Book DescriptionKorean food is widely praised as healthy.But what if that belief itself is the problem?In The Delicious Killer: Korean Food (Hansik), author Dijac Yoon confronts a deeply uncomfortable truth: modern Korean food, wrapped in the image of tradition and health, has quietly transformed into a system overloaded with sugar, refined carbohydrates, and salt - and it is making people sick.Written from the perspective of a Korean who loves his food and culture, this book begins with an apology and unfolds as a sharp, honest examination of how "home-cooked," "traditional," and "healthy" became illusions. Through comparisons with Western fast food, real medical data, cultural analysis, and the author's own experience surviving a cerebral infarction, the book exposes how familiarity disarms skepticism and how repetition, not indulgence, destroys health.This is not a diet book.This is not an attack on Korean food.It is a structural autopsy.Inside, readers will explore: Why hamburgers are blamed while sugar-soaked Korean dishes are forgivenHow gochujang quietly became a sugar-based industrial productThe hidden role of corn syrup and sweetness in everyday side dishesWhy "a little is okay" leads to blood-sugar spikes and metabolic collapseWhat happens when illness reveals there is nothing left to eat on the Korean tableWhy Korean food needs redesign, not promotionBlunt, personal, and deeply cultural, The Delicious Killer argues that true love for Korean food means being willing to question it - and to rebuild it for survival in the modern world.This book is for readers who want truth over comfort, health over nostalgia, and responsibility over blind pride.Korean food is not dead.But unless we face what it has become, it may continue to kill us - deliciously.