Everything about Daikon totally explained
Daikon (from
Japanese daikon (大根), literally "large root") is a mild-flavored
East Asian giant white
radish. Though most widely known as
daikon, the radish is also known under other names, including
mooli in Hindi, Punjabi,
nepali,
bihari,
daikon radish,
Japanese or
Chinese radish,
winter radish, Korean) or
moo (Korean),
moorro (Gujarati),
moolah (Bengali),
lobak,
loh bak,
lo-bok, or
lo bok (Cantonese),
labanos (Tagalog),
rabu,
phakkat-hua, and
củ cải trắng (Vietnamese).
Although there are many varieties of daikon, the most common in Japan, the Aokubi Daikon, has the shape of a giant
carrot, approximately 20 to 35 cm (8 to 14 inches) long and 5 to 10 cm (2 to 4 inches) in diameter. One of the most unlikely shaped daikon is
Sakurajima daikon from
Kagoshima Prefecture that's shaped like an oversized
turnip with white outside and bright pink inside.
The flavor is generally rather mild compared to other small radishes.
Cuisines
Daikon are an important part of
Japanese cuisine. Raw daikon may be served in salads, as a garnish for dishes such as
sashimi, or marinated in vinegar. Grated raw daikon, known as
daikon oroshi, is popular as a
garnish for dishes such as
yakizakana (
grilled fish),
natto, or in the dipping sauce for
tempura or
soba. Cooked daikon is often served as an ingredient in
miso soup or in stews such as
oden. In some areas of Japan it's often stewed with
squid or
octopus, as it's said that enzymes contained in daikon tenderises them.
Daikon was traditionally pickled in autumn to preserve vegetables for the winter. One of the most popular varieties of pickled daikon, called
takuan (沢庵) in Japanese and
danmuji (단무지) in Korean, is usually bright yellow in colour and is sometimes used in
sushi. It is claimed, but not historically supported, that a Buddhist monk called
Takuan Sōhō first made this pickle.
Shredded and dried daikon is called
kiriboshi daikon, literally cut-and-dried daikon.
Fresh leaves of daikon can also be eaten as a
leaf vegetable but they're often removed when sold in a store because they don't adjust well to the refrigerator, yellowing quite easily. Daikon
sprouts, known as
kaiware, are a popular garnish for salads and sushi.
Daikon is likewise a very important ingredient in
Chinese,
Korean,
Vietnamese,
Tibetan and
Indian cuisines. In China, it's used in a variety of dishes such as
poon choi and
dim sum. One dim sum, called
lobag gow (蘿蔔糕), which can be cooked either by
frying or steaming, is traditionally served at the
Chinese New Year. Daikon is often cooked with meat and
shiitake mushrooms in China, as a simple family dish. Daikon is often added to fishball curry, along with pig skin.
In Korea, where it's called
mu, it's often pickled, and used in a variety of
kimchi called
kkakdugi (깍두기). Pickled daikon (
monla gyin) is also popular in
Burma on its own or made into a salad. Daikon (
monla u) may be simply boiled and dipped in a curried salty
fish sauce or made into a sour soup with fish head (
nga gaung chinyei).
Daikon is also quite popular in
Eastern European cuisines, where is it usually referred to as "white radish" and served fresh in salads with
vegetable oils or
sour cream as a dressing.
Daikon is known as
mooli in
Punjabi food preparations, such as mooli
parathas.
Mooli is also one of the most popular ingredients of Punjabi salads. Mooli
raita is also a very popular salad containing mooli.
Cultivation
The variety 'Long White Icicle' is available as seed in Britain, and will grow very successfully in Southern England, producing roots resembling a parsnip by midsummer in good garden soil in an average year.
Storage
The roots can be stored for some weeks without the leaves if lifted and kept in a cool dry place. If left in the ground the texture tends to become woody, but the storage life of untreated whole roots isn't long.
Nutritional information
Daikon is very low in
food energy. A 3 ounce (85 g) serving contains only 18 Calories (75 kJ) and provides 34 percent of the
RDA for vitamin C. Daikon also contains the active
enzyme myrosinase that aids
digestion, particularly of starchy foods.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Daikon'.
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