NYCReview

photo credit: Kate Previte

A spread of Korean dishes and wine on a table in Sunn's.
8.7

Sunn's

At Chinatown wine bar Sunn's, banchan steps into the spotlight

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KoreanWine Bar

Chinatown

$$$$Perfect For:Date NightsDrinking Great Wine

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Whether you refer to the area just south of Hester as Dimes Square or Chinatown, you can’t deny it’s changed. A luxury hotel has arrived. So has an omakase spot. Home goods store Coming Soon, with its vintage dressers and $70 martini glasses, has drifted east from Soho.

Sunn’s, a pop-up-turned-wine bar, isn’t here to save the day, but it does provide some soulful relief. The six-table spot with a single induction burner has a scrappy feel that’s going extinct in these parts. As legally required, the restaurant does have natural wine (and soju)—courtesy of neighbor Parcelle—but it also has an uncompromising Korean menu that splits the difference between comfort and creativity.

Of their nine or so rotating dishes, roughly half wouldn’t feel out of place in a home kitchen. A pot of glistening chicken soup with mandu big as rabbit ears, say, or silky sliced pork belly glazed with coffee. Even the showstopping Pyrex of tteokbokki under a blob of stracciatella reads like a feral midnight snack. 

Other items are more controversial. A set of banchan, free at your average Korean spot, costs a little over $20. But these aren’t your usual specimens. Kimchi and acorn jelly aside, the selection is as disparate as the playlist featuring SZA and Steely Dan. Sign us up for more tahini-glazed mushrooms, yellow beans in a peanut-persimmon sauce, and oxtail pressed into a tidy terrine. Those misfit sides are the real headliners here.

With its idiosyncratic menu and kitchen tools hung up like rakes in a garage, Sunn’s is messy in a way that feels personal. The chef behind the counter? That’s Sunny. The paintings on the wall? From her artist husband. It’s a bold move charging for banchan, even if you have a $200 blanc de blancs to go with it. This skeleton crew pulls it off with unpretentious flair.

Food Rundown

A set of banchan on a table.

photo credit: Kate Previte

Banchan

An appropriate knee-jerk reaction to paying twenty-something dollars for banchan should fall somewhere along the five stages of grief. You’ll quickly get over it. There’s always a daily selection—with items like kimchi, eggplant, and a zippy potato salad—in addition to specials like Korean-style giardiniera and squishy pearl onions embedded in mustard. Always get the specials.
A bowl with pieces of raw fish, anchovies, and a chojang sauce.

photo credit: Kate Previte

Hwe

There are other things you should try before the hwe. But if you want some compelling introductory bites, absolutely go for it. We’ve had scallops caught by the chef’s dad, as well cubes of Hudson Valley trout dressed with fried anchovies and translucent cloud ear mushrooms.
A glass dish with cheese-covered rice cakes in a red sauce.

photo credit: Kate Previte

Ttoekbokki

There’s zero chance you’ll regret ordering these gummy, cheese-smothered rice cakes from Hansol Foods in Flushing. They look like something you’d throw together at 3am, and taste like a cross between Little Italy and K-Town.
A stew with squash in it.

photo credit: Kate Previte

Hobak Chigae

The larger items lean traditional, and there are no misses. A little vat of hobak chigae comes with short rib and kabocha squash in nutty, murky brown broth littered with sesame seeds. If it's available, get it for the table.
A bowl with dumplings, seaweed, and strands of omelet in a broth.

photo credit: Kate Previte

Dak Mandu Guk

Always order these big, floppy mandu submerged in a shimmering broth with skinny strands of omelet swimming about.

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FOOD RUNDOWN

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