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Premium Korean Bbq Steakhouse

Google: 4.3 · 376 reviews

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CuisineKorean Steakhouse
Executive ChefSangkyun Han
Price≈$100
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityLarge
Opinionated About Dining

A Korean steakhouse on West 6th Street in Koreatown, Daedo Sikdang has earned back-to-back recognition on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list, ranking #373 in 2024 and climbing to #360 in 2025. The kitchen, led by Chef Sangkyun Han, operates in the tradition of Korean table-grilled beef with the precision and sourcing ambition that separates the district's serious players from its tourist-facing competitors.

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Daedo Sikdang restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
About

Koreatown at the Table

West 6th Street in Koreatown runs through one of the most densely concentrated restaurant corridors in Los Angeles, a stretch where the competition for repeat Korean-American diners is as demanding as any Michelin-watched block in the city. The neighborhood has long operated on its own hierarchy, one largely invisible to guides that measure prestige by tasting menus and white tablecloths. Daedo Sikdang sits near the leading of that local hierarchy, with two consecutive placements on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America rankings — #373 in 2024 and #360 in 2025 — as the clearest external signal of where it stands in a crowded field.

The OAD Casual list, for those unfamiliar, aggregates votes from a network of experienced diners rather than anonymous inspectors. Consistent upward movement on it, even modest, reflects sustained quality across repeat visits rather than a single exceptional night. Daedo's trajectory follows that pattern: the kitchen under Chef Sangkyun Han has held its position and improved it, which in this neighborhood means it is out-executing a large number of credible competitors year after year.

The Drink Program in a Beef-Forward Room

Korean steakhouse dining in Los Angeles has, for most of its history, operated with a drinks menu built around soju, beer, and occasionally makgeolli. The format is practical: charcoal or gas grills embedded in tables, clouds of smoke, cuts arriving raw to be cooked by diners over an open flame. The pairing logic has always been about refresh and cut rather than complementary flavors, and soju does that job efficiently.

What has shifted in the upper tier of Koreatown dining is a quiet expansion of that logic. Wine has entered Korean steakhouses not as an affectation but as a functional response to the meat on the table. Bold, structured reds , the kind of Cabernet Sauvignon and Malbec that perform well against fat-marbled beef , translate directly to galbi and chadolbaegi without requiring a sommelier to explain why. The grill smoke adds a layer of char that tends to amplify rather than fight tannic structure, which means the wine pairings that work in an American chophouse frequently work at a Korean grill table too.

Where an ambitious Koreatown room can distinguish itself is in how deliberately it approaches that program. At the tier Daedo occupies , recognized by peer-network voters as a standout casual destination, open until midnight on Fridays and Saturdays for a crowd that dines late by any American standard , the drinks list carries real weight in the overall experience. Diners who arrive knowing that Korean beef formats are forgiving partners for structured reds will find the pairing logic here rewarding. Those accustomed to defaulting to soju towers will find that option fully available; the culture of the room accommodates both.

For comparison, the fine-dining tier in Los Angeles , Providence, Kato, Somni, Hayato , tends to build wine programs around extremely specific pairing philosophies. The casual Korean steakhouse format operates differently: the expectation is that you're eating at volume and over time, which changes how a drinks program needs to be constructed. Breadth matters more than depth; flexibility matters more than curation. That is a distinct skill set, and the leading rooms in Koreatown have started to exercise it seriously.

The Grilling Tradition and What Separates Good from Great

Korean table-grilled beef is one of the few dining formats in which the diner becomes an active participant in cooking. The degree of char, the timing of the cut, the ratio of meat to ssam wrap , these are variables the diner controls, and a kitchen's job is to deliver ingredients prepared with enough precision that the outcome at the table is consistent regardless of who is grilling. That means sourcing, butchering, and marinade (where applicable) matter far more in this format than in a conventional sit-down context where execution is entirely in the kitchen's hands.

The OAD peer network recognizes this. When experienced diners consistently vote a Koreatown grill room into the top 400 casual restaurants in North America , placing it in the same ranked list as rooms from across a continent , they are signaling that the sourcing and preparation standards have crossed a threshold that most neighborhood operations do not reach. For context, Los Angeles has dozens of Korean barbecue operations; the list that includes Daedo Sikdang is not long.

The tradition Daedo works within is ancient by the standards of American restaurant history, with galbi and bulgogi preparations rooted in centuries of Korean culinary development. What the current generation of Koreatown restaurants has added is an American-market sensitivity to sourcing transparency and ingredient quality, layered onto a format that was already technically demanding. Chef Sangkyun Han's kitchen represents that convergence: Korean grilling tradition with the sourcing rigor that an OAD-recognized room in Los Angeles must sustain to hold its position.

Placement in the Los Angeles Dining Picture

Los Angeles has absorbed Korean cuisine more fully than almost any other American city, to the point where Koreatown functions less as an ethnic enclave and more as a legitimate culinary district with its own internal standards. Diners who approach it through the lens of Osteria Mozza or the city's Michelin-tracked rooms will find a different set of reference points operating here , not lesser ones, but different. The metric is communal abundance, late hours, and the quality of the beef rather than the refinement of the plating.

Nationally, the Korean steakhouse tradition competes in a peer set that includes destinations far beyond Los Angeles. Rooms like Atomix in New York City, which operates at the fine-dining end of Korean cuisine, or reference-point American restaurants like Le Bernardin, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, and Alinea in Chicago, represent the formal end of the spectrum. Daedo operates in a different register entirely , high-conviction casual, with repeat-visit credentials and late-night hours that serve a community that eats on its own schedule.

For readers building a broader Los Angeles itinerary, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, along with guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the city. For steakhouse comparisons at the higher price tier, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and The French Laundry in Napa represent the wine-country end of Northern California's beef-and-wine tradition. Emeril's in New Orleans and 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong sit at different points on the global scale of what a recognized casual or premium room looks like. Daedo holds its own in that company at its price point.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 4001 W 6th St, Los Angeles, CA 90020
  • Hours: Monday–Thursday 5–11 pm; Friday 5 pm–12 am; Saturday 11 am–12 am; Sunday 4–11 pm
  • Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #360 (2025); #373 (2024)
  • Google Rating: 4.3 from 356 reviews
  • Chef: Sangkyun Han
  • Cuisine: Korean Steakhouse
  • Booking: Contact details not listed; walk-in availability varies , Friday and Saturday late hours are busy
Signature Dishes
Daedo CutKkakdooki Fried RiceDaedo Bulgogi
Frequently asked questions

Budget Reality Check

A quick peer snapshot; use it as orientation, not a full ranking.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Modern
  • Trendy
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Group Dining
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityLarge
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Sleek modern interior with light wood tables, glistening metal grills, and efficient ventilation to prevent smoke odor; simple aesthetic with a high-end, focused atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
Daedo CutKkakdooki Fried RiceDaedo Bulgogi