Bueongi Donkatsu Kimpo Review: Family Donkatsu at Hyundai Outlets

⚡ THE QUICK TAKE
  1. 부엉이돈가스 (Bueongi Donkatsu, “Owl Donkatsu”) — a Japanese-Korean donkatsu and udon family restaurant inside Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets, where the panko is shatter-crisp from fresh oil and the salad-donkatsu set is the healthy move.
  2. Salad-donkatsu set ₩15,500 ($11) · kimchi-cheese-fried-rice ₩15,000 ($10) · kids’ set ₩8,000 ($5.50, under-8s only) · “정식” sets come with mini soba or udon, oden, and a side salad.
  3. The best lunch stop on an outlet shopping day, especially with small kids. Cards OK, English service.

🗓️ MY VISIT NOTES

Visited: 2026 · Where: Bueongi Donkatsu, Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets restaurant floor, Gimpo-si, Gyeonggi-do · How I paid: Out of pocket (내돈내산 / not sponsored, no PR invite)

I visited Bueongi Donkatsu on an outlet shopping day with the family, and I ordered the tenderloin donkatsu set as the proper introduction. I tried the salad-set on the side and noticed the dressing was the standard Korean katsu-house onion soy — light and tart, the right counterweight to the fried pork. My visit confirmed why this is the family-lunch default at the outlets: kids’ menu at ₩8,000, full sets under ₩19,000, photo menu in English, cards OK.

I found the panko-to-pork ratio thoughtful — crisp without overwhelming, the way fresh-oil donkatsu should be. I was surprised by how steady the kitchen runs even at peak lunch on a weekend. The 15-30 minute wait we hit at 12:30 is real — I have been recommending arriving before 11:45 or after 14:30 to skip the line entirely.

There’s a Korean proverb — “신발을 튀겨도 맛있다”, “even fried shoes taste good [in good oil]” — and at 부엉이돈가스 (Bueongi Donkatsu, “Owl Donkatsu”) inside Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets, the oil is the whole story. Crisp, fresh, never-tired panko on tenderloin pork, with a salad-donkatsu set that makes you feel virtuous and a kids’ menu that runs ₩8,000 ($5.50). After an outlet shopping day in 2026, this became the family-lunch default.

Bueongi Donkatsu salad-donkatsu set top-down - sliced golden donkatsu on a black wire rack with giant green salad, white rice bowl, cold mini-soba in dashi broth, kimchi, pickled radish and butter on the side
📍 WhereInside Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets (김포현대프리미엄아울렛), Gimpo-si, Gyeonggi-do — restaurant floor
🚗 AccessBest by car · free outlet parking · or shuttle bus from Gimpo Goldline subway · 15-min drive from Gimpo Int’l Airport
🕒 HoursDaily ~10:30–21:00 · follows outlet operating hours
💰 Price₩8,000–₩19,000 ($5.50–$13 USD) per person · 정식 (set) ₩12,500 ($8.5 USD)–₩19,000 ($13 USD) · 단품 (à la carte) ₩10,000 ($6.8 USD)–₩16,500 ($11 USD) · kids set ₩8,000 ($5.4 USD)
📖 English menuYes — photo menu with English alongside Korean · easy to point-order
💳 CardsVisa / Mastercard accepted
📞 ReservationWalk-in · weekend lunch (12:00–14:00) waits 15–30 min — go early or after 14:30
👶 KidsKids’ set ₩8,000 ($5.50) available for under-8 only · highchairs available · mini-donkatsu + udon combo

Cultural context for foreigners: Korea took the Japanese tonkatsu (とんかつ) — pork cutlet, panko-breaded, deep-fried, served with shredded cabbage — and made it thinner, wider, pounded flat, sliced into strips, with a uniquely Korean sweet-tangy brown sauce. The result is 돈가스 (donkkaseu) — its own thing now, not the same dish as the Tokyo version. Bueongi Donkatsu is the Korean-Japanese fusion chain (the “KOBE” branding refers to their Kobe-themed udon bar sister-concept). Inside a premium outlet mall, it’s the family-restaurant version of the genre — quick service, photo menu, kids’ set, cards accepted.

The Spot — Inside Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets

Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets (김포현대프리미엄아울렛) is the big designer outlet mall about 30 minutes west of Seoul, near Gimpo Airport. Popular with Seoul day-trippers, Korean families on weekends, and Japanese/Chinese tourists doing duty-free + outlet runs. Bueongi Donkatsu sits on the restaurant floor of the outlet — the kind of mall food court that goes well beyond food court quality.

The dining room is set up for families: warm wood tables, low lighting, ample seating, no-fuss service. Highchairs are stacked by the entrance. Each table has the photo menu under glass — Korean labels, photos of every dish, English subscripts.

The Menu — Set or À La Carte

The menu splits into two specialty bars: 부엉이돈가스 (the donkatsu side) on the left, 고베우동 (Kobe Udon Bar) on the right. Every donkatsu and every udon can be ordered as a 정식 (jeongsik, set meal) or 단품 (danpum, à la carte). Get the set — the value is real.

📋 Menu Highlights — Korean / English / ₩ (정식 set / 단품 à la carte) / $ USD

Korean English 정식 (Set) 단품 (Solo)
부엉이돈가스Owl Donkatsu (sirloin)₩12,500 ($8.50)₩10,000 ($7)
샐러드돈가츠 ★Salad Donkatsu₩15,500 ($11)₩13,000 ($9)
김치돈가츠Kimchi Donkatsu₩15,000 ($10)₩12,500 ($8.50)
눈꽃치즈돈가츠 (BEST)Snow-Cheese Donkatsu₩17,500 ($12)₩15,000 ($10)
통모짜치즈카츠 (STAR)Mozzarella-Filled Katsu₩17,500 ($12)₩15,000 ($10)
콤보카츠Combo Katsu₩17,500 ($12)₩15,000 ($10)
모듬카츠Assorted Katsu Platter₩19,000 ($13)₩16,500 ($11)
키즈세트 ★Kids’ Set (under 8 only)₩8,000 ($5.50)
크림카레우동 (BEST)Cream-Curry Udon₩15,500 ($11)₩12,000 ($8)
명란크림우동Mentaiko Cream Udon₩15,500 ($11)₩12,000 ($8)
유자냉소바 (COLD)Yuzu Cold Soba₩13,500 ($9)₩10,000 ($7)
고베카레라이스Kobe Curry Rice₩7,500 ($5) + toppings ₩1,500 ($1.0 USD)–₩4,500 ($3.1 USD)

정식 (set) composition: donkatsu + mini-udon or mini-soba + oden + salad. +₩1,000 ($0.7 USD) to upgrade sirloin → tenderloin (안심).

The two important things to know:

  • “등심” (deung-sim, sirloin) vs “안심” (an-sim, tenderloin) — sirloin is the default, juicier and more marbled. Tenderloin is the upgrade (+₩1,000 ($0.7 USD)) — leaner, more tender, the cleaner cut. Order 안심 if you want it fancier; 등심 if you want it more flavorful.
  • 정식 (set) = donkatsu + mini-udon or mini-soba + oden + salad. Always pick the set unless you genuinely don’t want the noodle. The mini-soba in particular is a beautiful add-on (see below).

샐러드돈가츠 (Salad Donkatsu) — The Smart Order

The 샐러드돈가츠 정식 (Salad Donkatsu set, ₩15,500 / $11) is what to order if you want to feel good about your outlet-mall lunch. Crispy panko-breaded donkatsu, sliced into strips, set on a wire rack over a black plate with a giant mound of fresh salad — mixed greens, red cabbage, sprouts, cherry tomatoes — dressed in a light Italian-style vinaigrette. The salad is half the plate, not garnish.

Close-up of Bueongi Donkatsu salad-donkatsu - shatter-crisp panko-breaded pork cutlet pieces on a wire rack with cherry tomato and a giant mound of fresh mixed greens and red cabbage

Upgrade to 안심 (tenderloin) for ₩1,000 ($0.7 USD) and you get the cross-section bonus — each strip cuts open to show the pink, tender, just-cooked-through pork interior. The crust shatters under a chopstick. Dip in the brown sauce, then bite. This is the dish where you understand why “fresh oil” matters.

Chopsticks lifting a piece of Bueongi tenderloin donkatsu showing the crisp golden panko exterior and pink juicy pork tenderloin interior - cross-section close-up with the full plate and salad in background

The set comes with a cold mini-soba (모밀, momil) in a small porcelain bowl — buckwheat noodles in chilled dashi, garnished with scallion and seaweed. Lift, dip, slurp. The cold soba between bites of hot fried pork is the move — it resets your palate. Many regulars say “the soba is actually why I come here”.

Action shot of Bueongi cold buckwheat soba mini side - chopsticks lifting brown buckwheat noodles from a blue-and-white porcelain bowl of cold dashi broth, with the donkatsu set and pickled radish in the background

Kimchi-Cheese-Fried-Rice with Donkatsu — The Stoneware Stunner

The dish that goes viral on Korean food Instagram is the kimchi-cheese-fried-rice + donkatsu (₩15,000 / $10). A hot stone bowl arrives sizzling: kimchi-fried-rice in the center, a moat of melted mozzarella cheese ringing the rice, a half-cutlet of crispy 등심 donkatsu on top, and a sunny-side egg crowning it all, finished with chopped parsley. The whole thing keeps cooking at the table.

Three angles of the kimchi cheese fried rice with donkatsu - top-down view of full setting with side dishes, side angle showing the cheese-rimmed bowl, and action shot with wooden spoon lifting the cheese pull

How to eat it: break the yolk into the rice, stir the molten cheese in from the edges, scoop with a wooden spoon to get cheese + rice + a bite of donkatsu in every spoonful. The kimchi is aged-sour-sweet, the cheese is chewy-stretchy, the donkatsu adds the crunch, the egg yolk binds everything. It’s a Korean fusion dish that shouldn’t logically work — and absolutely does.

Extreme close-up of a wooden spoon holding a perfect bite of Bueongi kimchi cheese fried rice with melted mozzarella, kimchi-stained rice, sunny egg yolk and donkatsu - steam visible, the bowl half-eaten in the background

The Kids’ Set — A Proper Family Restaurant Move

For families: the 키즈세트 (Kids’ Set) at ₩8,000 ($5.50) — available only for under-8 — is a thoughtful kid-sized version of the adult menu. You get a smaller donkatsu, a mini-udon in mild dashi, a small portion of rice, fruit, juice, and a small dessert, all on a divided kids’ tray. Highchairs are stacked by the entrance. The staff bring kids’ utensils without being asked.

This is the reason this restaurant is the right call for a multi-generational Kimpo outlet trip. Grandparents get the salad-donkatsu and feel virtuous. Parents share the kimchi-cheese-rice and feel indulgent. Kids get a proper kids’ set and a mini-udon. Everyone eats well in under 45 minutes.

Practical Notes for Visitors

  • Waits are real on weekend lunch (12:00–14:00) — 15–30 min for a table. Arrive by 11:30 or after 14:30 to walk straight in.
  • Cards accepted (Visa / Mastercard). The mall accepts foreign cards across the board, so you don’t need cash.
  • English-friendly — staff understand the basics, and the photo menu makes ordering trivial. Point at the picture, hold up fingers for quantity.
  • Always order the set (정식), not the à la carte (단품) — the ₩2,500 ($1.7 USD)–₩3,000 ($2.0 USD) difference gets you the mini-noodle + oden + salad, which is real value.
  • Upgrade to 안심 (tenderloin) for ₩1,000 ($0.7 USD) — small price, noticeable difference in tenderness.
  • Pair with the outlet trip: Kimpo Hyundai Premium Outlets has Nike, Adidas, Polo Ralph Lauren, Coach, and dozens of Korean brands at 30–70% off. Lunch here, shop the afternoon, drive back to Seoul.
  • For a Korean comfort-food contrast, compare with Kkamu House (countryside hwangtae baekban) or Eondeokwie Jangdokdae (mountain farm-to-table kimchi-jjim). For a different family-restaurant Korean classic, Jumak Boribap in Seoul.

The Verdict

Bueongi Donkatsu is the kind of restaurant that the rest of the world doesn’t talk about enough — the well-run, family-friendly, fresh-oil-fried, value-priced mall donkatsu specialist that solves the family-lunch problem on an outlet day. The salad-donkatsu is the smart order. The kimchi-cheese-fried-rice is the show-off order. The kids’ set is the parent’s-secret-weapon order. The English-language friendliness, the kids’ menu, the photo menu, the card acceptance — all the things that turn a Korean restaurant into a foreign-visitor-comfortable one are quietly in place. Skip the food court next door. Order 샐러드돈가츠 정식 in 안심, add the kimchi-cheese-rice for the kids, get a 키즈세트 for the under-8. Strong recommendation.

— THE FOODIESEOUL VERDICT —
★★★★½
4.5 / 5
“The best family lunch on a Kimpo outlet shopping day — fresh-oil-fried tenderloin donkatsu, a salad-set that’s actually healthy, and a kids’ menu that runs ₩8,000 ($5.50). English-friendly, cards OK.”

🍽️ Food
5.0
💰 Value
4.0
🌏 Foreigner-friendly
4.0
📍 Access
3.5

Best foroutlet shopping day · families with small kids · donkatsu craving · multi-generational lunch
Order this샐러드돈가츠 정식 (Salad Donkatsu set) · 안심 upgrade (+₩1,000 ($0.7 USD)) · kimchi-cheese-fried-rice for the kids · 키즈세트 for under-8s