If you grew up with umma’s side dishes on the counter, you already know the test. The moment the banchan lands, the kitchen has told you everything — whether the kongnamul was dressed with sesame oil that morning, whether the kimchi was fermented in-house, whether an ajumma in the back actually cooks. Santa Clara’s El Camino Real stretch between Wolfe and Lincoln is the informal Koreatown, with a tighter cluster on Kiely Blvd and a second scene across the border in Sunnyvale. These are the rooms that pass the test.
1. Jang Su Jang (Santa Clara) — The Michelin Guide benchmark, recommended for multiple years and co-signed by Zagat.
The granite tables with built-in grills are the theater; the bottomless, clearly house-made banchan is the substance.
Dinner lands around $70+ per person. 3561 El Camino Real #10. Umma-approved, full stop.
2. Shu’s Korean Restaurant (Santa Clara) — Locally nicknamed 시골대가집, “countryside grand house,” and the banchan lives up to it. Yelp reviewers describe a spread “so generous and diverse… it comes in a big box for delivery.” Order the galbitang — fall-off-the-bone short rib, broth with real depth. 3258 El Camino Real, closed Mondays.
3. Chungdam (Santa Clara) — Nine banchan dishes, rotated depending on which chef is on the line. Pollack roe, lotus root, fish cakes, proper kimchi — it reads like a tasting menu of side dishes.
KQED calls it “modern and sophisticated,” a room built for celebrations.
3180 El Camino Real; reservations wise on weekends…