6.3 kmFlores
    $$

    Very good! The bulgogi, kimchee, and moochee moochim was a little on the sweet side but was still…read morequite delicious when we added denjang to the amazing and deliciously prepared bossam. The pindeduk was extra crispy and delicious as well! Service was impeccable the ambiance was delightful and clean. Would go back anytime! It is deemed "old Korea town" but I would say it's the Real Korea flavor.

    Korean food, how I've missed you. As someone who used to live in a town where 50% of residents were…read morenative born Koreans, Una Cancion Coreana made me feel right at home. It's a bit off the beaten path, in a small Korean area in the barrio of Flores. It took me about 45 minutes to arrive from where I live (Recoleta) but the commute was definitely worth it! A lovely, clean and modern atmosphere and friendly staff greets you as you walk in the door. The restaurant seems small, but there are several rooms for larger groups, so don't fret if the front of the restaurant seems very busy. The menu is diverse and has all the Korean staples. Being a vegetarian, my go-to is always veggie bibimbap. If you have any questions, the waitstaff is very helpful. Our server was fluent in English as well as Spanish and Korean - impressive! The bibmbap was just what I thought it would be. Amazingly fresh, great flavors, and a taste of home (Fort Lee, NJ) Prices are reasonable considering any "exotic" food here is always more on the expensive side. The authenticity is there as well, so if you're used to Korean food, you know what you're getting. I'm so happy I got to try Korean food in Buenos Aires. Even though it's a long trip for me, I might be making another visit back to Una Cancion soon.

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    Una Canción Coreana - New offerings!

    New offerings!

    Una Canción Coreana - Interior

    Interior

    Una Canción Coreana - El local

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    El local

    BBQ Town - Menú libre. Marzo 2016

    BBQ Town

    3.6(17 reviews)
    3.3 kmBelgrano
    $$$

    There's no menu. It's an "all you can eat" kind of setup, but no buffet - they just start bringing…read moreyou stuff once you sit down and keep going until you stop - and you can ask for "refills" on any dishes that you like. First up, the usual array of dishes of ban chan arrived first. A nice selection, our favorites were the just barely poached octopus with chili sauce (really mild though), and the chili tripe (also very mild). Disappointingly, not a spicy dish in the mix, and no kimchi. But then we saw a Korean family arrive and they got a much bigger array, including kimchi and other dishes. We flagged down our waiter and asked, and he sort of mumbled a bit (he's actually quite charming and speaks flawless English with a clipped British accent) about not thinking we'd want that stuff but then promised to get it for us. Despite asking again a bit later on, we never did get the spicy dishes. More small dishes showed up, with decent dumplings, some really good grilled fish, tofu, and a few others. We continued to munch away happily. I should also note, we were happy to find something besides the ubiquitous selection of Quilmes and Stella Artois beers, with Tsing-tao on the menu (why not a good Korean beer? I know they have them in Koreatown, or at least used to, so they should be available). A single small pancake for wrapping things up arrived - a little surprising that we didn't get one apiece, but so be it. And, rice finally arrived on the table. At about the same time the first of the items for grilling showed up. A bit earlier our waiter had brought a small basket of hot coals which he placed under the grill element and then turned on the gas, which I guess keeps the coals hot, but seems a strange mix to me - maybe it's always that way at Korean bbqs, I never noticed. Here we got frozen slices of pork belly and frozen shrimp. It's fine, by the way, that they're frozen, it's actually kind of common - you drop them straight onto the grill and cook them to your tastes. The pork belly was good. The shrimp were freezer burned and pretty tasteless. Really good, plump oysters drizzled with a slightly sweet chili sauce were brought to the table - I could have just sat there and eaten those. Delicious! As we'd finished off the pork belly and shrimp, our next grilling selection arrived. Marinated shaved beef, differently marinated pork, and squid tentacles garnished the plate, and we tossed them all on to get them cooking. The octopus were the best, but all were good. A plate of lettuce leaves was on the side for wrapping, along with various dipping sauces. I think we'd have appreciated, at some point, a little info on what we were being served, but for the most part, service was wordless unless we asked questions. And finishing off the meal with two different soups, a really excellent seafood broth, and a good, but less spectacular, meat broth filled with greens.

    A culinary adventure. I'm still trying to figure out just what the Hell I ate. Did I like it? Hell…read moreyes. It was, without a doubt, absolutely ravaging. Do I know what I was? No clue whatsoever. Mineral? Vegetal? Animal? Beats me. But I had a great time, saw things that seemed to have been snatched straight out of Middle Earth, and felt like Indiana Jones in the scene from Temple Of Doom. In other words, it was cinematic.

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    BBQ Town
    BBQ Town
    BBQ Town - Muy rica  la comida, buena recepción lo recomiendo!

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    Muy rica la comida, buena recepción lo recomiendo!

    Boseong

    Boseong

    5.0(1 review)
    6.3 kmFlores

    We have been holding off on this one, not sure whether it was a Korean restaurant or not. The…read morecharacters on the sign outside are Chinese (yes, I know, prior to the introduction of the Hangul alphbet, Koreans used Chinese characters), and we'd been unable to get a solid translation on the first two characters (bao cheng). So, we've been trying the other spots first. This weekend we decided to give it a go, and mounted the stairway and got ourselves buzzed in. Found Korean characters inside, and waiter confirmed that the name was Boseong, the name of a province in South Korea which for half a millennium has been famous for its green teas. (Oh, and "bao cheng", the Chinese characters turns out to be the Chinese name for the same province.) Turns out to be another Korean barbecue joint! (Makes sense, it used to be one called Mido that closed up about a year and a half ago.) No questions asked, we'd barely even doffed our jackets and sat before a grate was placed over the barbecue pit and a whopping plate of what had to be two kilos of beef, half coated in gochujang and the other half not, hit the table. We noticed that the grate wasn't getting hot, and started to flag down a waiter to see about turning on the gas, when one approached from the kitchen carrying a bucket of fiery, burning wood coals with a pair of tongs. That got lowered into the pit - this is the first one we've encountered that didn't just use a gas burner, and adds a nice smokiness to the grilled meats. It also explains the huge extraction pipes. In short order, a small array of what turned out to be excellent ban chan also joined the beef, and we got going. First off, was simply noting the high quality of everything. The kimchi and other nibbles were spicy, well balanced, and fresh - we even liked the tripe! The smoked fish, at pretty much every place we've been, has been more or less dried out, this was soft, fresh, and perfectly flaky. Little mini mandu were tasty, but a little gummy. Slightly improved by tossing them on the grill, but not among my favorite dumplings to date. Same for the scallion pancake, lacking in scallions for the most part, and a little doughy. Come to think of it, we probably could have tossed it on the grill too. On the other hand, excellent, fresh oysters with lemon and spicy chili sauce. We never did get our bowl of soup that other tables were getting at the end, but neither of us was hungry enough to eat them anyway. After the food finishes, they bring over a pot of chilled tea of some sort - tasted like some kind of nut infused sweet liquid, something like chestnut. It was a nice way to finish. And, it all comes in at the same 300 pesos/person that the other grill spots in the 'hood charge. We left, very happy campers.

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    Boseong
    Boseong
    Boseong

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    K-Style Grill

    K-Style Grill

    4.5(2 reviews)
    3.5 kmBelgrano

    Taking over the spot recently vacated by the oil-infused kitchen of Tan's Food. A competing Korean…read morebarbecue spot to BBQ Town a couple of blocks away on Juramento, they certainly give each other a run for the money. This place definitely has the edge when it comes to variety and quantity of banchan and kimchi (with six varieties of the stuff mixed in there!). One of the fun things about Korean barbecue is the whole cook it yourself schtick. Here, that's not an option. A waiter does it for you - I can't imagine they can do that when the place is full, but we were the only folk there, and he wouldn't let us touch it. The meat is far more limited than the banchan selection with just slices of bacon, some beef shortrib meat, and some prawns. The latter were a bit mealy, the texture of having been deep frozen for way too long. The two red meats, however, were delicious, and we ordered another round. I like that they include tteok-bokki, the Korean rice cakes, though the sauce was a bit bland compared to the usual. And, two different clam and tofu soups, one "spicy" (not), and one not (also not). As best we could tell, they were identical soups other than the addition of a small amount of chili paste which did little more than color the broth. One other big plus in addition to the banchan array - of which we could have made a meal - is a three-tap selection of craft beer. On the other hand, we haven't been to BBQ Town in about two years, so they well may have added craft beer in too - it's all the rage the last couple of years. The all you can eat barbecue comes in at 950 pesos/person, plus beverages, or about $16, so figure on, with drinks and tip, around $20. Not a bad deal at all, and easier to get to for many folk than the ones in Flores or Floresta.

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    K-Style Grill
    K-Style Grill
    K-Style Grill

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    Dagi & Myeoni

    Dagi & Myeoni

    4.5(2 reviews)
    5.6 kmFloresta

    This place has no sign on the door, it just looks like a house with a buzzer, but I'd been clued in…read morethat there was a "Korean Fried Chicken" spot along that block (in fact, that's how Google Maps marks it, although they think it's across the street at 682, a vacant lot - I've tried to change it, but they haven't accepted the change). There is actually a restaurant sign on the house next door at 685, but it was locked up tight. I stood around for a few minutes figuring out my next stop, and luckily, a couple of businessmen came along, rang the bell, and went in, and I saw it was a restaurant. So, gave it a shot. They were quite welcoming, and let me know that at lunch they only offer the various iterations of fried chicken, or the stir fried noodle dishes, the rest of the menu is dinner only. The name, dagi myeoni, means tea ceremony. I ordered the "Chicken Hot", to which my waitress replied, "But without the spicy sauce, right?" "No, I like spicy." "Okay...." Food arrives, a whopping place of wings separated into joints, in a sweet and sour sauce with no kick. "This isn't spicy, don't you have an actual spicy sauce like it says on the menu?" "Well, we gave you the sweet and sour because spicy isn't for you." "I want spicy." Heads to the kitchen, comes back with sweet and sour sauce with maybe a tablespoon of gojuchang stirred into it. "Here's spicy sauce, but you won't be able to eat it." I ate it all (really good, could still use more kick), they were shocked. "How did you eat that, it's too spicy for you people?" "Not for me. Next time, spicy like Koreans eat it, okay?" She was so sweet about it all though that I handed her a decent tip and got an "Okay!" with a big grin. Oh, and they'd given me salad and sweet pickled daikon for my ban chan, while the tables around me got kimchi and other spicy dishes for theirs.

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    Dagi & Myeoni
    Dagi & Myeoni
    Dagi & Myeoni - !

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    !

    Yugane

    Yugane

    4.4(7 reviews)
    5.4 kmFlores
    $$$$

    Literally meaning "In Yu's house", this is apparently one of the older Korean BBQ restaurants in…read moretown. It's a little fancier than the other places we've been, and, a little pricier (at 380 pesos/person plus beverages). At the same time, the service is better, and much more attentive than any of the other spots we've been (setting aside the occasional flirtatious waiter). Although they were never full, they got close to it, and they'd advised me when I contacted them that they don't take walk-in diners, it's reservation only. Big array of ban chan. High quality, no doubt. Fewer sort of "side dishes" - there were some scallion pancakes, some deep-fried stuffed zucchini, and a soup, and that was about it. More variety in the meat selection for the grill, with shortribs, hanger steak, pork belly, some tripas (both small and large intestines - something I've not seen anywhere else), and calamari tentacles. There was also an odd sort of egg mixture in one of the little troughs where the cooking grease runs off, and we were show to mix in the raw, frozen corn off to the side there, and let it cook by virtue of the hot grease dripping into it. Kind of comes out like a sweet corn pudding that I don't want to eat again. Overall, nice space, friendly and attentive service, and good food. It doesn't supplant my top three for Korean BBQ, but it is good, and might be the only daytime Korean BBQ spot over in the Floresta Koreatown (which, in response to the other review already posted here, isn't particularly dangerous, even at night - I might not wander the streets, but just to go to a restaurant, it's fine).

    I haven't had Korean BBQ for 2 months. I was desperate. They said this restaurant is in a dangerous…read moreneighborhood. "DO NOT go there at night!" I went during the afternoon with a friend. I arrived at 3pm. They looked closed. I knocked. The owner said hello. He then opened the restaurant for us. We were the only 2 in the whole place. Boy am I glad I went. The meats were plentiful. The banchans were delicious. My stomach was crying out in joy. What a hidden gem in the roughest parts of BA. Go there and eat. But don't go at night.

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    Yugane
    Yugane
    Yugane

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    Namu - korean - Updated May 2026

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