Hyunwoo Cho

Hyunwoo Cho

With over 10 years of experience in the Hallyu industry, Hyunwoo has dedicated his career to connecting Korean culture with the world. As the founder of Daebak, he works closely with Korean brands and stays ahead of the latest trends to deliver an authentic taste of Korea to fans globally.

Korean tornado potato hoeorigamja spiral cut deep fried street food sprinkled with seasoning

Tornado Potato: Korean Street Food Masterpiece

Hyunwoo Cho

Table of Contents

When most people think of Korean street food, they picture tteokbokki carts, hotteok pancakes, or fish-shaped bungeoppang. There is one item, though, that needs no translation and converts skeptics on the first bite: the tornado potato. A whole potato sliced into one continuous spiral, threaded onto a long skewer, deep fried until golden, and dusted in cheese, honey butter, or chili powder. The result looks like a fried art project and tastes like the love child of a French fry and a potato chip.

Korean tornado potato spiral cut on a stick at a Seoul street stall
Source: Travelvui

Where it started

Tornado potato, known in Korean as hoeori gamja (회오리감자, literally "swirl potato"), first showed up in Korean street markets around 2005 to 2007. Myeongdong vendors get credit for making it a tourist staple, though similar spiral potato snacks now appear at night markets across Asia. The signature look comes from a hand-cranked spiral slicer that turns a whole potato into one long ribbon while the skewer holds it in place.

Korean tornado potato cooking on a skewer at a street vendor stall in Seoul
Source: Mobile Food News

How it is made

The technique looks simple but the execution matters. Vendors cut the potato into a continuous spiral so thin it almost falls apart, stretch it along a 30 cm bamboo skewer, and drop the whole thing into hot oil for two to three minutes. The spiral shape gives every layer maximum crispness and creates the audible crunch that makes tornado potatoes such a social media favorite. After frying, the potato gets dusted in flavor powders. Cheese, honey butter, sour cream and onion, barbecue, hot chili, and corn are the most common. Some Myeongdong stalls add a Vienna sausage threaded through the skewer's center for a sweet salty bite.

Myeongdong night market street food spread featuring tornado potato among Korean snacks
Source: Daniel Food Diary

Where to find one

Tornado potato is everywhere tourists go in Seoul. Myeongdong is the obvious starting point, but you will also find them at Hongdae's weekend market, Namdaemun, Insadong, Gwangjang Market, and most festival food zones. A standard skewer runs 4,000 to 5,000 won (roughly 3 to 4 USD), with sausage versions a little more. They are best eaten standing right next to the stall while the oil is still bubbling on the surface. Tornado potato cools down fast, and the texture suffers within ten minutes.

Seoul street food scene with vendors selling tornado potato and other Korean snacks
Source: Migrationology

Why it travels so well

The reason tornado potato has spread from Seoul to Bangkok, Manila, and Singapore is its almost universal appeal. The base ingredient is the potato, which crosses every cultural line. The seasoning powders are familiar (cheese and barbecue both translate). The format is shareable, photogenic, and inexpensive. K-pop fans posting Myeongdong food crawls on Instagram and YouTube made the tornado potato a recognizable Korean export, and copycat stalls quickly opened in night markets across Southeast Asia. The Korean original still wins on technique. The spiral is tighter, the oil is fresher, and the seasoning powders hit harder. If you are in Seoul, treat one tornado potato as required viewing.

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