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An unassuming stairwell on 32nd street leads to one K-Towns best kept secrets. Pocha 32 serves savory Korean pojang macha (street food) accompanied with dozens of varieties of sochu. Always friendly and convivial, it's the kind of place where good friends come to eat, drink and celebrate.
Why You Should Go
Watermelon sochu is served in a hollowed out half watermelon. You use a ladle to fill your glass.
The extensive menu has many hard to find dishes.
What You Should Know
Jinro Sochu equals trouble. Charm sochu equals getting off easy. Order the Jinro.
The walls of Pocha are lined with photos and notes that patrons have left here in the past. Scribble a note to commemorate your night and fix it to the net with a sochu cap tie.
It is customary and polite in Korea to pour a drink with your right hand and place your left hand under your right elbow to support it.
Pocha is a concatenation of Pojang Macha or Korean food cart.
Mashi-go chuk-ja is a typical Korean toast meaning "Let's drink and die"
The WHO reports that (including unreported production) Koreans consume more alchohol per capita than any other country in the world.