This recipe compliments of my youngest daughter Mrs. TAFKAP
TAFKAP JR #1, #2 & #3 love the roasted radishes.
my daughter states that the roasting takes the spicy(?) bite out of the radishes.Perfect timing! I planted some radishes in our garden this fall for the first time ever. They're doing great, but we really aren't radish eaters. I was wondering about how they cooked up, but honestly hadn't heard of anyone cooking with them, just eating them raw on vegetable trays.
Have you ever sauteed the greens, or always eat them raw?
i grow daikon in my garden sometimes to loosen up the soil. good pickled too.Try it with daikon radish or the Korean variety too. Just 1 radish is all you need for a test. They are huge and cheap at most markets. I use them in place of taters occasionally in stews.
Turnips are really good too.
bookmarked. thanks.I pickle them all the time but mostly lacto fermented with Korean sea salt and Korean pepper flakes. In Korea the lacto fermnted radish is called kakkdugi [Gak do Gee]. Their variety is a little different but Daikon works too. The other way i do them is sweet pickled with rice wine vinegar and stained with turmeric to simulate Korean Danmuji/Japanese Takuan. It tastes similar but not exactly the same.
If you like spicy, pickled and radish you will probably like this and its simple to make.
Kkakdugi (Cubed radish kimchi)
Kkakdugi is a type of kimchi made from diced radish. It’s a very common kind of kimchi and often used in Korean everyday meals along with baechu kimchi (napa cabbage kimchi).www.maangchi.com