Close Menu
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now
North America’s largest Hong Kong festival will take over Metro Vancouver for one day only

North America’s largest Hong Kong festival will take over Metro Vancouver for one day only

Local bookstores in Edmonton to indulge in your reading fantasies

Local bookstores in Edmonton to indulge in your reading fantasies

Multiple arrests made in downtown LA after sex toys thrown during anti-ICE protest, officials say

Multiple arrests made in downtown LA after sex toys thrown during anti-ICE protest, officials say

6 things you should know about Christine Fréchette, Quebec’s new premier

6 things you should know about Christine Fréchette, Quebec’s new premier

Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur Launches AI Technologies for Meetings and Events

Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur Launches AI Technologies for Meetings and Events

Former senator to be interim head of RCMP watchdog

Former senator to be interim head of RCMP watchdog

Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly building an AI clone to replace him in meetings

Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly building an AI clone to replace him in meetings

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Gimbap Is Ready to Be Known as More Than Just ‘Korean Sushi’
Gimbap Is Ready to Be Known as More Than Just ‘Korean Sushi’
Travel

Gimbap Is Ready to Be Known as More Than Just ‘Korean Sushi’

7 April 20267 Mins Read

On a personal level, gimbap came first for chef Jihan Lee, with his mom’s gimbap setting the standard. On a professional level, though, gimbap took a backseat to another seaweed-wrapped rice roll: sushi. After training at New York City’s two-Michelin-starred temple of sushi Masa, Lee and his business partners opened the Japanese hand roll bar Nami Nori in 2019. Even though they’d floated the idea of gimbap, also often romanized as kimbap, since day one, it didn’t feel like the right time.

The idea remained in the back of their heads. “As Nami Nori grows, eventually we’ll have a team that’s operating it,” Lee recalls thinking. “Then, we can really think about the concept of gimbap, because it’s still something very new to the [rest of the] world.” He wanted to make sure they could do it right, with restaurant business expertise behind them and the trust of diners. In mid-March — with Nami Nori now established enough to have expanded into Florida, New Jersey, and Virginia — Lee unveiled TBD Gimbap in Manhattan’s West Village, where he serves only gimbap. “No soy sauce required,” reads a sign in the space.

TBD draws on chef Jihan Lee’s mother’s gimbap, though the chef plans to experiment with more fillings soon.
Jill Rittymanee/TBD Gimbap

With more typical fillings like beef bulgogi and spicy carrots, but also a forthcoming slate of specials that draw on his Japanese training, Lee hopes to push the concept — and test the waters — of what constitutes gimbap. TBD, as its name might suggest, is technically a pop-up; Lee expects it’ll be open until at least May. Lee and his partners in Launchpad Hospitality are sussing out the market; of course diners wanted sushi, but now, how much do they want gimbap?

It’s not the first dedicated gimbap restaurant in the city; it follows in the footsteps of places like Kimbap Lab, which launched in NYC in 2014. And in March, Kim’s Kimbap also opened as the first United States outpost of a chain that’s operated in Korea since 1992, serving made-to-order rolls filled with ingredients like chicken tenders and spicy pork, though the rolls have been upsized into burrito-like portions for the American audience. The global boom of Korean culture made it the right time to expand to NYC, according to store owner John Kim. “K-food has more recognition than before: People can distinguish gimbap from sushi,” he says. “It’s an opportunity.” Even frozen gimbap is on the come-up: At Trader Joe’s, gimbap is a hot item every time it returns to the freezer shelves, thanks to TikTok fame.

By virtue of its appearance and its general format, gimbap has often been described in Western media as “Korea’s sushi.” Yes, at a glance, there are ingredients swaddled in short-grain rice and then rolled in a sheath of seaweed. Still, some might call this a lazy comparison, one that disregards the nuance in technique and expectations between the two dishes, as well as the cultural differences between Japan and Korea. (The question of which dish came first remains a tenuous one.) Now, with Korean cuisine having attained more stature globally, some chefs are advocating for a better understanding of gimbap, one that lets the dish stand on its own without comparison. (Even Trader Joe’s disaggregates the two.) “I just want to show that gimbap is different,” Lee says.

What makes good gimbap is variety. If sushi emphasizes the simplicity of rice and seasoned fish, gimbap explores the harmony of more ingredients, though these inclusions vary depending on the maker. For this reason, gimbap can be laborious. “I always want it to have something salty, something crunchy, and something in between,” says Jihee Kim, the chef and owner of Los Angeles’s Perilla, which she describes as a “reimagination” of Korean banchan through California produce. “I’m looking for textures: something crunchy, something fresh, and some pickled stuff for flavor,” she says, adding that the avocado in hers is more of a “California thing.”

an overhead image of a plastic tray of gimbap on top of a park table. inside the gimbap are vegetables including mushrooms and avocado.

Perilla’s Jihee Kim describes her food as a “reimagination” of Korean banchan using California produce.
Matthew Kang/Eater LA

In an attempt to dissuade customers from dipping her gimbap in soy sauce — she doesn’t think it fits with the way the fillings are seasoned — Jihee Kim serves it with a hot mustard sauce, though that’s a bit of a concession, too. “Some people, especially Americans, are looking for a lot of sauces,” she says. Perhaps more than sushi, gimbap is like a sandwich. At least, that’s how she associates it: as synonymous with childhood picnics as sandwiches and field trips might be to others, and with a similar level of variety.

For some people, the complicated relationship between Japan and Korea can make the comparisons between gimbap and sushi more frustrating. “When you take into account the history of Japan colonizing Korea — and having taken a lot from Korea, and absorbing it into its own culture — this idea of Korea constantly being subsumed by Japaneseness is pretty fraught and kind of tense,” says culture writer Giaae Kwon. Kwon has written significantly about gimbap, including a 2021 piece titled “Kimbap, Never ‘Korean Sushi,’” in which she describes gimbap as one of the “quintessentially nostalgic foods in Korean cuisine.” In recent years, this cultural tendency to juxtapose Korea and Japan has changed slightly as Korean food has increasingly entered the American zeitgeist, Kwon acknowledges.

For Kwon, it was Momofuku’s short-lived NYC restaurant Kawi that reshaped how she thought about gimbap, a dish she’d previously found “uninteresting.” At Kawi, the chef Eunjo Park made Korean food that Eater NY’s former restaurant critic Ryan Sutton described at the time as “stunning,” including gimbap with foie gras, short rib, or omelet and dried anchovy, offered with a side of trout roe and uni. In an email, Kwon described Park as having given gimbap “life” at Kawi. “Because she understands Korean food, she was really able to push boundaries in terms of what we might think of as gimbap,” Kwon says.

Kawi became a pandemic casualty in 2021, though Park continues to share her experiments on Instagram, proving how friendly the format is to experimentation: gimbap with galbi-style mushrooms wrapped in phyllo, then rolled with chives and pickled burdock; gimbap that riffs on Chinese tomato egg, with tomatoes confited in sesame oil; BLT gimbap, crunchy with bacon crumbles; gimbap with pan-fried Jimmy Nardello peppers.

an overhead image showing a hand using chopsticks to pick up a piece of bluefin tuna gimbap at the california restaurant super peach. the glass platter sits on top of teal tile.

The popular gimbap at Super Peach is a callback to the menu at the now-closed restaurant Kawi.
Jennelle Fong/Super Peach

At Super Peach, the LA restaurant that opened in October, gimbap has been the highest-selling dish on the menu, according to executive chef Nick Picciotto. It is, indeed, a call back to Kawi, where Picciotto also worked. “It’s something that we always wanted to bring back,” he says, though he notes that the gimbap at Kawi was “a little more high-end” than what they’re currently doing at Super Peach.

Despite the glowing reviews of Kawi’s gimbap, Picciotto recalls some pushback at the idea of selling gimbap for between $30 and $70. “We learned our lesson of the acceptable price that people are willing to pay, depending where our location was,” he says. Super Peach, which is in a mall, takes a more middle-of-the-road approach, with gimbap between $19 and $29. The best-sellers are the spicy bluefin tuna gimbap with avocado and crushed rice crackers, and the galbi-glazed beef gimbap with dill pickles and caramelized onions. “I’m really glad to bring that circle back [around] from Kawi,” Picciotto says.

For Lee, the motivation to open TBD somewhat mirrored the motivation behind opening Nami Nori. It made him sad, he says, that his friends and family struggled to eat at Masa, where lunch runs $495 per person. Eventually, what he started to see with Korean food was “like deja vu,” he says, referring to the rise of Korean fine dining in NYC. “I started thinking, Wow, Korean food is becoming unattainable.”

As much as Lee respected that work, he wanted to make food that people could eat once or twice a week. “I thought gimbap was the perfect business for that,” he says.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur Launches AI Technologies for Meetings and Events

Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur Launches AI Technologies for Meetings and Events

Travel 13 April 2026
Martyn’s Law Introduces New Security Requirements for Hotels Across the UK

Martyn’s Law Introduces New Security Requirements for Hotels Across the UK

Travel 13 April 2026
Are Airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi Open? Here’s the Latest on the Middle East Airspace Closure and Which Hubs Are Operating, Canada Reviews

Are Airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi Open? Here’s the Latest on the Middle East Airspace Closure and Which Hubs Are Operating, Canada Reviews

Travel 13 April 2026
The reviews have just landed for ‘Euphoria’ season 3 – and everyone is saying the same thing, Canada Reviews

The reviews have just landed for ‘Euphoria’ season 3 – and everyone is saying the same thing, Canada Reviews

Travel 13 April 2026
How Boutique Hotels Can Stand Out with Creative Content Marketing

How Boutique Hotels Can Stand Out with Creative Content Marketing

Travel 11 April 2026
Ashford Hospitality Trust Sells Four Hotels, Agrees to Sell Two More

Ashford Hospitality Trust Sells Four Hotels, Agrees to Sell Two More

Travel 11 April 2026
Top Articles
9 Longest-Lasting Nail Polishes, Tested by Top Manicurists

9 Longest-Lasting Nail Polishes, Tested by Top Manicurists

25 January 2026179 Views
Forbes ranked Canada’s top employers for 2026 and over 30 Quebec companies made the cut

Forbes ranked Canada’s top employers for 2026 and over 30 Quebec companies made the cut

22 January 202699 Views
Canada’s best employers for 2026 were revealed and these are the top companies to work for

Canada’s best employers for 2026 were revealed and these are the top companies to work for

21 January 202698 Views
The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

18 May 202497 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Former senator to be interim head of RCMP watchdog
Lifestyle 13 April 2026

Former senator to be interim head of RCMP watchdog

The Liberal government has named well-known legal ethicist and former senator Brent Cotter to be…

Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly building an AI clone to replace him in meetings

Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly building an AI clone to replace him in meetings

A new Southern Thai street tea stall is hand-pulling drinks near the Eaton Centre, Canada Reviews

A new Southern Thai street tea stall is hand-pulling drinks near the Eaton Centre, Canada Reviews

I moved to Canada after it topped global rankings, but I wasn’t prepared for what came next, Life in canada

I moved to Canada after it topped global rankings, but I wasn’t prepared for what came next, Life in canada

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
North America’s largest Hong Kong festival will take over Metro Vancouver for one day only

North America’s largest Hong Kong festival will take over Metro Vancouver for one day only

Local bookstores in Edmonton to indulge in your reading fantasies

Local bookstores in Edmonton to indulge in your reading fantasies

Multiple arrests made in downtown LA after sex toys thrown during anti-ICE protest, officials say

Multiple arrests made in downtown LA after sex toys thrown during anti-ICE protest, officials say

Most Popular
Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202429 Views
OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024362 Views
LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202476 Views
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.