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  • 2 days ago
Simmered kiriboshi daikon is a Japanese side dish recipe that turns dried daikon radish into a tender, savory, and naturally sweet comfort food. This dish usually starts by soaking kiriboshi daikon in water until it softens, then gently squeezing and cutting it before cooking. Ingredients such as carrot, aburaage fried tofu, shiitake mushrooms, or hijiki can add extra texture and flavor, while a broth made with dashi, soy sauce, mirin, sake, and a little sugar gives the dish its balanced sweet savory taste. As the daikon simmers, it absorbs the broth and becomes juicy, soft, and full of umami while still keeping a pleasant chew. The final kiriboshi daikon works well with steamed rice, miso soup, grilled fish, bento meals, or other Japanese home dishes, making it a simple make-ahead side with deep flavor and comforting texture.
Transcript
00:00If your soy dish can be prepared in advance last five days and tastes even better cold, you've struck cold.
00:07This simmered kiriboshi daikon does exactly that. Let's unlock the secret.
00:11For a printable version of this recipe, visit my website. Just google kiriboshi daikon statue to find me.
00:17Add 50 grams of dried shredded daikon, what we call kiriboshi daikon, to a bowl and cover it with cold
00:24water.
00:25Massage gently with your hands, then drain. We'll repeat that wash and drain two more times, three in total.
00:33Kiriboshi daikon is simply sun-dried shredded daikon radish.
00:37That drying concentrates sweetness and umami while giving a satisfying springy chew.
00:42It's a classic Japanese pantry hero, widely loved since the Edo period.
00:47After the third rinse, place it in a clean bowl and drop in one dried shitake.
00:52Pour in 300ml of fresh water and let it soak for 20 minutes.
00:58While it rehydrates, julienne 75 grams of carrot and slice two fresh shitake mushrooms.
01:04Match their cross-section to the daikon strands for a better bite and a more unified flavor.
01:10Lift the kiriboshi daikon out of the water and squeeze it firmly.
01:13Keep the soaking liquid. This is a flavorful daikon and shitake stock that we will use later on.
01:19Trim the stem from the rehydrated mushroom and slice it too.
01:24If the daikon strands feel too long, cut them in two thirds.
01:28I'm also using satsumage. It's a fish paste that has been shaped and deep fried, basically a fishcake.
01:34If you're looking for subs, other fishcakes like chikua or kamoboko are great swaps.
01:40Even atsuage tofu or aburage as plant-based options will be okay too.
01:45For the satsumage, pour boiling water over it to rinse off some surface oil.
01:49Then slice it to roughly the same thickness as the shitake.
01:54It's a large pan over medium heat and add one teaspoon of oil.
01:58When it's hot, add a carrot, the shitake, and the rehydrated shitake.
02:03Saute for two to three minutes.
02:07Add a squeezed daikon and 100 grams of satsumage and stir fry for one more minute.
02:15Pour in all the daikon soaking liquid,
02:20plus one tablespoon of sake,
02:22and one and a half tablespoons of light brown sugar.
02:26Stir to dissolve the sugar, then let it simmer at a steady medium low for about five minutes.
02:35When most of the liquid has gone, add three tablespoons of Japanese soy sauce and three tablespoons of mirin,
02:41and simmer again until the liquid is nearly absorbed.
02:45Just the thin glossy sheen left in the pan, that light glaze is the goal.
02:54Time to taste. Try a strand and a carrot.
02:57If you'd like a touch more saltiness, add about one teaspoon of soy sauce at a time, and stir through.
03:06When you're happy with it, drizzle over some toasty sesame oil.
03:10Let it cool. It's lovely warm and cool.
03:12Plate it up, and finish with a sprinkle of white toasty sesame seeds.
03:17And that's our simmered Kiriboshi Daikon.
03:19Strands of daikon with a gentle chew, springy satsumage, and soft shitake.
03:24All glossed in a soy mirin sheen that doesn't shout, just lingers in the most pleasant way.
03:31Want even more delicious recipes? Grab my free cookbook from the link in the description.
03:37Okay, let's go over the ingredients one more time.
03:40And if you're ready to cook, grab the written instructions by clicking the full recipe box
03:44with a picture that's about to pop up on your screen.
03:48Want to learn every detail behind this recipe?
03:50You can find the full version and step-by-step tips on my website.
03:54Just tap the link on the screen.
03:55And for more recipes like this, head to my Japanese side dish playlist coming up next.
04:00Thanks for watching.
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