choa magazine
  • About
    • Join our team
    • Press
  • Magazine
    • 1: 물 — WATER
    • 2: 집밥 — JIP-BAB
    • 3: AGING IN PLACE
    • 4: SEX
  • Submit
  • Podcast
    • groundings
    • #choachat
  • Newsletter
  • Support
  • Resources
    • In Solidarity
    • For Asian Communities
    • Toronto's Koreatown

choa 2022 Jip-bab Calendar

SKU:
CA$30.00
CA$30.00
Unavailable
per item
An illustrated 2022 calendar (8.5 x 11") featuring 12 different Korean food recipes from 12 Korean diasporic women.

​The recipes range from jeon (pancake) to guk (soup), tteok (rice cake) to guksu (noodle). It's the perfect calendar to guarantee a delicious year. 

The calendar is unbound, so you can display it however way you like — you can tape it on the wall, hang it using a binder clip or a magnet, or frame each month/recipe. You can also store it with your cookbooks once the year passes as a recipe book of its own.

Recipes from Harriet Kim, Michelle Kim, Jennifer Ban, Ki-Sang Yi, Leslie Yun, Subin Yang, Victoria Cho Min, Mirae Lee, Erin Kang, Sena Kwon, and Frances Kim with a recipe inspired by the conversation with Kristyn Leach in Volume 2.

-
Please note: We ship from Canada. Items are shipped within 2-4 business days of your order being placed, and will take around 1-2 weeks for Canada, 2-3 weeks for USA and other countries. There may be delays due to the holiday season and Covid-19.

If you'd like to receive the calendar before December 25, 2021 (Christmas), please make your order by the following date:
USA & Other Countries: December 1, 2021
Canada: December 6, 2021
​
For more details on our shipping and return policy, refer to the main Support page.
Buy Now
Picture
About
Support Our Work
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us
FAQ    
Privacy Policy
@choamagazine
© 2020-2025 choa magazine
  • About
    • Join our team
    • Press
  • Magazine
    • 1: 물 — WATER
    • 2: 집밥 — JIP-BAB
    • 3: AGING IN PLACE
    • 4: SEX
  • Submit
  • Podcast
    • groundings
    • #choachat
  • Newsletter
  • Support
  • Resources
    • In Solidarity
    • For Asian Communities
    • Toronto's Koreatown