Camera in the Kitchen: Momofuku Ssam Bar

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Chefs are known to traverse New York by night, a choice number of restaurants saving their best cuts of meat and their best bottles of wine for the late night foodies who know to swing by. David Chang's Momofuku Ssam Bar, a second venture to follow the well-established Momofuku noodle bar, offers a late night Asian fusion menu full of superstar items from 10:30 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. (Wednesday - Sunday) including fatty pork belly, roasted brussels sprout halves (with kimchi), sandwiches made of headcheese, ham, and chicken liver pate, fried veal sweetbreads, and a spicy Korean-style tripe stew.

Between 11 a.m. - 10 p.m., the Ssam bar can appear sparse, almost disturbingly slow. Sleek wood benches line the northern wall, directly across from a long countertop catering to solo diners swinging by for a quick bite. Chang--a gourmand if he should choose to take the title--offers a short "regular" menu with three options: 1) an Asian burrito in a warm flour wrap (a ssam is a Korean wrap) filled with rice, bacon black beans, sweeter-than-usual kimchi puree, and a choice of either organic chicken, shredded Berkshire pork, or spicy marinated tofu ($9) 2) heaping rice bowls topped with the same hearty combination of ingredients ($13) and 3) Berkshire pork or organic chicken steamed buns (2 for $8).

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All food is prepared by friendly chefs at the burrito bar, then sent back with you on a silver tray to eat cafeteria style at the seat of your choice. The informaliity can be uncomfortable, especially if accustomed to the bustle and table service of the original Momofuku nearby, but Chang obviously has a plan, and the casual format is part of it. On a recent visit, Gothamist tried the Berkshire pork wrap--here, the ssam is made with pork shoulder rather than the pork belly like it is at the original Momofuku-- and though the meat is noticeably less luxurious, the flavor is far from compromised. The pork buns mimic those at the original Momofuku, but cost a dollar less, spongy white buns spread with a thin layer of pickle, hoison sauce, and a succulent hunk of meat.

Late night, however, is where the real magic happens and one sees quite clearly why Chang was named Food & Wine magazine's Best New Chef of 2006 . Eld inlet oysters are simultaneously sweet, salty, and tingle your tongue; four cuts of ham from either Kentucky, Virginia, or Tennesse will introduce you to the cornucopia that is pig. The spicy honeycomb tripe steams peppery heat into your nostrils, the tripe swimming in fiery red broth. Prices hover betewen $7 - $14 for most plates of cheeses, meats, raw bar items, and assorted small dishes. As for beverages, the bar offers beer, sparkly sake, and Dr. Pepper (because Chang likes it).The best technique to conquering the menu is to bring a big group or go back a few times--but remember: go late, and order without restraint.

Momofuku Ssam Bar is located at 207 2nd Avenue (at 13th St.) and open daily, 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. for the "regular" menu; 10:30 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. Weds - Sun for the late night menu. 212-254-3500

Photos by overshadowed on flickr.

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Comments (4) [rss]

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this comment is dumb, i know. i just can't resist the thought of seeing junior high school kids (and plenty of "adults" too for that matter) giggling and saying,

"mama-fuck-you"

change the name pehaps?

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the 1st looks like it has ants all over it. the last looks like a turd on ham w/ a dallop of diarrhea

this place is a rip off. $9-13 and still hungry...c'mon...and the food is WAY too salty...the original noodle bar is great (if you can get in).
they should swap the 2 places, otherwise, this place is closed in a year...
and whats up with the nike ad in the back corner...thats so cheesy...

Is it idiot night on the comment board?? First, people seem to have missed that there is a difference between Ssam late-night and Ssam daytime.
I've eaten there several times and 1) its not too salty 2) the prices aren't cheap, but its definitely not out of line with other late-night higher-end food (Blue Ribbon, Mas) 3) the prices aren't cheap because they're using things like Berkshire pork and small Southern ham producers, rather than, say, the unspeakable slop you'll get in Chinatown pork buns. 4) they're serving dishes like grilled sweetbreads, veal head terrine, grilled sardine sandwiches, etc...If you want to spend $9 at 1am and be full, got to Taco Bell or the plethora of substandard cheap food places in the Evill. You're missing the point...

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