Rice
Kimchi Bokkeumbap
Kimchi Fried Rice

Aged kimchi and rice stir-fried together, usually crowned with a runny fried egg.
When kimchi gets too sour to enjoy raw, Koreans turn it into kimchi-bokkeumbap — chopped kimchi fried with rice until the edges caramelize, the sourness mellowing into deep savory tang. It's the classic 'empty-fridge' meal: fast, made from leftovers, and beloved as both a lazy home dinner and a late-night fix. A fried egg on top, yolk left runny to fold through the rice, is almost mandatory. Spam, pork, or a sprinkle of seaweed flakes often join in. It's humble, a little nostalgic, and one of the first dishes many Koreans learn to cook for themselves.
✦ Tastypinch tip
Use the spoon for the rice and save chopsticks for lifting the egg or any larger kimchi pieces.
How to eat it
- Break the egg yolk and fold it through the rice before eating.
- Eat with a spoon; the rice is loose and stir-fried, not pressed.
- A spoon of the egg with each bite balances the kimchi's tang.
Common mistakes
- Expect tang, not just heat — the sourness of aged kimchi is the point.
- If you avoid pork or Spam, ask; many versions add them by default.
Where to try it
- Casual diners and snack shops (분식집)
- A common late-night or hangover meal


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