Grilled

Bossam-gui

Grilled Boiled Pork

보쌈구이

Pork belly first boiled with aromatics until tender, then sliced and briefly charred on the grill for a crispy exterior with melt-in-the-mouth interior.

Bossam-gui is a hybrid technique that applies final grilling to the already-beloved boiled pork dish (bossam), creating a version where the pork has the deep flavour penetration of the long aromatics boil but gains the caramelised, textured exterior that only grilling provides. Traditional bossam — pork belly boiled in water infused with doenjang, garlic, ginger, and green onion — is one of Korea's most celebrated pork dishes, served wrapped in napa cabbage leaves with oyster kimchi and fermented shrimp paste. The grilled variant emerged at restaurants that wanted to offer something visually and texturally distinct from the standard presentation, and the crackling sizzle of the pre-boiled slices hitting a hot grill became a selling point. Because the pork is already cooked through from the boiling stage, the grilling step is brief — three to four minutes on a hot grill is enough to develop colour and crust without drying the interior. The dual-cooking method results in a flavour more complex than either approach alone: the boiling infuses the meat with aromatic depth while the grill adds Maillard browning and a slight smokiness. Restaurants in Seoul's Mangwon neighbourhood have become particularly associated with innovative bossam preparations including the grilled variant.

How to eat it

  1. Wrap a slice of grilled pork in a napa cabbage leaf.
  2. Add a small piece of oyster kimchi and a pinch of saeu-jeot (fermented shrimp).
  3. Eat in one bite to get all the flavours simultaneously.
  4. Accompany with makgeolli or soju for the traditional pairing.

Where to try it

  • Bossam specialty restaurants in Mangwon, Seoul
  • Traditional pork restaurants in Mapo-gu, Seoul