by Dominique Didier
Bright yellow pickled daikon are a staple in Japanese and Korean cuisine. Known as takuan in Japan and Danmuji in Korea, these pickles add a sweet and savory crunch to sushi rolls or as a side in many Asian dishes. You can eat them as a snack, add to sandwiches or salads, or chop and sprinkle on plain white rice. This recipe came to me from my Korean roommate’s mother. We always had a jar of her pickles in the refrigerator.
You will need a large airtight glass jar or jars.
Ingredients:
1 lb. daikon radish peeled and cut in pieces 3” long. You can make these into 1 – 2” thick spears or thick chunks.
1 cup sugar
1 cup water
1/3 cup vinegar
¼ TBSP red pepper seed
1 small red chili pepper (optional – I did not use it)
1 tsp ground turmeric (optional; this will give the pickles their yellow color, adjust turmeric to get the color you like)
¼ tsp alum
Instructions:
Place daikon chunks in a large bowl of water to completely cover the daikon. Soak for 24 hours, then drain.
Add sugar, water, vinegar, red pepper seed and chili pepper and tumeric (if using) to a saucepan and bring to a boil. Cool.
Once the vinegar solution is cooled, add the alum.
Fill jar(s) with daikon and cover with the vinegar solution. These will be ready to eat in ~8 hours but will taste best after 24 – 48 hours. These last a long time in the refrigerator – I still have some I pickled last year – but they will lose some crispness over time.
Note: You may have to adjust the volume of vinegar solution depending on how much daikon you use and the size of your jar(s). Sometimes I make 1.5x or double a pickling recipe to ensure I have enough liquid to cover my pickles. More than once I’ve had to whip up a second batch of pickling solution to top off my jars!