best asian restaurant?

<p>I've been suggested Taste of Thai or the Noodle House.
How's that Korean place (assuming there's only 1)?</p>

<p>No buffets :)</p>

<p>Talk to me.</p>

<p>Tast of Tai is good. I would recommend Four Seasons for Korean and Plum Tree for Japanese.</p>

<p>the Noodle House is goooood.</p>

<p>If you want Korean, Koko is the better choice. And this is coming from a Korean.</p>

<p>Mmm yeah the Plum tree has some amazing sushi.</p>

<p>Plum tree is also good for saki bombing</p>

<p>Mmm...</p>

<p>Thanks all.</p>

<p>I went to eat at Koko on my visit there and it was pretty good!
hahha.. but it seemed ONLY asians ate there XD</p>

<p>are these yummy asian restaurants expensive? and is there an asian supermarket for TRUE asians to make their own food? hahah. jay kay. thanks!</p>

<p>tun. im korean. what kinda food is good there. you can try to write it out in english if you don't have the korea chars. on your keyboard.</p>

<p>i still need to try koko!</p>

<p>Taste of Thai and Thai Cuisine are both ammmmazing
Plum Tree is def good</p>

<p>fwoosh- Its probably a good sign that lots of asian people eat at that place. My parents always told me you can tell how authentic the food is somewhere by the people eating there. For example....if you went to go to a Chinese restaurant, and there are a lot of people eating there who are Chinese (or from that culture), then you know it's authentic and not just americanized food. :D</p>

<p>Password.. i think most of them are pretty averagely priced as far as asian restaurants go? The last time I ate at the plum tree I paid like 13 bucks for a set of (delicious) sushi rolls. My memory sucks, so the price probably is slightly different, and it definitely might fluctuate depending on what you order, but on the whole its not too too pricey. You could definitely find cheaper places to eat, but if you're looking for a nicer than a carryout box of chinese dinner, these places are fantastic.</p>

<p>I have Korean on my keyboard but I'm too lazy to type them all out, so I'll do it in konglish. ;)</p>

<p>Well, I haven't tried nearly all of the menu, but the only stuff I don't like there is the dwenjang jigae and jajangmyun. Things that I like, or my friends have told me they like:
dolsot bibimbap
japchae
soondubu jigae
kimchi jigae
galbi tang
budae jigae
pajun
bulgogi
duk mandoo gook</p>

<p>they have more stuff but I can't remember it off the top of my head. If you're from any of the big K-towns in America, the food is comparable to your average restaurant there.</p>

<p>Miyake, anyone? Great Japanese food!</p>

<p>Miyake is sort of Americanized. I prefer to travel an hour north for a great hibachi (sp?) grill, a place called Ichiban. </p>

<p>Since you're from Montgomery county, MD, maybe you'll sympathize in the fact that I have yet to find chinese food as cheap and as high-quality as A&J's on the Rockville Pike. That place would thrive beyond belief in Ithaca</p>

<p>wow tun they do have everything haha. im near NYC so i go to really good korean restaurants. is the place like have really nice interiors? haha cause when i went to purdue. there was a korean place nearby and we were about to eat there. but it was so small, dirty, and like we were like hell no.</p>

<p>Are you from Montgomery County, gomestar? A&J is indeed sorely missed up here!</p>

<p>I was there this summer, splitting my time between working on Key West ave and K-Street downtown. I lived right near the twinbrook metro line. I miss it, killing time at the Rio was great over the summer.</p>

<p>I'm from around NYC also so my comparison was based on restaurants in Flushing. The interior is nothing special. They have this hangul wallpaper all over the place and the tables and chairs are nothing special. They also give you basically no banchan (4 little dishes). But for being in a city that's 250 miles away from any large non-student Korean population, it's decent.</p>