The Coffee Prince & What’s up with Korean Cafes?

Poster sign of the popular 2007 K-drama, The Coffee Prince

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I was in Seoul for my birthday weekend with my friend, Chance, when the urge for Sunday morning brunch struck.  We were starving and in the mood for a lazy meal at café.

Our café requirements?

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Funky, trendy, Seoul-ish

(we were being girlie)

But then the same conundrum that always arises around food, did. What to eat? No.

Where.

Being a veggie traveler in Korea is always a bit daunting around meal time. Where do you find a restaurant with food menus in English? I’m reliant upon picture menus and finding those kind of menus take time. Until now, it’s never occurred to me that even in a cosmopolitan city, such as Seoul, finding a café to have brunch at requires effort!

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Koreans and Brunch? No…

Aah… brunch at a Korean café. 

Easy solution, right? That’s what Chance and I thought.

You’re probably thinking… coffee and a lightly toasted sesame bagel with cream cheese or an egg. Or maybe yogurt, a fruit cup, a salad, a veggie pita, hummus wrap or split pea soup!

But hold on.

Brunch is a western concept.

It’s typical of westerner to slide on breakfast or even skip it all together!

 

What is breakfast to Koreans?

For Koreans, not having breakfast is a big ‘No-No’. In fact, to Koreans, breakfast is the most important meal of your day!

Thus, the brunch dishes I mentioned above, along with scrambled eggs, vegetable salads and sandwiches (in any form) are not common dishes in cafes. In fact, the only eateries you’d typically find these foods are in a western(ized) restaurant.

When I first arrived at my Korean school, each morning my co-teachers would greet me with:

How was your breakfast?

Awkward, right?

Good Morning, Christine! How was your breakfast?

This was my teachers’ daily standard greeting to me. It happened so frequently it grew uncomfortable. So I lied. I didn’t have the heart to tell them the truth about me and breakfast– that half the time I didn’t have it!

Why disappoint people?

nyc coffee carts
Going to school or work each morning, when I was living in New York City, I’d grab a coffee and a muffin from a street corner breakfast cart. I’d eat on the run or at work.   photo by Reblogged.files.wordpress.com

 

What’s the most popular dish served at Korean cafes ?

So what do cafes in Korea serve other than coffee? Waffle  and crêpe desserts! 

To some, that might qualify as a form of a breakfast, but Chance and I were being ‘health freaks’ on top of girlie. Waffle after waffle, after waffle, all smothered with dollops of whipped creme, ice cream, chocolate drizzles, etc…

A request for “a slice of healthy” seemed like a tall order.

Half an hour into our search, it seemed we’d be collapsing to a western restaurant. Quiznos, Dos Tacos and a Subway were all gearing up for a game of  Ki-Bi-Bo! (aka the Korean version of the Rock, Paper, Scissors , which happens to be somewhat of a national game) 

What to do?


Chance & I find an interesting crepe cafe with a wide assortment  (waffles desserts are very similar to these)

crepe dessert
crepe dessert
korean dessert waffles
Korean dessert waffles               Photo credit: Epicurious Travels

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The Coffee Prince Cafe (or Tiramisu Cafe)

coffee_prince_drama

This is for you Mom…

I was momentarily distracted by a familiar sign (see top photo) drew my attention and pulled me into a side alley.

If you’re a K-drama fanatic like my mom is, you’ll recognize the faces of on the photo at the top, from the once popular television series, The Coffee Prince! The show takes place in a café and is about the characters which work there.  Tucked off in one of the Hongdae café alleys and neighbor to the Hello Kitty Cafe, rests the Tiramisu Cafe. The name is misleading as many MBC fans really know it as the Coffee Prince Cafe, as it was once the set background for the show. 

We stepped inside the small two-story eatery and explored. Did it look anything like the show? Maybe I didn’t remember the location correctly, because exactly nothing felt reminiscent of series, except for the framed posters and photos from the show.

 

coffee prince cafe seoul

coffee prince cafe

coffee prince cafe

Was this cafe our godsend… our prince?

Unfortunately not.

The menu still ranged from coffees to desserts and everything felt a bit overpriced.

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G & B (Goulash Soup & Bread)

At last! Just when you think your prince will never arrive, just 4 blocks from Subway restaurant, heaven rescued us!

We discovered Goulash Soup and Bread (click here for my review).


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