Recently, DNA storage has emerged as a promising data storage solution, offering significant advantages in storage density, maintenance cost efficiency, and parallel replication capability. Mathematically, the DNA storage pipeline can be viewed as an insertion, deletion, and substitution (IDS) channel. Because of the mathematical terra incognita of the Levenshtein distance, designing an IDS-correcting code is still a challenge. In this paper, we propose an innovative approach that utilizes deep Levenshtein distance embedding to bypass these mathematical challenges. By representing the Levenshtein distance between two sequences as a conventional distance between their corresponding embedding vectors, the inherent structural property of Levenshtein distance is revealed in the friendly embedding space. Leveraging this embedding space, we introduce the DoDo-Code, an IDS-correcting code that incorporates deep embedding of Levenshtein distance, deep embedding-based codeword search, and deep embedding-based segment correcting. To address the requirements of DNA storage, we also present a preliminary algorithm for long sequence decoding. As far as we know, the DoDo-Code is the first IDS-correcting code designed using plausible deep learning methodologies, potentially paving the way for a new direction in error-correcting code research. It is also the first IDS code that exhibits characteristics of being `optimal' in terms of redundancy, significantly outperforming the mainstream IDS-correcting codes of the Varshamov-Tenengolts code family in code rate.