Today in Korea: Karrot Marketplace — Buy a Lamp, Meet a Stranger, Eat Fries Together

In South Korea, the hyper-local app Karrot Marketplace (당근마켓) isn’t just for selling used items anymore — it’s quietly becoming a social experiment. The app connects neighbors who live nearby, encouraging face-to-face meetups for simple trades. But lately, something funny has been happening after these exchanges.

A growing trend on Karrot and social media shows neighbors casually suggesting, “Want to grab fries?” after completing a deal. Not coffee. Not a full meal. Just french fries. It’s low-pressure, inexpensive, and universally loved. A sofa pickup turns into a five-minute fry break. A book sale becomes a sidewalk snack date. Fries have somehow become the unofficial friendship starter of Korean neighborhoods.

Fries with strangers
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Easy to Learn Korean 742-743 Fried chicken

Easy to Learn Korean 742 and 743 – Fried Chicken

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I found this new snack that I like called Fried Chicken Drumsticks at the local supermarket in Seoul this week.

Charcoal Fire Crackers

Hot Charcoal-Fire Barbecue – 핫숯불바베큐 (hat-sutbul-babekyu)

Chicken 1

Fried Chicken – 닭 튀김 (dak twigim) or 후라이드 치킨 (literally the English words ‘fried chicken’-huraideu chikin)

They taste like fried-chicken flavored crackers and remind me of Pepperridge Farm’s Goldfish crackers, if you know those. The crackers are wrapped in aluminum foil inside of a small red box that’s strikingly similar to a takeout chicken box. It only costs 900Won (less than $1USD) and is actually worth trying. Real Korean-style Fried Chicken is one of my favorite foods and this definitely reminds me of that.

There are several ways to say chicken in Korean:
1.닭 – chicken
2.닭고기 – chicken meat
3.치킨 – literally the English word ‘chicken’

All three of these can be used for chicken meat. Here, 닭다리 (dak-dari) means ‘chicken leg, or chicken drumstick.

742-Fried-chicken743- Fried Chicken 2

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