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From Seoul with Spice: A beginner’s guide to vegetarian Korean food

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 26, 2025, 18:26 IST
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1/8

A beginner’s guide to vegetarian Korean food

Somewhere between a K-drama heartbreak and a K-pop high note lies the secret to Korean food — it’s not subtle. It doesn’t whisper flavour; it sings it, preferably with a side of fermented funk. For the uninitiated vegetarian, this world of kimchi and gochujang can feel like entering a BTS concert with earplugs on — everyone’s screaming, and you’re not sure why yet. But the truth is, Korea’s culinary charm doesn’t live or die by meat. It lives in its textures, its colours, its unapologetic balance of spice, sweet, and soul.So if you’ve ever wondered what a beginner-friendly Korean meal looks like without the bulgogi or barbecue, start here. From the rainbow bowl of bibimbap to the sesame-slick noodles of japchae, these dishes prove you don’t need pork belly to taste Seoul.

2/8

Bibimbap (비빔밥)_ The Bowl That Broke the Internet

Every culture has its comfort bowl. India has khichdi, Japan has donburi, and Korea has bibimbap — a symphony of rice, sautéed vegetables, and fried egg, all glued together by gochujang’s fiery embrace. The beauty of bibimbap lies in its chaos. You stir it till colour becomes memory, and taste becomes harmony. Vegetarians can skip the beef entirely; tofu or mushrooms work just as well. The point isn’t what’s in it — it’s the act of mixing, a ritual of edible therapy.

3/8

Kimchi (김치)_ The National Obsession

No Korean meal is complete without kimchi — fermented cabbage with the temperament of a rock star and the soul of a grandmother. It’s sharp, spicy, unapologetically alive. Traditional versions may use fish sauce, but vegetarian kimchi is everywhere now, often made with sea salt and ginger brine instead. The first bite is confusion; the second is commitment. By the third, you’re Googling “how to make kimchi at home” and planning your own fermentation empire.

4/8

Japchae (잡채)_ Noodles with a Sense of Drama

Glass noodles that glisten like a K-drama tear under studio lights. Japchae is stir-fried sweet-potato noodles tangled with spinach, carrots, mushrooms, and soy-sesame sauce. It’s savoury, slippery, slightly sweet — like an introvert at a party who turns out to be the best dancer. Zero spice, full personality. It’s the dish you feed your sceptical friend who says, “I don’t like Korean food.” You’ll win them over before they finish the plate.

5/8

Pajeon (파전)_ Korea’s Rainy-Day Pancake

Koreans say the sound of rain makes them crave pajeon — a savoury pancake of scallions, chillies, and batter crisped to perfection. Think dosa meets tempura. Some versions include seafood, but the vegetarian one, fragrant with spring onions and dipping soy, is addictive enough to make you fake a thunderstorm just for an excuse. Pair it with makgeolli (Korean rice wine) and you’ll understand why nobody in Seoul minds a cloudy day.

6/8

Kimbap (김밥)_ The Picnic Hero

Imagine sushi, but less pretentious. Kimbap rolls are made with rice, seaweed, and fillings like spinach, pickled radish, carrot, or tofu. It’s Korea’s lunchbox legend — portable, pretty, and perfectly balanced. You’ll find office workers, students, and even monks munching on it. The vegetarian versions skip the ham and egg but keep all the crunch. It’s the snack that proves minimalism can taste maximalist.

7/8

Sundubu-jjigae (순두부찌개)_ The Soft-Tofu Hug

Jjigae means stew, but sundubu-jjigae means surrender. Silky tofu swims in a bubbling, spicy broth that tastes like a warm argument between chilli and comfort. Usually, it comes with seafood, but the vegetarian variant — made with mushrooms and vegetable stock — feels like a heated blanket for your taste buds. Eat it with a bowl of rice, and the world feels fixable again.

8/8

The Seoul Truth

Korean food for vegetarians isn’t about compromise; it’s about discovery. It teaches you that flavour doesn’t need flesh, that spice can be spiritual, and that balance — between heat and sweetness, crunch and silk — is an art form. Start with these six, and soon you’ll be adding gochujang to your morning oats just to feel something again.

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Copyright © Jun 6, 2026, 02.02AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service