Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Japanese Turnips

I was shopping at Marukai this weekend when I saw the most delectable looking turnips I'd ever seen. Plump, round bulbs with lovely green leaves and sturdy stalks. I had no idea what to do with them but decided I couldn't pass up anything that looked so fresh and good.

Back at home, I pondered and pondered. You can always pickle turnips. Or eat them raw. Or make soup. I decided to pickle one turnip and make soup out of the rest.

But before making anything, I decided to eat a piece raw. I was expecting something crunchy, something with a bit of bite. But not this turnip. It was creamy! Like turnip ice cream. I could have eaten all four bulbs right there on the spot.

What I did to make the soup was pretty easy. I sliced up the turnips (unpeeled because they were so tender) and added it to chicken stock (made simply with chicken, garlic and ginger, salt and pepper). I also added the chopped up greens. Again, the turnips defied expectation because I was thinking the greens were going to take some time. Nope. Within five minutes they were ready to eat. And the soup was incredible! Definitely an A.

For the pickles, I left the bulb and greens whole. First I salted them for twenty minutes. And then I added them to well-salted water, with green onions, a slice of ginger, and two sliced cloves of garlic. Now the turnip is resting in the refrigerator, but the pickling liquid tastes great already!