There is a moment — and if you have ever sat around a live-fire grill set into the center of a restaurant table, you know exactly the one I mean — when the sizzle of marinated short ribs hitting hot cast iron makes every person at the table go quiet. That moment happens nightly at Honey Pig Korean BBQ on Josey Lane in Carrollton, tucked into a bustling shopping center in the heart of the city’s vibrant Korean dining corridor, and it never gets old.
Carrollton has quietly built one of the most impressive Korean food destinations in the entire Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, and Honey Pig sits comfortably near the top of that conversation. The restaurant is part of a well-regarded Korean chain that has earned devoted followings in cities like Los Angeles and Annandale, Virginia, but the Carrollton location feels genuinely local — lively, unpretentious, and packed with regulars who clearly know what they are doing when they arrive.
The setup is exactly what Korean BBQ should be: each table has a ventilated charcoal or gas grill built right into the surface, and servers manage the actual cooking for you, tending the meat with practiced confidence while you focus on the equally impressive spread of banchan — those small complimentary side dishes that arrive before you have even ordered your first round. Expect pickled kimchi, seasoned spinach, crispy fish cake, cold bean sprouts, and a rotating cast of seasonal accompaniments that alone justify the trip.
Now, the meat. The galbi — beef short ribs marinated in a subtly sweet soy-based sauce — is the anchor of any visit and deserves to be your first order. Follow it with the spicy pork belly and a round of the brisket, which the servers slice into manageable bites and wrap for you in crisp lettuce leaves with a dab of fermented soybean paste. The combination of textures and flavors is genuinely transporting.
What makes Honey Pig particularly special for a night out is the energy of the room. The dining space is open and buzzing, the lighting warm, and the smell of grilling meat creates an atmosphere that feels more like a celebration than a Tuesday dinner. It is the kind of place where a table of two can linger for two hours and a group of eight barely notices how quickly the evening disappears.
Parking is plentiful in the lot, and the restaurant tends to fill up on weekend evenings, so arriving early or putting your name in ahead of time is wise. Bring a group if you can — Korean BBQ rewards the communal table — and come with an appetite. Honey Pig does not do anything halfway, and neither should you.