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  • Casual Friday: Young Dabang
Tteokbokki at Young Dabang
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Casual Friday: Young Dabang

The spicy tteokbokki you crave is inside the Fairfax H-Mart.

By Alice Levitt September 3, 2021 at 7:00 am

I’ve been craving spice lately. Also, fun textures. The obvious answer: Tteokbokki.

Not familiar with the Korean rice cakes? I usually introduce them to friends as resembling “Korean gnocchi,” but their texture is often closer to the chewy tapioca boba you’ll find in your bubble tea. They’re typically served in a spicy sauce with similarly elastic slices of fish cake, maybe an egg.

But not all tteokbokki are created equal. Take, for instance, the version I recently had for lunch at Young Dabang. The eatery is a stand inside the Fairfax H-Mart, just across the way from one called Let Them Talk, which serves both Korean corn dogs and mochi doughnuts. A return visit to the food court is obviously in order.

I was impervious to delicious distractions, though. I was eager for what I had heard was the spiciest tteokbokki around. The extra-large pans include a medium sized for two or three people and a large intended for three or four. I ordered the smaller of the two and dispatched most of it on my own. I just couldn’t stop biting into the chewy, extra-long rice cakes.

The pan comes with a pair of scissors for cutting up the cakes into bite-sized pieces. This adds fun novelty to the meal, but so does the variety of foods contained in a serving. There’s a tangled nest of al dente ramen noodles, as well as the expected fish cakes and egg. This version also includes a pair of fried dumplings filled with the kind of sweet potato-based glass noodles you’ll find in japchae. But the centerpiece is a pile of lightly seared brisket (other options include squid and a cheesy omelete), very much like the thinly sliced versions of the beef served at Korean barbecue restaurants.

Those last two ingredients sit atop the saucy pasta, unmarred by the fiery-sweet sauce. It proves a welcome respite from the inferno. But it’s tough to stay away from the spicy bits for too long.

11200 Fairfax Blvd., Fairfax

Feature image by Alice Levitt

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Alice Levitt

Alice Levitt

Contributing Food Critic/Editor

Alice Levitt has been writing for Northern Virginia Magazine since 2020. She began her restaurant critic journey at Seven Days in Vermont in 2007 before moving on to Houstonia Magazine in Texas. Her food, travel, and health innovation stories have appeared in Vox, EatingWell, Simply Recipes, Allrecipes, and many other national publications.

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