ASIAN RECIPES FOR YOU

A Collection Of Easy Recipes With Asian Style For Your Family.

Discover More

Saturday, December 12, 2020

[Japanese Recipes] Takuan – Japanese Yellow Pickled Radish

Yellow pickled radish is the cutest and crunchiest snack in Japan. With just 2 minutes prep time, make your own tasty takuan slices ready to pop into your homemade sushi rolls or eat after a big meal.






Why We Love This

The iconic crispy crunchy texture of these pickles gets us every time, and has to be one of our favourite elements of the cute side dish, aside from it’s flavour of course!

Being able to make this at home in a matter of minutes, while having it last for months in the fridge, makes this the perfect condiment to have on hand for Japanese dishes.


What are Yellow Pickled Radishes?

Sweet and tart slices of yellow pickled daikon, known as takuan in Japan and danmuji in Korea, are usually eaten on their own as a side or in dishes like sushi and kimbap. It cuts through spice nicely, or some people also eat a few slices after a main meal to aid in digestion. You can also top a few slices over plain rice, or as an added snack to a bento box.

It’s sometimes referred to as oshinko (pickle made with salt) but can also refer to other pickled vegetables like carrots, cucumbers and eggplant. Some variations include pickling the daikon in salt and rice bran, although we think using vinegar is a lot easier to find as the main pickling ingredient.

Where We Discovered This Recipe

We first saw takuan in slices of fresh sushi (called shinkomaki), whizzing around on a conveyer belt at a restaurant in Osaka. We were immediately intrigued by glowing yellow strips and just had to try it! Chatting with our Osaka mum, Rieko, she mentioned she loves to have a few slices with a cup of tea. We’ll have to try that next!
What You’ll Need

No need to buy store bought, pickling your own takuan couldn’t be easier! Only 5 ingredients and a few minutes prep, and you’ll have these pickling away in your fridge.

  • Daikon – Daikon is long white radish, which is super popular in Asian cuisines – especially in Japanese, Korean and Chinese.
  • Vinegar – We used regular white vinegar for this, but you can sub this with white wine vinegar or rice wine vinegar if you prefer.
  • Sugar – White sugar is fine, or for a deeper flavour you can try using brown sugar or palm sugar.
  • Yellow Food Dye – This is to give the radish it’s distinct bright yellow colour. If you don’t like food dye, use a tsp of turmeric instead or leave it out completely.



How to make Recipe:



3.

Peel the daikon, removing both ends and cut down the centre. Slice into half moons.

Place them all in a large ziplock bag. Add sugar, salt, vinegar and yellow food dye.
Seal the bag and massage for a few minutes until the daikon is evenly coated.
Wrap up and place in an airtight container in the fridge (to reduce smell). Pickles will be ready in 24 hours minimum and the flavour will only get better each day after.




Takuan – Japanese Yellow Pickled Radish




Equipment: Glass jar or bottle for storage

Ingredients


▢ 500 g daikon(Japanese Radish)
▢ 100 g sugar (½ cup)
▢ 20 g salt (1 tbsp)
▢ 20 ml vinegar (1 tbsp)
▢ 6 drops yellow food dye(or 1 tsp tumeric powder)

Instructions

Peel the daikon, removing both ends and cut down the centre. Slice into half moons.
Place them all in a large ziplock bag. Add sugar, salt, vinegar and yellow food dye.

Seal the bag and massage for a few minutes until the daikon is evenly coated.
Wrap up and place in an airtight container in the fridge (to reduce smell). Pickles will be ready in 24 hours minimum and the flavour will only get better each day after.

This recipe and image sources are referred in website: Wandercooks.com. Thanks so much!

You Like It, Please Share This Recipe With Your Friends Using...


Don't Forget To Read This Also...





No comments :

Speak Your Mind:


Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Copyright 2015, "All Asian Recipes For You". All Right Reserved.
Powered By Blogger | Designed By EXEIdeas | Edit by [R]