Restaurant in New York City, United States
Octo
100ptsJunghwa Counter Cooking

About Octo
Octo at 1 East 33rd Street brings together Korean-Chinese fusion cooking under the roof of a family operation with roots in New York's oldest Korean barbecue tradition. The à la carte menu spans noodles, rice, and lunch specials alongside signature dishes like Peking black duck and beef tangsuyuk. A Google rating of 4.3 from 339 reviews and a mid-range price point make it a practical address for the Murray Hill dining circuit.
Where Murray Hill Meets Korean-Chinese Crossover
New York's Korean restaurant corridor has long anchored itself in Koreatown, the dense block of 32nd Street that runs between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. One block north, at 1 East 33rd Street, Octo sits close enough to feel the gravitational pull of that strip but operates in a slightly different register. The address puts it on the edge of Murray Hill, a neighbourhood that has quietly accumulated a range of mid-price Asian dining options over the past decade, operating in the shadow of the high-visibility Koreatown scene without being defined by it. That positioning matters: Octo is neither a classic Korean barbecue house nor an upscale tasting-menu operation like Atomix, which sits at the other end of the Korean dining spectrum in terms of format and price. It occupies the productive middle ground of à la carte, Korean-Chinese fusion at an accessible price point marked as $$ on the EP Club scale.
The family behind Octo, Steve and Christina Jang, are also connected to what is described as New York's oldest Korean barbecue restaurant, a credential that carries meaningful context. In a city where food businesses turn over at speed, multi-generational staying power in a single cuisine tradition is evidence of sustained local relevance, not just a biographical footnote. Chef Segeun Song leads the kitchen and channels the Korean-Chinese hybrid cooking style that defines the menu's character. That culinary tradition, known in Korea as Junghwa cuisine, blends Chinese technique and ingredient logic with Korean flavour frameworks — the result is a category that sits apart from both standard Korean restaurant fare and from the Chinese-American dining formats most New Yorkers know.
The Physical Setting and What It Signals
Fusion cuisines that blend Korean and Chinese cooking traditions tend to show up in two kinds of spaces in New York: the functional, high-turnover rooms of Koreatown designed for group dining and fast seating cycles, and the more considered rooms that signal a longer stay. The design and spatial character of Octo is not detailed in publicly available records, but the mid-range pricing and à la carte format suggest a room calibrated for a relaxed sit-down experience rather than a quick rotation. The address on East 33rd, away from the highest foot-traffic blocks of the Korean restaurant strip, reinforces that read. Spaces in this part of Murray Hill tend to be less pressured environments than the Koreatown corridor itself, which draws significant tourist and group traffic, particularly on weekends.
For comparison, the $$$$ rooms that define New York's fine dining tier, places like Le Bernardin, Per Se, Eleven Madison Park, and Masa, are engineered around a very specific choreography of space: controlled acoustics, wide spacing between covers, and a physical container that communicates the formality of the experience before any food arrives. Octo does not compete in that tier, and is not trying to. Its peer set is the mid-range Asian contemporary segment, where the room needs to support a convivial meal without signalling occasion dining. The Google rating of 4.3 from 339 reviews suggests the current setup is working for its customer base.
What the Menu Actually Does
Junghwa cuisine, the Korean adaptation of Chinese cooking that arrived in Korea via Chinese immigrant communities in the late 19th century, has a handful of dishes that function almost as national comfort food in Korea: jajangmyeon (noodles in black bean sauce), jjamppong (spicy seafood noodle soup), and tangsuyuk (sweet and sour crispy meat). These dishes appear in countless Korean restaurants in Seoul and in Korean diaspora communities globally, but they rarely receive serious treatment in New York. Octo's menu takes that tradition as a foundation and extends it with more ambitious preparations.
The Peking black duck is the dish that sits furthest from the Junghwa base and signals the kitchen's appetite for crossover. Peking duck as a format, with its lacquered skin and tableside presentation, belongs to a specific tradition of Chinese banquet cooking that requires preparation time and technique. The instruction to reserve ahead for this dish is a practical signal worth taking seriously: it is not a walk-in order. The beef tangsuyuk and cumin pork back ribs occupy a more accessible register, representing the meat-forward, sauce-driven dishes that define Junghwa cooking at its most direct. Cumin in this context points toward the influence of Northern Chinese cooking on the Korean-Chinese canon, a detail that places the kitchen's reference points on a wider map than the standard Koreatown menu.
The dumpling program deserves particular attention. The pork and Thai chili soup dumplings with caviar represent a fairly deliberate fusion move: soup dumplings, or xiaolongbao, are originally a Shanghainese format that has spread across Chinese diaspora cooking globally, while the Thai chili component adds Southeast Asian heat and the caviar dot introduces a luxury accent that sits outside the traditional register entirely. The spicy poached dumplings in black vinegar sauce are a more classically grounded preparation, where the Zhenjiang vinegar base is a standard condiment in Chinese dumpling culture. Together these two preparations show a kitchen comfortable operating across reference points without defaulting to a single tradition. The lunch specials and noodle and rice dishes round out a menu designed for repeat visits across different meal occasions.
Among Asian contemporary restaurants operating at this price point globally, the Korean-Chinese fusion format is relatively underrepresented outside Korea itself. Willow in Singapore and Banyan in Istanbul represent Asian contemporary approaches in other markets, but neither addresses the specific Junghwa tradition that Octo draws from. In the American market, restaurants that take this culinary lineage seriously as a primary focus are rare.
Planning a Visit
Octo sits at the $$ price point, placing it well below the high-end tasting-menu tier and within reach for a casual dinner or a more considered lunch. The à la carte format means the bill scales with appetite and order choices. Reserve ahead if Peking black duck is the draw, as the kitchen requires notice for that preparation. The dumpling workshop format signals that at least some of the menu is designed around engagement and participation rather than passive consumption, which changes the calculus for group bookings. For a fuller picture of where Octo sits within the New York dining circuit, see our full New York City restaurants guide. Those planning a broader trip can also consult our New York City hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
For those building a broader US dining itinerary, reference points in other cities include Emeril's in New Orleans, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Providence in Los Angeles.
Quick reference: 1 E 33rd St, New York, NY 10016 | Price: $$ | Google: 4.3 (339 reviews) | Reserve ahead for Peking black duck.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I eat at Octo?
The menu at Octo is built around Korean-Chinese fusion cooking, with several dishes that anchor its identity. The Peking black duck requires advance reservation and represents the most technique-intensive preparation on the menu. The beef tangsuyuk, a Korean-Chinese sweet and sour fried beef dish, and the cumin pork back ribs are the signature meat dishes that define the menu's character. On the dumpling side, the pork and Thai chili soup dumplings with caviar are the more adventurous order, while the spicy poached dumplings in black vinegar sauce are grounded in a more classical Chinese condiment tradition. The lunch specials offer a lower-commitment entry point for first-time visitors. Across all these, the menu's strongest through-line is the Junghwa culinary tradition, which treats Chinese cooking techniques as raw material for a distinctly Korean adaptation, rather than simply serving either cuisine in a direct form. See also the full treatment of the New York City restaurant scene, alongside the high-end Korean reference point at Atomix, to calibrate where Octo sits in the city's broader dining options.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New York City
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