Head-to-Head · Los Angeles
Somni vs Kang Ho Dong Baekjeong
Two Los Angeles tables that share a city and nothing else: Somni's 14-seat three-star counter against Koreatown's roaring charcoal grill. Book by budget and mood.
The Verdict
These two Los Angeles tables share a city and nothing else. Somni is Aitor Zabala's fourteen-seat counter in West Hollywood, promoted to three Michelin stars in the 2025 California guide, where a run of around thirty-two precise bites lands at roughly 645 dollars with a non-alcoholic pairing. Kang Ho Dong Baekjeong is the Koreatown grill house that opened in 2014 as the US flagship of comedian Kang Ho Dong's Seoul chain, where a dry-aged beef combo built on galbi and brisket runs about 95 dollars and the table cooks its own dinner. One is a hushed pilgrimage; the other is a loud, joyful night out.
The split is counter versus grill. Somni seats fourteen for a long, conceptual tasting, intimate and intense, with Zabala plating in front of you after years under Jose Andres and at elBulli. Baekjeong packs banquettes around live charcoal grills, with marinated short rib, brisket and pork belly seared tableside and banchan covering every inch of cloth. See both in the Los Angeles dining guide.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Somni | Baekjeong |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 10 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 9 / 10 | 6 / 10 |
| Value | 6 / 10 | 7 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A once-in-a-lifetime tasting | SomniThe fourteen-seat counter and Zabala's three-star cooking make for the more singular evening in the city. |
| A group night out with friends | BaekjeongGrilling and sharing around a charcoal table is built for a table of six in a way a tasting counter never is. |
| A milestone or anniversary | SomniA three-star tasting reads as the bigger occasion, and the counter is set up for two to mark a date. |
| Showing a visitor real LA | BaekjeongKoreatown Korean BBQ is a more quintessential Los Angeles night than any fine-dining room. |
| Solo dining | SomniA counter points one diner at the kitchen; a grill table needs at least two hands to work the meat. |
Price Comparison
The gap is wide. Somni runs about 645 dollars per person with its non-alcoholic pairing, and wine flights climb well beyond that, putting it at the very top of LA pricing. Baekjeong's dry-aged beef combo is around 95 dollars and feeds two to share, so a full dinner with soju and stews lands near 80 to 110 dollars a head. Weigh them against the best Spanish restaurants worldwide and Korean restaurants worldwide.
How to Book
Somni is the harder table by a distance. Its fourteen seats release on Resy at the top of each month and the prime evenings clear in minutes, so set an alarm and watch for cancellations near the date. Read the Somni review in full before you commit.
Baekjeong takes reservations and walk-ins, but waits run to two hours on weekend nights at 3429 West 8th Street, so book ahead or arrive early. Read the Baekjeong review first. For occasion fit, weigh both against the best LA tables for a birthday dinner and to impress clients. For more match-ups see Somni vs Providence and Spago vs Providence, and browse the compare index.