Best Korean Boribap Outside Seoul: Jumak Boribap (주막보리밥)

⚡ THE QUICK TAKE
  1. Korean traditional barley-rice house outside Seoul, beside the Joseon-era Seoorung royal tombs.
  2. Order: boribap (₩14,000 / $9.5 USD) + signature sujebi pot + patented kodari jjim.
  3. Worth the 25-min drive west of Seoul for one of the most complete Korean countryside meals.
  1. Whether the namul taste like they were prepped that morning, with seven-plus varieties
  2. Whether the gochujang is homemade — fermented, not sweet, with depth
  3. Whether the secondary dishes (sujebi, jjim) match the rice setup, not bolt-ons
Nine namul vegetables radiating around a bowl of gochujang
Korean name주막보리밥 서오릉점 (Jumak Boribap Seoorung)
NeighborhoodGoyang, near Seoorung (서오릉) royal tombs — just outside Seoul
Getting there~25-min drive from western Seoul (Eunpyeong-gu / Mapo-gu Sangam-dong). Bus from Seoul possible but slow. Rental car or taxi recommended.
Price range₩₩ — ₩14,000–25,000 (~$9.5–$17 USD) per person
SignatureBoribap (₩14,000 ($9.5 USD)) + signature sujebi pot + patented kodari jjim
English menuLimited — Korean menu, but staff handles “boribap” and pointed orders. Bring Papago.
Foreign cardsVisa/Mastercard accepted
HoursLunch and early dinner — check Naver Map for current
MapGoogle Maps · Naver Map

The Spot — Outside Seoul, Beside the Royal Tombs

Brick building with Jumak Boribap sign
New-wing entrance with welcome arrow
Inside the dining room with wood floors and stacked steel bowls

The Menu

Menu board with founder portrait and prices
  • 옛날 보리밥 (Yetnal Boribap) ₩14,000 ($9.5 USD) — Old-style barley rice + nine namul + house gochujang. The default order. Solo-friendly.
  • 시래기 털레기 수제비 (Siraegi Tteol-le-gi Sujebi) ₩26,000 ($18 USD) / 2 people only — The signature. Hand-torn dumplings in a deep dried-radish-leaf broth, finished with dried shrimp. Order-of-the-house.
  • 코다리 찜 (Kodari Jjim) ₩24,000 ($16 USD) — Half-dried pollack braised in their patented sweet-spicy sauce. Don’t skip.
  • Other plates: 옛날 국밥, 주꾸미볶음, 제육볶음, 도토리묵, plus set meals (정식) for 2.
  • Drinks: house 동동주 (cloudy-rice wine, ₩8,000 ($5.4 USD) per pot or ₩2,000 ($1.4 USD) per cup), 막걸리, 소주, 맥주.

The Boribap — How to Eat It

Full table setup - namul platter with side kimchi and lettuce wraps
  • 고사리 (gosari, fernbrake)
  • 시래기 (siraegi, dried radish leaves)
  • 오이 (oi, cucumber slices)
  • 콩나물 (kongnamul, soybean sprouts)
  • 시금치 (sigeumchi, spinach)
  • 가지 (gaji, eggplant)
  • 도라지 or 더덕 (mountain root)
  • 버섯 (mushroom)
  • 배추나물 (cabbage namul)
Yetnal Boribap - plain barley rice in a deep bowl
Boribap mixed with namul and gochujang

The Signature — Siraegi Tteol-le-gi Sujebi (시래기 털레기 수제비)

Signature Siraegi Sujebi pot - hand-torn dumplings with enoki on top

The Other Star — Kodari Jjim (코다리찜) with the Patented Sauce

Kodari Jjim with patented sweet-spicy seasoning
Kodari close-up - caramelized chili crust and sesame

Practical Notes for Visitors

  • Cards? Yes, accepted.
  • Parking? Yes — the restaurant has its own lot. You will need it; this is not a public-transit-friendly spot.
  • Wait time? Long. Expect 30+ minutes at peak weekend lunch. Worth it.
  • Foreign-friendly? Honestly low. Korean-only menu, Korean-only staff, Korean-only signage. This is part of the experience but bring a Korean friend or be ready with translation tools.
  • Solo dining? Boribap fine; the sujebi is 2-person minimum. Don’t come alone if you want the full experience.
  • Pair with: a walk through Seoorung tombs after lunch. The tombs themselves are on the UNESCO World Heritage list of Joseon royal tombs and the ground around them is one of Goyang’s prettier walking paths.

The Verdict

— THE FOODIESEOUL VERDICT —
★★★★☆
4.0 / 5
“Drive 25 min out of Seoul. Order the boribap and the kodari jjim.”

🍽️ Food
5.0
💰 Value
3.5
🌏 Foreigner-friendly
3.0
📍 Access
3.0

Best forKorean traditional food lovers, weekend day-trips out of Seoul, anyone who has a car
Skip ifYou only want fast urban dining, you cannot get a taxi or car, you came for spicy/heavy meals
Order thisBoribap + sujebi pot + patented kodari jjim
Visited2026 – 1 visit

Go. Drive 25 min west out of Seoul (or take a taxi from Yeonsinnae Station, ~₩15,000 ($10 USD)), park beside the royal tombs, and order the boribap + the sujebi for two + the kodari jjim. Don’t share the boribap — get one bowl per person. Mix it slowly with the homemade gochujang. Don’t skip the kodari jjim — it is what makes this place patented (literally — it is on the menu).

P.S. Second visit is when you start ordering the makgeolli kettle. (You will. Trust the makgeolli.)

Been to Jumak Boribap? Tell me what you ordered — drop a comment below.

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