Hansang
The name of this King Street room translates as a table full of food, and the promise is delivered literally: order a main and the table fills with ten or more banchan, small dishes of pickles, greens, fish cakes and, of course, kimchi, refilled without fuss as they empty. This is Korean home cooking rather than barbecue theatre or fusion, the sort of clean, comforting fare a Korean grandmother might set down. Bubbling stews anchor the menu, kimchi jjigae sharp with fermentation and tender braises of galbi jjim, alongside the rice, soup and shared plates that make up an everyday Korean spread. The cooking prizes wholesomeness and honesty over presentation; nothing is dressed up, and the generosity of the banchan is the whole point. Set in Melbourne's inner-west, the room is warm and unshowy, open seven days across long lunch and dinner hours, and equally suited to a solo bowl of stew or a shared table working steadily through the side dishes. For anyone chasing the homely, everyday side of Korean eating, the food of the family table rather than the restaurant, few places make the case as plainly, or as generously, as this one.