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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup

    475Pearl Points

    Focused Korean beef, strong credentials, easy to book.

    Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup

    Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup in Japantown is one of San Francisco's most focused Korean restaurants, earning a 2025 OAD Cheap Eats ranking and national dish recognition for its braised short ribs and beef soup. With a 4.6 Google average across 1,341 reviews and easy booking, it is a high-value, low-friction choice for anyone serious about Korean beef cookery.

    Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup: Worth Booking in San Francisco's Japantown?

    Yes, book it — Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup at 1620 Post St is one of the most purposeful Korean restaurants in San Francisco, and the fact that it earned a spot on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Cheap Eats list (ranked #378 in North America) while also appearing in a national roundup of the leading restaurant dishes eaten across the U.S. tells you that this is not a neighbourhood fallback. It is a specific, committed restaurant worth going out of your way for.

    What Daeho Actually Delivers

    Daeho is built around two disciplines: kalbijim (braised beef short ribs) and beef soup. That narrow focus is a feature, not a limitation. The kitchen's attention is entirely on getting these dishes right, and the Google review average of 4.6 across 1,341 ratings confirms that consistency is holding. For food and travel enthusiasts who seek genuine depth in a single cooking tradition rather than a sprawling pan-Asian menu, this is exactly the kind of venue worth seeking out. Compare it to Ssal or Bansang, both Korean options in San Francisco with their own distinct approaches, and Daeho's specialisation becomes even clearer: this is a restaurant with a thesis.

    The setting is Japantown, which gives the address a neighbourhood identity that rewards the short walk or drive from Union Square or the Tenderloin. The Post Street corridor is compact and the restaurant itself reflects the functional, no-ceremony spatial character common to serious Korean beef specialists: the room is designed to support the food, not the other way around. That is useful information if you are deciding between Daeho and a more atmospheric evening option — come here for the cooking, not the décor.

    Leading Time to Visit

    Lunch and early dinner are the optimal windows. Korean beef restaurants like Daeho draw strong weekend foot traffic, particularly in Japantown, which sees concentrated neighbourhood activity on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. If you are planning a weekend visit, arriving at opening or before the midday rush will give you a more comfortable experience in terms of pace and seating. Daeho's format is well-suited to a late-morning or early-afternoon meal , the braised short rib and beef soup format translates well outside of dinner hours, making this a practical choice for travellers structuring a full day of San Francisco eating. For the explorer planning multiple stops, Daeho works as a grounding, high-quality anchor for a Japantown or Western Addition food circuit that might also include Sungho.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is a genuine advantage in a city where Korean spots with this level of credentialled recognition often require planning ahead. Dress: Casual , this is a no-dress-code environment. Budget: Price range is not confirmed in current data, but OAD Cheap Eats placement strongly indicates this falls in the accessible, everyday dining tier rather than a special-occasion price point. Factor that against the dish-specific acclaim from national food coverage and the value proposition becomes clear. Groups: The Japantown location and casual format suggest this can accommodate groups, though calling ahead is advisable for parties of six or more given the specialist, compact nature of most Korean beef restaurants in this category. Getting there: 1620 Post St places you squarely in the Japantown shopping and dining district, accessible by Muni or a direct drive with street and garage parking nearby.

    How It Fits the San Francisco Korean Scene

    San Francisco's Korean restaurant scene has deepened considerably, and Daeho sits at the value-focused, technique-serious end of the spectrum. For context on Korean cooking at a higher price point and more formal register, the Seoul comparisons are instructive: Mingles and Kwonsooksoo in Seoul represent the fine-dining trajectory of Korean cuisine. Daeho is not operating in that register , it is doing something different and arguably more honest: mastering a focused set of dishes at a price point that is genuinely accessible. That is a different but equally valid reason to go.

    For broader San Francisco planning, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, our San Francisco hotels guide, our bars guide, our wineries guide, and our experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup?

    Order the kalbijim (braised beef short ribs) or the beef soup — these are the two dishes the restaurant is built around, and both earned Daeho a spot on OAD's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2025. Going off-menu or chasing side dishes is fine, but the braised short ribs are the reason this address gets repeated visits. If you want to hedge, get one of each and split.

    Can Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup accommodate groups?

    Groups are manageable here. Korean beef-focused spots like Daeho typically seat at tables sized for shared dining, which suits groups of 4 to 6 well. For larger parties, arrive early or during off-peak hours — Japantown draws strong weekend foot traffic and the restaurant's OAD recognition means it stays busy. Booking is rated Easy, so coordinating a group reservation should not be an obstacle.

    Does Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is centred almost entirely on beef — kalbijim and beef soup are the core offerings — so this is not a practical choice for vegetarians, vegans, or anyone avoiding red meat. For pescatarians or those with non-beef restrictions, options are likely limited. If dietary flexibility is a priority, a broader Korean restaurant in the city will serve you better than a specialist beef house.

    What is Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup known for?

    Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup is primarily known for Korean in San Francisco.

    Location

    1620 Post St, San Francisco, CA 94115

    San Francisco, United States

    Compare Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup

    Quick Value Check: Daeho Kalbijim & Beef Soup

    Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
    • Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$

    Comparing Daeho against San Francisco's most-discussed restaurants requires some deliberate reframing. Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison are all operating at the $$$$ tasting-menu tier, where dinner for two will routinely exceed $400 before wine. Daeho is categorically different: OAD placed it on the Cheap Eats list, not the fine-dining rankings, and that is the correct frame. If your question is where to spend a meaningful amount of money on a formal San Francisco evening, Benu's French-Chinese tasting menu and Atelier Crenn's poetic French format are the city's most decorated options. If your question is where to eat well for a fraction of that cost, Daeho wins on focused execution and value without qualification.

    Within the Korean category specifically, Daeho's competitive advantage is specialisation. Where broader Korean restaurants in San Francisco offer wider menus across more dish types, Daeho has reduced its scope to two things it does at a nationally recognised level. That trade-off is worth understanding before you book: you are not coming here for variety or a long table-sharing format. You are coming for braised short ribs and beef soup done with consistency and care. For diners whose San Francisco itinerary includes one high-end tasting experience and one serious casual meal, pairing a dinner at Lazy Bear or Atelier Crenn with a lunch at Daeho covers both ends of the city's dining range without redundancy.

    On booking difficulty, Daeho has a clear practical edge over every $$$$ venue listed above. Saison and Atelier Crenn in particular require significant advance planning, and walk-in availability at those restaurants is effectively zero on weekends. Daeho is rated Easy to book, which matters for travellers with compressed itineraries. If you are visiting San Francisco for a long weekend and want one guaranteed great Korean meal without the reservation logistics that fine dining demands, Daeho is the straightforward answer.

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