Restaurant in New York City, United States
Osamil
100ptsKorean-American Sunday Roast

About Osamil
A Korean-inflected gastropub on West 31st Street, Osamil earns its place on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual North America list — ranked #543 — by threading the communal, slow-cooked sensibility of a Sunday roast through a distinctly Korean-American lens. Chef Jonghwi Lim's kitchen sits in the Koreatown corridor, where bold sharing plates and a neighbourhood-bar format make it a practical anchor for the area's dining circuit.
The Sunday Roast, Reimagined Through a Korean-American Lens
The ritual of the weekly roast — long-cooked proteins, shared plates, a table that lingers — has proven more portable than any single culinary tradition. In cities with dense immigrant cooking histories, that ritual absorbs local technique and produces something that reads as neither strictly traditional nor self-consciously fusion. New York's gastropub tier has been working through exactly this kind of evolution, and Osamil on West 31st Street represents one of the more coherent expressions of it in the current moment.
Gastropubs in American cities occupy a specific middle register: more considered than a bar, less formal than a tasting-menu room, and defined by an expectation that the food will carry weight without demanding ceremony. The format originated in London in the early 1990s as a counter-reaction to pub food that had been reduced to an afterthought, and its American adaptation has continued to shift , often absorbing the cooking traditions of whatever neighbourhood it lands in. In Koreatown, that means the shared-plate format and slow-cooking instincts of the genre connect naturally with Korean braising traditions, communal eating culture, and the preference for food that rewards a table rather than a single diner.
Where West 31st Sits in the New York Dining Picture
Manhattan's Koreatown corridor , concentrated along 32nd Street but spilling across nearby blocks , functions as one of the city's most consistent dining destinations for late-night eating and neighbourhood regulars. It operates largely outside the review-cycle pressure that shapes venues in the West Village or Midtown proper, which gives restaurants there a different relationship to their guests. Osamil at 5 W 31st Street sits on the southern edge of that cluster, close enough to benefit from the area's foot traffic and culinary identity while occupying its own address rather than the main strip.
The competitive set for a gastropub in this position is worth mapping. At the high end of New York dining, rooms like Atomix and Le Bernardin operate at $$$$ price points with tasting-menu formats and reservation systems that require planning weeks or months in advance. Eleven Madison Park and Masa sit in that same tier , technically brilliant, architecturally composed, and priced to match. Osamil's gastropub format and Opinionated About Dining casual ranking place it in an entirely different conversation: the kind of room where the food is serious but the format invites a second drink.
Among Korean-leaning addresses in New York, Nowon offers a useful point of comparison in the neighbourhood-bar-with-serious-food category. The gastropub format as interpreted through Korean-American cooking has enough momentum in the city that venues here are increasingly benchmarked against a national casual peer set, not just local neighbours.
The Communal Table Logic
The gastropub format succeeds when it respects the underlying logic of the Sunday roast: food that is worth waiting for, worth sharing, and worth discussing. That logic is not about nostalgia , it's about technique and timing. Slow-cooked proteins develop flavour through collagen breakdown and fat rendering that faster cooking methods cannot replicate, and the resulting dishes demand a table format that distributes them widely rather than plating them for one. Korean braising , galbi-jjim, bossam, doenjang-braised cuts , shares that structural philosophy, which is why the Korean-American gastropub combination is less of a novelty than it might read on paper.
Osamil's placement on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual North America list at #543, supported by a 4.5 Google rating across 1,478 reviews, suggests a kitchen that has found its register and maintained it. OAD's casual rankings are generated from surveyed dining records rather than editorial visits, which means the score reflects repeated customer engagement rather than a single critic's assessment. A 4.5 average across nearly 1,500 reviews carries more distributional weight than a smaller sample , variance compresses as volume increases, so the score is unlikely to be propped up by outliers.
Gastropub as a National Format
The gastropub model has produced credible outposts in cities well beyond New York. Camden Spit & Larder in Sacramento and Damn the Weather in Seattle both work within the same format logic , food-forward, bar-adjacent, built for repeat visits rather than occasions. The difference in New York is density: the city has enough gastropub-adjacent rooms that differentiation requires a clear culinary identity, not just good execution of the baseline format. Chef Jonghwi Lim's Korean-American inflection provides that identity, and the OAD ranking confirms it has registered with the audience that tracks the casual tier carefully.
For wider context on American restaurants operating between the tasting-menu tier and the purely casual, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans illustrate the range of formats that have earned sustained recognition. Osamil's casual register sits below that tier in formality and price, but the OAD listing confirms it belongs to a tracked and evaluated national conversation about serious informal cooking.
Planning a Visit
Know Before You Go
- Address: 5 W 31st St, New York, NY 10001
- Cuisine: Gastropub / Korean-American
- Chef: Jonghwi Lim
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #543 (2025)
- Google Rating: 4.5 from 1,478 reviews
- Neighbourhood: Koreatown / Midtown South, Manhattan
- Hours / Booking: Check directly with the venue , hours and reservation availability not confirmed at time of publication
For more on where to eat, stay, and drink 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.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try dish at Osamil?
Specific dish details are not confirmed in our current data. Given the venue's gastropub format, Chef Jonghwi Lim's Korean-American approach, and the communal-plate logic the OAD casual ranking reflects, the kitchen is likely strongest on slow-cooked, shared proteins , the category that connects British roast tradition to Korean braising technique. Confirm the current menu directly with the restaurant before visiting.
How hard is it to get a table at Osamil?
Booking difficulty in New York's casual tier depends heavily on day, time, and format. Restaurants at this price register and OAD ranking level typically have more walk-in availability than tasting-menu rooms , unlike counters at Atomix or comparable fine-dining addresses, which require weeks of advance planning. That said, weekend evenings in any well-reviewed Koreatown room can compress quickly. Checking directly with the venue for current booking policy is advisable before planning a Saturday dinner.
What do critics highlight about Osamil?
Osamil's 2025 inclusion on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list at #543 is the primary documented critical signal. OAD rankings aggregate surveyed diner records, making the ranking a measure of consistent repeat performance rather than a single review moment. Chef Jonghwi Lim's kitchen and the venue's Korean-American gastropub positioning have been sufficient to register in a competitive national casual field , a list that covers hundreds of restaurants across the continent, from Nowon to comparable addresses in other cities.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New York City
- Le BernardinLe Bernardin is one of the most consistently awarded seafood restaurants in the world — three Michelin stars, 99.5 points from La Liste, and four New York Times stars held for over 30 years. At $157 for four courses at dinner ($225 for the tasting menu), it is the right call for a formal occasion or a serious seafood meal in Midtown Manhattan, provided you book well in advance.
- AtomixAtomix is the No. 1 restaurant in North America (50 Best, 2025) and one of the hardest reservations in New York: 14 seats, one seating per night, three Michelin stars. Junghyun and Ellia Park's Korean tasting menu pairs precision-sourced ingredients with Korean culinary heritage, explained course by course through hand-designed cards. Book months ahead or plan around a cancellation.
- Eleven Madison ParkEleven Madison Park is the definitive case for plant-based fine dining in New York City: three Michelin stars, a 22,000-bottle wine cellar, and an eight-to-ten course tasting menu in a landmark Art Deco room. Book it for a special occasion with a plant-forward appetite and three hours to spare. Reservations open on the 1st of each month and go within hours.
- Jungsik New YorkJungsik is the restaurant that put progressive Korean fine dining on the New York map, and over a decade in, it still holds that position. With two Michelin stars, a 2025 James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef, and a seasonally rotating nine-course tasting menu in a quietly formal Tribeca room, it earns its $$$$ price point for special occasions and serious dining. Book well in advance.
- DanielDaniel is the benchmark for classic French fine dining in New York: three Michelin stars, a 10,000-bottle cellar, and formal Upper East Side service that has stayed consistent for over 30 years. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At $$$$, it is a genuine special-occasion restaurant, but the wine program alone — 2,000 selections with particular depth in Burgundy and Bordeaux — makes it the strongest wine-and-food pairing destination in its category.
- Per SePer Se is one of New York's two or three most complete special-occasion restaurants: three Michelin stars, Central Park views, and two nine-course tasting menus that change daily at $425 per person. Book exactly one month out — the window fills fast. The salon accepts walk-ins for à la carte if you miss the main dining room.
Related editorial
- Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026: The Chairman and Wing Go 1-2 from the Same BuildingThe Chairman takes No. 1 and Wing climbs to No. 2 at Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026. Both operate from the same Hong Kong building. Here's what it means.
- Four Seasons Yachts Debut: 95 Suites, 11 Restaurants, and a March 2026 Maiden VoyageFour Seasons I launches March 20, 2026, with 95 suites, a one-to-one staff ratio, and 11 onboard restaurants. Worth tracking if you want hotel-grade service at sea.
- LA Michelin Guide 2026: Seven New Restaurants from Tlayudas to Uzbek DumplingsMichelin's March 2026 California Guide update adds six LA restaurants and one Montecito newcomer, spanning Oaxacan tlayudas, Uzbek manti, and Korean-Italian pasta.
Save or rate Osamil on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


