Samgyupsal?
Galbi?
What the heck are those?
Well for one, those are Korean food. And two, you might just be excited to find
out that you’ll be cooking on your dining table while eating them! I’m talking
about the Korean restaurant in Ledesco Village, Lapaz, Iloilo City called Don
Galbi where, for the first time, I ate Galbi which is grilled beef and
Samgyupsal which is grilled pork belly.
In case anyone is interested to know this |
Let’s talk about my gastronomic exploit on this. At first, the waiter
gave us a bunch of side dishes including lettuce, radish, kimchi, hard-boiled
egg in fish sauce and mung bean sprouts (aka togue). Then, he placed this
silver container which had sticky rice in it plus water served in a tiny silver
cup. I thought everything was set so I ripped open my chopsticks only to be
interrupted yet again by another waitress who turned on the oven attached on
our table. She fired it up and placed strips of pork belly on the pan. My
sister, whom I accompanied (more like third-wheeled), and her boyfriend began
placing the cloves of garlic on the pork, sautéing the sexy slab. When it was
cooked, the waitress came back again to cut them into small pieces.
Samgyupsal with some of the side-dishes. |
I thought this was finally it. I could eat, but then again my sister
beckoned me to grab one lettuce leaf, chopstick-pick around the side dishes
then take one piece of the pork and dip it in this savory orangey paste (I
don’t know what it was made of but it was good). Wrap them around like a Quesadilla
and voila, you can finally eat!
Eating Galbi like a quesadilla |
The Galbi story was quite the same only of course, it was beef this
time around. The Galbi, unlike the Samgyupsal, was marinated. I’m not so
discriminatory when it comes to food but I’m just used to eating my pork belly
marinated in fish sauce, salt, calamansi or Lea & Perrins sauce. The pork
was fine though and the beef was even better!
Generally, I felt an okay level of satisfaction despite the unlimited
serving of the side dishes probably because I’m more drawn into the Filipino
flavours which I’m yet to define (verging on a brilliant mix of sweet, onion,
garlic and spices). I think I also lost a bit of my appetite from the routine
of picking from this side dish to that. While it was interesting, it became
such a chore. Haha!
Aside from the two dishes we
ate, the restaurant also offers Tofu noodles, Ramen, Bibimbap and others which
I can’t quite pronounce decently and recall. Most of the meals cost Php 250 and
one order would be good for three or two persons, relatively speaking. They
sell Soju and Rice wine too although they’re a tad bit pricey.
Literally, the menu board but pardon the poor quality of my phone camera |
Also, before you enter Don Galbi’s dining area, you have to replace
your shoes with their slippers. I’m such a Cinderella that I couldn’t find the
right size for me so I grabbed a random one. My sister (yes, she’s a fan of
this place and been here since forever) told me that people can actually go
barefoot inside although it’d still be better to wear their slippers for
sanitary purposes as in possible visits to the comfort room. Anyway, the
slippers seemed neat of course they probably have microorganisms in them but,
excuse me, yes we’re talking about food.
They don't have size 5. |
So you if you’re into things like cooking on the dining table, Korean
food, changing shoes for dinner, and all that jazz, try Don Galbi! It doesn’t
close till 10PM (we were there Friday night).
The interior of Don Galbi at Ledesco Village, Lapaz, Iloilo City. |
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