Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea
The Green Table
580ptsMichelin-recognised, easier to book than peers.

About The Green Table
The Green Table is one of Seoul's more accessible fine dining options — Michelin Plate-recognised, La Liste-listed, and priced at ₩₩₩ in a city where comparable quality often costs more. Chef Kim Eunhee's French-Korean cooking foregrounds vegetables, herbs, and flowers with notable delicacy. Easier to book than most peers, and worth returning to for the counter experience.
Verdict: Worth booking, and easier to get into than most of Seoul's fine dining scene
Getting a table at The Green Table is, by Seoul fine dining standards, surprisingly manageable. While restaurants at the ₩₩₩₩ tier like 7th Door or Zero Complex can require weeks of advance planning, The Green Table sits at the ₩₩₩ price point with a booking difficulty rated Easy — meaning you can often secure a seat without the usual sprint to the reservations page. That accessibility, combined with two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) and consistent La Liste scores of 77–77.5 points across 2025 and 2026, makes it one of the more rational choices for a serious meal in Jongno-gu. If you have been once and are considering a return, the answer is yes — and this time, try to position yourself at or near the counter if the layout allows.
The Space: Fifth Floor, Arario
The restaurant occupies the fifth floor of Arario Space, a contemporary arts complex on Yulgok-ro in Jongno-gu. That address matters. Jongno-gu sits adjacent to Gyeongbokgung Palace and Bukchon Hanok Village, which gives the neighbourhood a different register from the sleeker, newer dining corridors in Gangnam or Itaewon. Coming here feels more considered , the kind of dinner you plan around a walk through the old city rather than a club reservation afterward.
The Arario building context shapes the experience before you sit down. Contemporary art venues in Seoul tend toward clean volumes and restrained material palettes, and that framing carries into the dining room. The fifth-floor position means natural light during lunch service and a degree of separation from street-level noise , both factors worth knowing if you are choosing between a weekend lunch and an evening sitting. For a return visit specifically, lunch on a weekday gives you the room in a calmer state and, if the spatial framing around vegetables and herbs is as deliberate as La Liste's notes suggest, daylight service lets you read the plate more clearly.
The Counter Angle
La Liste's 2026 assessment notes that Chef Kim Eunhee works with vegetables, herbs, and flowers with a degree of precision they describe as a "feminine touch" , sometimes building dishes that are entirely plant-based. For a return visitor, this is the most important thing to understand about how the meal is structured. The cooking is French-Korean in orientation, rooted in classical French technique but consistently pulled toward lighter, more herbaceous territory. If you sat through the menu once and found the vegetable work more interesting than the protein courses, that instinct is worth following: request a counter or pass-side seat if one is available so you can watch the plating sequences. At a restaurant where herbs and flowers are compositional rather than decorative, proximity to the kitchen changes what you notice.
The editorial angle here is practical: counter seating at venues where the visual detail of the plate is part of the value proposition is not just a preference , it is the better version of the same meal. If you are advising a friend who has eaten here once and is going back, tell them to ask for the counter. La Liste specifically calls out the delicacy of the execution; you see that more clearly from two metres than from across a full dining room.
Chef and Creative Direction
Chef Raphael Duntoye is listed as the chef name in the venue record, though La Liste's write-up centres its praise on Chef Kim Eunhee's work with vegetables and the overall sensory register she brings to the menu. The La Liste note also flags what it frames as a missed opportunity: given the name The Green Table and the obvious fluency with plant-forward cooking, the absence of a dedicated vegetarian or plant-only menu format is notable. For guests who came primarily for the vegetable courses, this is worth knowing , the menu is not fully plant-based, and if that matters to your group, clarify at booking.
Price and Value
At ₩₩₩, The Green Table prices below most of its Michelin-recognised peers in Seoul. Mingles, Jungsik, and Kwonsooksoo all sit at higher price tiers with deeper award stacks. The Green Table's Michelin Plate (rather than a star) reflects that it is a serious restaurant without reaching the very top tier of technical ambition or service formality. That is not a criticism , it is a useful calibration. You are paying for precise, delicate cooking in a considered space, not for a three-hour ceremony. For a solo diner or a couple who wants a genuine fine dining experience in Seoul without the full ₩₩₩₩ commitment, this is a sound choice. Compare it to L'Amitié at the same price tier if French cooking in Seoul is your focus , both are worth knowing about, and the difference in register (classic French vs. French-Korean with a vegetable emphasis) will drive your preference.
Timing Recommendation
A weekday lunch is the optimal visit for most diner profiles. The room will be quieter, the light better for the plate work, and the booking easier. If you are visiting Seoul in spring or autumn , when herbs and edible flowers are at their most varied in Korean markets , the seasonal produce argument for those windows is reasonable, though the kitchen's sourcing specifics are not confirmed in available data. What is confirmed is that the cooking foregrounds vegetables and botanicals as primary elements, so timing your visit around Seoul's produce seasons is a logical consideration.
For a broader picture of where The Green Table fits in the city's dining calendar, see our full Seoul restaurants guide. If you are planning a longer stay, our Seoul hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the surrounding context. For French Contemporary cooking elsewhere in Asia, Odette in Singapore and Amber in Hong Kong are the regional reference points at a higher award level. Within Korea, Mori in Busan and alla prima in Seoul are worth knowing for different reasons , alla prima in particular if you want innovative Korean-adjacent cooking in the same city.
Quick Reference
The Green Table, 5F Arario Space, 83 Yulgok-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul. Price tier: ₩₩₩. Booking difficulty: Easy. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024–2025; La Liste 77–77.5pts (2025–2026). Google rating: 4.8 from 100 reviews. Leading timing: weekday lunch.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the tasting menu worth it at The Green Table? Yes, at the ₩₩₩ price point it represents strong value relative to Michelin Plate peers in Seoul. The cooking is technically precise with a clear emphasis on vegetables, herbs, and flowers , if that register appeals, you are getting a coherent and well-executed meal rather than a generic fine dining formula. It does not reach the technical ambition of a starred Seoul restaurant like Jungsik, but it is not priced like one either.
- Is The Green Table good for solo dining? Yes. The easy booking, ₩₩₩ pricing, and counter-style proximity to the kitchen (where available) make it a practical solo option in Seoul's fine dining tier. The room's size and the relatively intimate Arario Space setting suit a single diner better than larger, more formal venues. Counter seating is particularly worth requesting when dining alone.
- What should I wear to The Green Table? No dress code is confirmed in available data, but the Michelin Plate recognition and Arario Space setting suggest smart casual at minimum. In Seoul's fine dining culture, guests at this price tier typically dress up rather than down. Arriving in business casual or above is safe.
- Does The Green Table handle dietary restrictions? No booking policy or dietary accommodation details are confirmed in available data. La Liste notes that the kitchen works extensively with vegetables and can build entirely plant-based dishes, which suggests some flexibility , but contact the restaurant directly before booking if dietary needs are a factor. A website or phone number is not currently listed in Pearl's data for this venue.
- What are alternatives to The Green Table in Seoul? For French cooking at the same price tier, L'Amitié (₩₩₩) is the closest comparison. For Korean fine dining with more award depth, Mingles and Kwonsooksoo are the benchmark choices. If you want Korean-French fusion with a more innovative edge and are willing to spend more, Zero Complex (₩₩₩₩) is worth considering. See our full Seoul restaurants guide for a broader comparison.
Compare The Green Table
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| The Green Table | ₩₩₩ | — |
| Solbam | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| Onjium | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| 7th Door | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
| L'Amitié | ₩₩₩ | — |
| Zero Complex | ₩₩₩₩ | — |
How The Green Table stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does The Green Table handle dietary restrictions?
The kitchen's demonstrated strength is with vegetables, herbs, and flowers — La Liste's 2026 assessment specifically highlights Chef Kim Eunhee's precision with plant-based elements, which suggests dietary flexibility is within the kitchen's range. That said, specific accommodation policies are not documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a deciding factor.
What should I wear to The Green Table?
The restaurant sits inside Arario Space, a contemporary arts complex — the setting is polished but not a formal hotel dining room. A neat, put-together look fits: think elevated casual or business casual rather than black tie. Nothing in the venue record mandates a strict dress code, but at the ₩₩₩ price tier, overly casual clothing would feel out of step with the room.
Is the tasting menu worth it at The Green Table?
At ₩₩₩, it prices below comparable Michelin-recognised peers in Seoul such as Mingles or Kwonsooksoo, which makes the value case straightforward if French-Korean cuisine is your format. La Liste has scored it at 77–77.5 points across two consecutive years, signalling consistency. If you want something purely Korean in tradition, Onjium is a stronger fit at a similar tier.
Is The Green Table good for solo dining?
The fifth-floor Arario Space setting and the kitchen's focus on detailed plate work make it a workable solo option — the meal gives you something to engage with rather than just a social backdrop. Booking as a solo diner at ₩₩₩ is generally easier than at Seoul's four-tier restaurants, where counter seats fill quickly. Confirm counter or bar seating availability when reserving.
What are alternatives to The Green Table in Seoul?
For a higher-stakes French-Korean experience, L'Amitié sits at a comparable positioning but with a different creative direction. If you want traditional Korean craft over French technique, Onjium is the clearer alternative. For those who prefer a full vegetable-forward menu — something La Liste notes The Green Table stops short of — Zero Complex is worth considering. 7th Door and Solbam both operate at higher price tiers and present a more demanding booking process.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Seoul
- MinglesMingles is Seoul's most credentialed modern Korean restaurant: three Michelin stars, World's 50 Best number 29 in 2025, and a tasting menu built around Chef Mingoo Kang's in-house fermented jangs. Book six to eight weeks ahead — availability is near impossible — and budget for ₩₩₩₩ food pricing plus wine. The best single splurge for a food-focused visit to Seoul.
- OnjiumRanked #57 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holding a Michelin star, Onjium is one of Seoul's hardest reservations and one of its most justified. Chef Cho Eun-hee's research-driven Korean tasting menus draw from centuries-old recipe books, with a strong vegetable focus and techniques including fermentation and drying. Open Tuesday to Friday only; book as far ahead as possible.
- EvettEvett holds two Michelin stars and one of Seoul's most serious wine lists — 2,170 selections with a World's Best Wine List 3-Star Accreditation. Chef Joseph Lidgerwood's innovative Korean-influenced tasting menu in Gangnam is near-impossible to book; lunch is your best entry point. At ₩₩₩₩, it is one of the few Seoul addresses where the cellar matches the kitchen.
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