Restaurant in New York City, United States
Jeju Noodle Bar
705Pearl PointsCounter seat, Michelin star, fair price.

About Jeju Noodle Bar
Jeju Noodle Bar holds a Michelin star and an OAD top-200 ranking while staying in the $$$ price tier — a rare combination in Manhattan. Chef Douglas Kim's West Village counter delivers technically precise Korean ramyun and raw seafood preparations at a price point that consistently overdelivers. Book three to four weeks out and request the counter.
A Michelin-starred Korean noodle bar at $$$ pricing: here's whether it's worth booking
Jeju Noodle Bar on Greenwich Street in the West Village earns a Michelin star and an Opinionated About Dining top-200 ranking while keeping prices in the $$$ range — a combination that almost never happens in Manhattan. If you've eaten here once and are deciding whether to return, the short answer is yes, and the longer answer is that the counter is where you want to be.
What you're actually getting
The room is intimate and the counter is the seat that earns its reputation. From there, you watch chef Douglas Kim's team build each bowl and plate with a precision that belongs in a more expensive restaurant. The visual language here is deliberate: clear broths that arrive with a visible depth of colour, sliced raw fish arranged with the kind of care you'd expect from a omakase counter, and ramyun bowls that look deceptively simple until the components register. This is not a ramen shop that happens to have good sashimi. The two sides of the menu — raw seafood preparations and ramyun bowls deepened with lobster emulsions, Parmesan foams, and bone broths , operate at the same technical level, which is unusual and worth the trip on its own terms.
The Michelin inspectors noted that the kitchen delivers bowls that taste greater than the sum of their parts, citing scallop, tuna, and amberjack preparations alongside pork bone broth ramyun and a toro ssam bap with scrambled egg, tobiko, and toasted seaweed. The Persian cucumber kimchi with spicy plum dressing and sesame seeds has been called a standout. These are specifics from the award record, not generalised praise, which tells you something about how focused the menu is.
Service philosophy: does it earn the price?
At $$$ in Manhattan, the service question matters. Jeju Noodle Bar's model is closer to a high-end casual counter than a white-tablecloth room, and that is exactly right for the format. The counter configuration , where you watch dishes assembled in front of you , does the work that tableside service does at a more expensive restaurant. You get transparency and engagement without formality. For the price tier, this is the correct trade-off. You are not paying for extensive tableside theatre; you are paying for technical cooking served efficiently in a small, focused room. If you need extensive sommelier guidance or multi-course pacing with explanations between each dish, you will want to look at Atomix instead, which operates at $$$$ and offers the full modern Korean tasting menu experience. But if you want Michelin-level food without the ceremony, the service model here is an asset, not a compromise.
That said, the intimate scale means the room fills fast and the pace can feel compressed during peak hours. Come early in the service , Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 3 PM onward gives you the most flexibility. The Wednesday and Thursday 5 PM open is the tightest window for the week.
How it fits into New York's Korean dining scene
New York's Korean restaurant category has expanded considerably, and Jeju Noodle Bar occupies a specific position: it is the venue where Korean technique meets a narrow, refined format at a price that doesn't require a special-occasion budget. If you are building a Korean dining itinerary in the city, Jua and bōm are the natural companions at different price points and formats. For a broader Korean dining comparison in the city, 8282, Meju, and Ariari each represent different entry points across the casual-to-fine spectrum. For context on how Korean fine dining performs at the source, Mingles and Kwonsooksoo in Seoul are the reference points.
Booking: treat this like a hard reservation
Jeju Noodle Bar is a hard booking. A Michelin star at $$$ pricing in a small West Village room creates demand that consistently outpaces availability. Plan a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for a Friday or Saturday slot. The counter is the preferred configuration , request it when booking. If your target night is not available, the Sunday 3 PM early service tends to be slightly more accessible than Friday or Saturday evening. Do not rely on walk-ins; the seat count is small and the room fills reliably.
Practical details
| Detail | Jeju Noodle Bar | Jua | Atomix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price range | $$$ | $$$ | $$$$ |
| Cuisine format | Korean noodle / raw seafood | Korean contemporary | Modern Korean tasting |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Hard | Very hard |
| Service style | Casual counter / table | Intimate tasting | Full tasting menu service |
| Michelin recognition | 1 Star (2024) | Check Pearl listing | 2 Stars |
| Hours | Wed–Thu 5–10 PM; Fri–Sun 3–10 PM | Check Pearl listing | Check Pearl listing |
| Location | West Village, Manhattan | Manhattan | Midtown East |
For a full view of where to eat, drink, and stay in the city, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide. If you're tracking Michelin-level value across other US cities, comparable precision-at-accessible-price venues include Smyth in Chicago, Providence in Los Angeles, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco. For the other end of the price-to-prestige scale, The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg show what the leading of the tasting menu market looks like.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Jeju Noodle Bar?
Book the counter if you can — it is the better seat in the room and puts you in front of the kitchen as chef Douglas Kim's team assembles each bowl and plate. The menu is concise, the room is intimate, and a Michelin star at $$$ pricing means demand consistently outpaces the space. Come with an appetite for both seafood crudo and ramyun; the menu covers both sides without asking you to choose.
Can Jeju Noodle Bar accommodate groups?
Not comfortably for large parties. The room is small and the counter format is built for parties of two to four. Groups of five or more will find the logistics tight and should consider whether a venue with a dedicated private dining option better fits their needs. For a group Korean meal in Manhattan with more space, Atomix or a larger Koreatown option makes more practical sense.
How far ahead should I book Jeju Noodle Bar?
Book at least three to four weeks out. A Michelin star in a small West Village room with limited evening hours — Wednesday through Sunday only — creates a narrow window of availability that fills fast. Friday and Saturday are the hardest nights; Wednesday and Thursday give you a slightly better shot. Do not assume walk-in availability.
Is lunch or dinner better at Jeju Noodle Bar?
Jeju Noodle Bar does not serve lunch. Service begins at 5 PM Wednesday through Thursday and at 3 PM Friday through Sunday — so the Friday-to-Sunday afternoon slot is your earliest-access option. If you want the counter at a calmer pace, the early Friday or weekend afternoon seating is worth targeting over peak Saturday evening.
Is Jeju Noodle Bar worth the price?
Yes, particularly for what $$$ buys in Manhattan. A Michelin star, an Opinionated About Dining top-200 ranking, and a menu that pairs sushi-grade seafood with lobster-emulsion ramyun puts Jeju Noodle Bar well above its price bracket relative to comparable tasting-format venues in New York. If you want Korean technique at this level without the four-figure bill that comes with Atomix or Masa, this is the practical answer.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Jeju Noodle Bar?
Jeju Noodle Bar's format is not a traditional tasting menu — it operates as a counter-service restaurant with a concise à la carte menu rather than a fixed progression of courses. That structure is part of what keeps prices at $$$ while delivering Michelin-star output. If a structured multi-course format is what you are after, Atomix is the benchmark comparison in New York's Korean dining category.
Can I eat at the bar at Jeju Noodle Bar?
Yes, and the counter is the seat worth having. Opinionated About Dining specifically calls out the counter as the preferred perch, where you can watch each dish come together. Reserve a counter spot directly if the booking system allows you to specify; table seating is the fallback, not the goal.
Location
679 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10014, United States
New York City, United States
Compare Jeju Noodle Bar
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Jeju Noodle Bar | $$$ |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ |
| Atomix | $$$$ |
| Per Se | $$$$ |
| Masa | $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ |
What to weigh when choosing between Jeju Noodle Bar and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Le Bernardin, French, Seafood, $$$$
- Atomix, Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$
- Per Se, French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Masa, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Eleven Madison Park, French, Vegan, $$$$
Jeju Noodle Bar sits in a different bracket from most of its natural comparisons in New York. Atomix is the obvious Korean fine dining reference point, but at $$$$ with a full tasting menu format, it is a different financial and experiential commitment. If you want structured courses, wine pairings, and extended service, Atomix is the booking. If you want Michelin-level Korean cooking at roughly half the price in a counter setting, Jeju Noodle Bar is the stronger value decision.
Le Bernardin, Per Se, Masa, and Eleven Madison Park all operate at $$$$ and deliver full tasting menu experiences with commensurate service depth. They are the right choice when the occasion demands ceremony and extended dining. Jeju Noodle Bar is the right choice when the priority is technical cooking at an accessible price in a room where the food does the work rather than the production around it.
For practical decision-making: if you are booking one Korean meal in New York and budget is flexible, Atomix wins on format and depth. If you are booking one Korean meal where value matters, or if you want to eat well twice in the city on one Atomix-equivalent budget, Jeju Noodle Bar is the sharper call. The Michelin star and consistent OAD recognition confirm it is not a trade-down; it is a different format operating at the same quality tier.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 5 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 5 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 3 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 3 PM-10 PM
- Sunday
- 3 PM-10 PM
Recognized By
Explore New York City
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