

At Palate in Busan, Chef Kim Jae-hoon channels contemporary French technique through coastal Korean terroir, delivering a progressive tasting menu, refined service, and a sommelier-led wine program in a serene, design-forward space.

A French Table on the Edge of Haeundae
Dalmaji-gil, the curved hillside road that arcs above Haeundae beach, is known more for pine trees and sea views than for serious dining. Arriving at Palate in the early evening, the setting carries the particular quiet of a neighbourhood that was never designed around restaurants — which makes the presence of a Michelin-starred contemporary French kitchen here feel deliberate rather than accidental. Busan's fine-dining scene has historically anchored itself downtown or along the waterfront; a destination restaurant on this stretch of Haeundae-gu says something about the direction the city's upper dining tier is moving.
What Busan's Dining Scene Asks of a Place Like This
Busan holds its food traditions carefully. The city's culinary identity runs through dwaeji-gukbap (pork and rice soup), naengmyeon cold noodles at places like 100.1.Pyeongnaeng, and a seafood culture that tracks the catch rather than the calendar. In that context, a contemporary French operation is not filling an obvious gap so much as arguing for a different kind of table altogether — one where the reference points are Parisian technique, personal culinary experience across multiple countries, and the ongoing ambition to keep revising the menu's premise. The La Liste ranking tells part of that story in numbers: 77 points in 2025, rising to 79 in 2026, a trajectory that reflects the kind of incremental sharpening that distinguishes restaurants that are building toward something from those that have settled into a formula.
Among Busan's award-recognised dining options, Palate occupies a mid-range price tier (₩₩) that sits below the ₩₩₩ bracket of a place like Mori and considerably below the ₩₩₩₩ positioning of Born and Bred. For the calibre of kitchen , Michelin one star since 2024 , that price point represents an access argument the city's other starred options don't always make.
The Case for Occasion Dining Here
Contemporary French restaurants in Korean cities have tended to cluster in Seoul, where the concentration of international visitors, corporate entertainment budgets, and food media attention creates conditions favourable to that format. Jungsik in Seoul and Mingles operate within a capital-city fine-dining ecosystem that has its own self-reinforcing logic. In Busan, a restaurant running the same format works against a different set of conditions: a local dining culture that skews toward the communal and the traditional, a tourist base that comes primarily for beaches and seafood, and a fine-dining peer group that remains smaller and less visible internationally.
That tension , between the ambition of the kitchen and the conservatism of the surrounding dining environment , is part of what makes Palate a considered choice for milestone meals. Occasions that call for a tasting-format dinner rather than a shared feast, where the conversation can carry without the distraction of a busy communal floor, and where the kitchen's direction provides something to discuss across courses, tend to land differently here than at a more predictable setting. Chef Kim Jae-hoon's approach , described in the La Liste citation as free-spirited and adventurous, drawing on culinary diversity experienced across his career , produces a menu that shifts rather than repeats, which means return visits for anniversaries or recurring celebrations are unlikely to retrace the same ground.
For comparison, Seoul's contemporary Korean tasting-format options , Gaon, Kwon Sook Soo , anchor their occasion-dining proposition in heritage and formality. Palate's proposition is different: the occasion is framed through the progressive rather than the ceremonial, which suits a particular kind of celebrant , one who wants the meal itself to be the discovery rather than the backdrop.
How Palate Fits Into Busan's Wider Restaurant Map
Busan's restaurant scene in the Haeundae area has grown more layered in recent years. Chef Gon and Le dorer represent other directions within the city's higher-end dining tier, and the diversity of formats , from Japanese omakase to European bistro , reflects a dining public that has broadened its frame of reference considerably. Palate's French contemporary positioning sits within that broader shift without duplicating any of its neighbours' approaches.
Internationally, the ₩₩ contemporary tasting format has comparators in cities where the category has matured: Alo in Toronto and César in New York City both operate in the contemporary European register at accessible-luxury price points. What distinguishes Palate within that loose international peer set is the specific tension of running that format in a Korean provincial city , the kitchen is making arguments that its immediate environment doesn't automatically support, which is the kind of creative pressure that tends to produce interesting food.
For those interested in exploring how Korean culinary traditions interact with French technique across different registers, the route from Busan to Seoul via Jungsik or the temple cuisine at Baegyangsa Temple in Jangseong-gun maps the range of what the peninsula's kitchens are doing at the moment. Palate occupies one specific node in that range: the French-trained, internationally informed contemporary kitchen that has chosen to plant itself in Busan rather than the capital.
Planning a Dinner at Palate
The restaurant operates a lunch and dinner service Wednesday through Sunday, with Monday and Tuesday closed. Dinner runs from 6 PM to 10 PM; lunch, available Thursday through Sunday, runs from 12 PM to 3 PM. Wednesday dinner-only service makes mid-week booking the narrowest window. For special occasions, the dinner format on a Friday or Saturday gives the full experience without the compressed timing of a mid-week Wednesday slot. Given the Michelin recognition and the modest Google review count of 4.5 across 37 reviews , a low volume that reflects the restaurant's selective capacity rather than limited reputation , advance booking is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. The address on Dalmaji-gil 65beon-gil places the restaurant on the hillside road above Haeundae, accessible by car or taxi from the Haeundae metro area. Those building a longer Busan stay around the meal should consult our full Busan hotels guide, our full Busan bars guide, and our full Busan experiences guide for surrounding context. Our full Busan restaurants guide and our full Busan wineries guide round out the picture for those spending multiple days in the city.
FAQs
- What's the must-try dish at Palate?
- Palate's menu is designed to evolve rather than anchor itself to fixed signatures , the La Liste citation describes the kitchen's approach as free-spirited and adventurous, drawing on the culinary diversity in Chef Kim Jae-hoon's background. Because the menu shifts as the restaurant's concept develops, specific dish recommendations from a previous visit may not apply to your booking. The reliable constant is the French contemporary framework: expect technique-driven courses where the sourcing and composition reflect the kitchen's ongoing experiments rather than a set piece. For current menu details, contacting the restaurant directly ahead of your visit is the most reliable approach. The Michelin one-star recognition (2024) and the La Liste score of 79 points (2026) confirm that the kitchen's output is consistent at a high level regardless of the specific dishes on any given menu. See also: Chef Gon, Le dorer, and The Flying Hog in Seogwipo for other contemporary options across the southern Korean dining circuit.
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge