Over a decade ago, former Westword food editor Mark Antonation began his food-writing career by eating his way up Federal Boulevard. Now, we’re turning our attention to another vibrant culinary corridor.
The four-plus-mile stretch of Havana Street between Dartmouth and Sixth Avenue in Aurora is home to the most diverse array of international cuisine available in the metro area. From restaurants and markets to take-and-go shops and stands, food lovers of nearly any ethnicity or interest can find a place that will remind them of home or open new culinary doors. In Eat Up Havana, Antony Bruno will visit them all, one by one, week by week.
Previous stops:
- Old Town Hot Pot
- Leezakaya
- Chutney Indian Cuisine
- El Tequileno
- Milkroll
- Shin Myung Gwan Korean BBQ
- Watan Restaurant & Bakery
- Las Fajitas
- Mr. Tang
- Nana’s Dim Sum & Dumplings
- Yemen Grill
- Tofu House
- Sushi Katsu
- Coco Loco
- Ali Restaurant & Bakery
- Thank Sool Pocha
- Taqueria Corona
- Hanyang Wang Jokbal
- Coffee Story
- Tofu Story
- Havana Street Night Markets
- Seoul BBQ & Hot Pot (the Hot Pot)
- Seoul BBQ & Hot Pot (the BBQ)
- Pho 75
- Yong Gung
- Chopsticks A GoGo
- Angry Chicken
- L Cafe & Food Court
Next up… Gangnam GT Lounge & Karaoke
There are plenty of places to get dinner and a show in Denver. But only a few where you are the show.
One of these is Gangnam GT Lounge & Karaoke — which, as the name makes obvious, is a karaoke lounge focused on allowing all who enter to belt out their inner Backstreet Boys regardless of any ability to carry a tune.
Of the several karaoke establishments that line Havana Street in Aurora, the robust food program sets Gangnam GT Lounge & Karaoke apart. Sure, some of the others have eating options, but they’re rather limited in scope and the menus are positioned mostly to provide accompaniments to the booze needed to lube up those untrained vocal cords. Gangnam GT, meanwhile, has a roster several pages long, with a hard skew towards the Korean fare found in spades along this southern strip of Havana.




