Yummy Place to Open Chamblee Outpost

The fried chicken joint's third location is expected to open soon.
Yummy Place to Open third Location in Chamblee
Photo: Official

Korean chicken joint Yummy Place is gearing up to open its third location in Chamblee, at 5070 Peachtree Boulevard. The restaurant already has two locations in Duluth and Edgewood.

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Yummy Place has been around since 2019, and specializes in Korean fried chicken and street food, serving up just about every style of chicken you could think of — from popcorn chicken and wings to “cheese chicken” (pieces of chicken smothered in cheese, of course) and a whole fried bird.

But the restaurant doesn’t stop at Korean dishes. The fried chicken spot also offers typical American diner classics, like Philly cheesesteaks, burgers, and even a plate of spaghetti with meat sauce.

According to owner Sunny Kim, the new Yummy Place outpost is going to open as soon as they’re finished the permitting process. “It will be a family-friendly place for some fast-casual, authentic Korean flavors,” says Kim, whose wife and daughters painted the mural at the new spot.

Expect fried, crispy chicken (a whole one, if you can handle it), authentic Korean dishes, and for those of you who simply can’t stray beyond what you know, cheeseburgers.

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.
Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.
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