Grilled

Guun-galbijjim

Grilled Galbi with Braising Sauce

구운갈비찜

Short ribs braised until tender then charred over charcoal, combining the deep flavour of braising with the smokiness of the grill.

Guun-galbijjim is the ambitious technique that bridges the gap between the braise and the grill, taking short ribs that have already been slow-cooked in a rich sauce until the collagen has dissolved and the meat is yielding, then finishing them directly over charcoal to add a smoking, caramelised exterior that braising alone cannot create. The dish has its roots in the royal court cooking tradition of Joseon, where cooks were expected to demonstrate mastery of multiple cooking methods in a single preparation, and a dual-technique approach to galbi was considered a marker of culinary sophistication. Modern Korean upscale restaurants have revived and elevated this technique as part of a broader interest in gungmul (royal court cuisine), serving guun-galbijjim as a centrepiece dish with considerable ceremony — the server brings the braised ribs to the table and finishes them tableside on a personal charcoal grill. The layering of flavours is extraordinary: the deep, sweet soy of the braise is absorbed throughout the meat and then the caramelised char adds a bitter, smoky top note that gives the dish a complexity approaching the best Western braised preparations. It is a showpiece meal for special occasions and a dish that food-literate diners specifically seek out when exploring the upper registers of Korean cuisine.

How to eat it

  1. Use chopsticks to pull tender meat from the bone — it should fall away with minimal effort.
  2. Eat with rice and simple banchan that won't compete with the complex sauce.
  3. The charred exterior and braised interior should be eaten together in each bite.

Where to try it

  • Royal court cuisine restaurants in Insadong, Seoul
  • Traditional Korean fine dining in Jeonju