Seminole Heights Korean restaurant Gangchu reopens under new ownership this weekend

Jeanie and Josh Kang have owned and operated Brandon’s Bom Oriental Market for about four years.

click to enlarge Gangchu, at 6618 N Nebraska Ave. in Tampa, Florida on Aug. 2, 2024. - Photo by Ray Roa
Photo by Ray Roa
Gangchu, at 6618 N Nebraska Ave. in Tampa, Florida on Aug. 2, 2024.
Four months after going on the market, Gangchu has new owners who’ll reopen the Seminole Heights restaurant on Saturday.

“We signed about two weeks ago,” Josh Kang told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay last Friday, about the deal that gives him and his wife Jeanie control of the building and business.

The couple has owned and operated Brandon’s Bom Oriental Market for about four years. Josh also runs five franchise locations of Charleys Cheesesteaks between the Bay area, Georgia and Ohio. Jeanie is a lawyer by trade, and a great cook, too. The couple wanted to run an independent Korean food restaurant before opening any of the Charleys locations.

“We love to have fun, so this concept is a really perfect fit for us,” Josh added about the decision to move in.

He’s excited to use his management skills, his wife’s food knowledge, and more help from Jeanie’s brother Sam who is also a great cook, to serve customers who’re already used to having Korean food at 6618 N Nebraska Ave.

Josh said that for now, Gangchu 2.0 will run a smaller menu than the previous iteration.

He mentioned a new Yangnyeom chicken wings with four sauces (original, soy garlic, sweet and spicy, and hot with Thai chili pepper) is on that menu ($14-$19), along with beef bulgogi ($18), tteokbokki ($13) and jaeyook ($18).
click to enlarge Gangchu's new Yangnyeom chicken wings come with a choice of four sauces (original, soy garlic, sweet and spicy, and hot with Thai chili pepper). - PHoto by Ray Roa
PHoto by Ray Roa
Gangchu's new Yangnyeom chicken wings come with a choice of four sauces (original, soy garlic, sweet and spicy, and hot with Thai chili pepper).
A newly posted takeout menu also has kimchi fried rice ($17) and pancake ($14), boneless chicken ($12-$17), snack platters and fries ($6-$7), beef dumplings ($9) and even Korean ramen ($6).

“But as soon as we settle in the kitchen, we will keep developing more dishes,” he explained, added that he and Jeanie will also bring in a more expansive soup menu.

The bar will operate as well, and the N/A beverage list includes fruit-flavored sodas (calamansi, watermelon, mango, melon, plum)

Mostly everything on the menu can be sourced through distributors who service Bom Market, too.

Party people will be happy to know that Gangchu’s karaoke room will also stay the same.

Gangchu has its grand reopening Saturday, Aug. 10 at noon. After that, it will be closed open noon-11 p.m. Sunday and Tuesday-Thursday, and noon-midnight Friday-Saturday. The restaurant will be closed on Mondays.

Josh says Gangchu is hiring servers, but prefers to hire slowly as the kitchen grows.

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UPDATED
: 08/08/24 7:25 p.m. Updated to make clear that the Kangs own the building and business.

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Read his 2016 intro letter and disclosures from 2022 and 2021. Ray Roa started freelancing for Creative Loafing Tampa in January 2011 and was hired as music editor in August 2016. He became Editor-In-Chief in August 2019. Past work can be seen at Suburban Apologist, Tampa Bay Times, Consequence of Sound and The...
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