The Internet’s Only Website
Dedicated Entirely
to Kimchi
KimchiGuide started with one question a Korean friend asked over dinner. It grew into the most accurate, most tested, and most honestly written kimchi resource on the internet — recipes, fermentation science, health research, and Korean food culture. All in one place.
“No website existed that was dedicated entirely to kimchi. Every resource was either one page on a Korean food blog or a 400-word recipe with no context. Kimchi deserved more than that — 5,000 years of Korean culinary history, an entire fermentation science, a dozen different varieties, and a growing body of clinical research. That’s what this site is.”
How KimchiGuide Came to Exist
It started with a 20-minute answer to a simple question. A Korean friend asked Ji-Young: “What kimchi do I use for jjigae?” Ji-Young gave her a thorough explanation — kimchi age, fermentation stage, why the sourness matters, why the fat content of the pork matters more than most recipes acknowledge. Her friend listened, then said: “You should write this down.”
Ji-Young looked for a website that already covered kimchi at this level. There wasn’t one. So she built it.
What KimchiGuide Stands For
Why KimchiGuide Is Not Like Other Food Sites
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We only cover kimchi — and we cover it completelyMost websites publish one kimchi recipe and move on. KimchiGuide covers baechu-kimchi, kkakdugi, oi sobagi, baek kimchi, vegan variations, fusion applications, health research, fermentation science, and Korean culinary history — all on one site, all at depth.
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We explain the “why” — not just the “what”Why iodized salt kills fermentation. Why aged kimchi works better for jjigae. Why tuna oil should never be drained. Why gochugaru and cayenne are not substitutable. The knowledge behind the technique — because understanding is more useful than instruction.
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Health content is written and reviewed by medical professionalsDr. Sarah Mitchell RD PhD writes all health content from clinical and research expertise. Dr. James Cho MD FACG independently reviews every article before it publishes. No health claim survives without a cited human clinical trial.
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We document our failures — not just our successesThe Test Kitchen Notes section records what went wrong, why it went wrong, and what it taught us. The iodized salt failure. The cayenne-instead-of-gochugaru batch. The over-fermented jjigae. Failures teach more than successes — so we publish them.
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Korean-language primary sourcesOur founder is a native Korean speaker who reads primary Korean fermentation science texts, regional kimchi variation records, and historical culinary manuscripts — knowledge that has never been translated into English and exists nowhere else in the English-language kimchi space.
Ji-Young Park — The Person Behind KimchiGuide
Ji-Young grew up in Busan in a household where kimchi was not an ingredient — it was a rhythm. Her grandmother made kimchi twice a year using the traditional jangdok method, and Ji-Young began helping at age 8. By 16, she was making independent batches. By 20, she was testing variables. By 34, she had built the internet’s only kimchi-dedicated website.
Moving to London in 2012 transformed Ji-Young’s relationship with kimchi from cultural habit to deep technical understanding. Sourcing alternatives, adapting recipes for Western kitchens, and explaining Korean techniques to non-Korean cooks forced her to understand kimchi at an ingredient and biochemical level she never needed in Korea.
Full Bio & Experience →The People Who Make KimchiGuide Accurate
Ji-Young writes everything you’d ask a Korean home cook. Dr. Sarah answers everything you’d ask a clinical dietitian. Dr. James checks everything you’d need a gastroenterologist to verify.
Former Stanford Clinical Dietitian
UCSF Medical Center
Four Content Areas — One Obsession
KimchiGuide on Social Media
Ji-Young shares recipe development, fermentation experiments, and Korean food culture across five platforms — all content created personally, no agency.
Common Questions About KimchiGuide
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Who founded KimchiGuide?KimchiGuide was founded in 2024 by Ji-Young Park (박지영), a Korean home cook born and raised in Busan, South Korea. Ji-Young has over 15 years of kimchi-making experience and was trained in traditional fermentation by her grandmother. She is based in London, UK.
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Is KimchiGuide’s health content medically reviewed?Yes. All health and nutrition content is written by Dr. Sarah Mitchell RD PhD and independently reviewed by Dr. James Cho MD FACG (board-certified gastroenterologist, UCSF Medical Center) before publication. The reviewer’s name and review date are visible on every health article.
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How does KimchiGuide test its recipes?Every recipe is cooked by Ji-Young a minimum of three times before publication. Variables are tested one at a time. Failures are documented in the Test Kitchen Notes section. If a recipe produces inconsistent results, it goes back to testing.
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Does KimchiGuide use AI to generate content?AI tools may assist with research organisation. Every recipe, health claim, and factual statement is personally verified by the named author before publication. No unverified AI-generated content is published. Our Editorial Policy covers this in full.
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How do I contact KimchiGuide?For general enquiries: hello@kimchiguide.com. For editorial corrections or concerns: editorial@kimchiguide.com. Ji-Young also responds personally to recipe comments within 48 hours.
Contact KimchiGuide
Recipes, site feedback, reader questions
Factual errors, source disputes, corrections
Brand collaborations, recipe commissions