
Seoulside Wings, the Houston food truck turned restaurant, has quietly slid into a new Jersey Village storefront this week, bringing Korean-style wings, kimchi fries and Korean corn dogs to the Northwest Freeway strip. A grand opening is set for Saturday, with giveaways and midday fanfare on the schedule. For longtime regulars, the move marks Seoulside's first brick-and-mortar stop after years spent working the catering and food truck circuit.
The restaurant's site lists the new address as 17452 Northwest Fwy in Jersey Village and notes a soft-opening period in mid-February leading up to the Saturday celebration, according to the Seoulside Wings website. The page also directs customers to the brand's Conservatory Galleria stall and the truck schedule for catering and events.
What To Order
Taking over the former Ugly Donuts & Corn Dogs space, the Jersey Village shop is in soft-opening mode and plans a noon grand opening on Saturday, as reported by Community Impact. The menu leans hard into double-fried wings, tossed in flavors such as soy garlic, lemon pepper, garlic parmesan, buffalo, hot lemon pepper, honey butter, spicy rice-cake and classic Korean barbecue. Rounding things out are bulgogi rice bowls, kimchi fries and the shop's Korean corn dogs.
From Truck To Counter
Owner Jane Lim launched Seoulside as a food truck in 2019 in Korea Town's Spring Branch neighborhood, and she told Community Impact, "We actually started right before the pandemic, and we served food consistently. That's really how we built our first following." Lim said the team will keep the truck on the road for catering while using the storefront to expand the menu.
Where To Find Them Next
If you miss the opening-day festivities, Seoulside is still slinging wings at its stall inside the Conservatory Galleria food hall and running the truck for off-site events. Hours and ordering info are listed on local platforms such as ToastTab. Customers can also call (713) 909-0112 for catering or event bookings.
For Jersey Village and nearby neighborhoods, the new storefront adds a quick Korean comfort-food option to the US-290 strip and gives fans another chance to chase flavors they might have only caught at pop-ups. Expect some lines in the early days as locals work through the roster of wings and corn dogs that helped build Seoulside's following in the first place.









