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It's been confusing, to say the least, to be a vegetable-loving individual in Germany this past month. For a while, to be on the safe side, all I did was eat stewed vegetables, which I didn't mind in the least. Braised zucchini and slow-cooked Romano beans are very fine indeed. But then the summer sun and the lack of answers from the scientists and government agencies involved in solving this E. coli epidemic started to get to me. That and the fact that weeks were going by in which I was not allowed a single raw tomato.

(I ask of you: how can one live through the month of June without eating raw tomatoes? I say one cannot.)

At the greenmarket yesterday, then, I bought a sackful of everything I'd missed so much over the past few weeks, from a favorite local farm: a kilo of gleaming tomatoes, a long, dark cucumber, the most beautiful, moody head of oak-leaf lettuce and a perky bunch of radishes. I had to restrain myself from nibbling on the greens on my walk home, Peter Rabbit-style.

(Several people have asked how I'm dealing with the vegetable situation at present in Berlin: I try to buy fresh produce only from local vendors at green markets who are either growing the produce themselves or eating it themselves. If I have to buy any fresh produce from the grocery store, I cook it. I'm steering clear of ground meat and I only buy organic, local milk and eggs anyway. And now I'm making my own yogurt, too. But not because of the E. coli, just because. Homemade yogurt!)

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Despite a few intermittent bursts of rain now and then, it's tough not be spending every waking minute outdoors these days. Berlin in summer is something so impossibly lovely and fleeting that it must be enjoyed and soaked up, as much as humanly possible. The best way to do this (besides taking a boat ride around the city) is to go out to one of Berlin's many parks and have a picnic. Just the other day, I was at my friend's annual picnic a stone's throw from the bridge to Potsdam, and we had ourselves a feast: cold meatballs and herb jam on flatbread, long-cooked beans and carrot-harissa salad, strawberry cake and Bienenstich.

I've been thinking a lot about picnics lately, and celebrations, too. As much as I can't wait for our wedding celebration at the end of June and the rustic Italian menu we'll be serving our guests, there are some days I wish we'd just decided to have a party in the middle of a big, empty park in Berlin – empty save for the massive trees keeping quiet watch over us – and spread out blankets covered with big trays of deviled eggs, homemade pickles and pavlova (in this ideal world, mayonnaise-spiked egg yolks and fresh whipped cream consumed on a hot summer's day outdoors makes perfect sense and is not dangerous in the least).

Maybe that's how we'll celebrate our anniversary instead. One thing I know for sure, the next picnic I go to, I'll be bringing a jar of radish pickles – rosy-pink and crunchy.

The recipe comes from the archives of Gourmet.com and is a cinch. You salt a bunch of quartered radishes, which give off a surprising amount of liquid half an hour later, and dissolve sugar in rice wine vinegar. Then you put the salted, drained radishes into the vinegar solution along with spoonful of slivered ginger. A few hours in the refrigerator (they can stay there up to a day) and you've got yourself a bowlful of crisp, sour, pickly radishes that are lovely popped into your mouth straight from the fridge or served, more adult-like, alongside a plate of salumi, for example. The addition of the ginger gives the pickles the faintest soupçon of sushi ginger. It's lovely.

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I find picnics require pickles almost as much as they require a steady supply of cold drinks. You need the occasional bright pop of acidity and crunch to wake up your palate and keep you from fading away on the blanket, ants nipping at your ankles.

How about you, dear readers: what are your picnic must-haves?

Quick Radish Pickles
Makes about a cup

6 oz radishes (about 7), quartered
3 tablespoons rice vinegar (not seasoned)
2 tablespoons sugar
1 (1-inch) piece peeled ginger, cut into thin matchsticks (1 tablespoon)

1. Toss radishes with 1 tsp salt in a bowl and let stand 30 minutes. Drain in a sieve but do not rinse.

2. Heat vinegar with sugar in a small saucepan over medium-low heat, stirring, until sugar has dissolved. Remove from heat and add radishes, then stir in ginger. Transfer to a small bowl and marinate, chilled, at least 2 hours.  Radishes can be marinated up to 1 day.

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40 responses to “Melissa Roberts’ Quick Radish Pickles”

  1. Suvir Saran Avatar

    Our family would pickle radishes just this way.
    Only difference that we do so in the winter, since that is when they are in season in New Delhi.
    Your blog, your photographs and your writing is exceptionally beautiful and inspiring.
    Thanks!
    Suvir

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  2. Suvir Saran Avatar

    Proud of you for being daring enough and honest enough to post a photograph showing the rubber chopping board with dark patches on it. I have a rectangular one just like that.
    Have no shame in pulling it out and using it either.
    And have never felt the need to use bleach to clean it up.
    Feed scores of people each week most months and no one has ever gotten sick.
    You are wonderful!
    A compliment in all earnest when being given by a confirmed gay man such as myself. Hope you can take it as such.

    Like

  3. K Bossmann Avatar
    K Bossmann

    My husband’s Fritto di Pollo is a must! Other than that it just depends on what is in season….cherries and white wine are how I would end a picnic if I had the choice:-) I want to thank you…from one transatlantic girl to the other…I am in the USA now, but miss D’land so much. You bring me a smile every week – Danke!

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  4. lauren@spicedplate Avatar

    I just picked up some lovely radishes at the farmers’ market…I can’t wait to make this recipe!

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  5. Nadine Avatar
    Nadine

    Hi!
    I love your blog, it’s fantastic!
    I just moved to Berlin so I love to learn about what is in season and methods of preparation with available resources.
    I wonder if you would be kind enough to point me to where in Berlin are good places to buy quality ingredients i.e. fresh produce, spices, cheese… can all these be bought at the market? Have you already posted about this?
    I would be eternally grateful!
    xo

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  6. Renee Avatar
    Renee

    Two words: pickled cherries. My new favorite! (My husband’s too 🙂
    2 parts white wine to 1 part cider vinegar, most of a small jar of honey (or as much as you can stand), a pinch of raw sugar, a cinnamon stick and a couple vanilla bean pods. Simmer it all for a while then toss in some pitted cherries (or other fruit) for about 6 minutes. Refrigerate when room temp.
    Ohhh so good on top of goat cheese…

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  7. Caffettiera Avatar

    I am eating raw vegetables all through the E.coli crisis, and yesterday I was quite sick… But it may well be just a virus, and I already feel better. Tomatoes make me feel healthier.
    It’s been ages since I had a picnic. When I make one, I often bring hummus and some whole grain salad, Ottolenghi style. Big portions, to share with everyone. A weird item that works well is pasta e fagioli. Eaten cold, it is almost solid, it can be eaten in disposable dishes if you use them, and it is easy to carry in the pressure cooker it has cooked in.

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  8. deb Avatar

    I think that every picnic needs something pickled — I love pickled sugar snaps this time of year. I made these radishes a few years ago and they were wonderful. However, opening the lid of the jar a few days later was a… noseful. Now when I make them, we eat them quickly.

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  9. noëlle {simmer down!} Avatar

    You have tomatoes already in June there?! They won’t be ready here until at least mid-August, I think. 😦 Luckily I still have a couple jars that I put up last year as well as some roasted Romas in the freezer to get me through.

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  10. the twice bitten Avatar

    Ultimate picnic essentials- old friends, sun, a great spot, nice rug, wicker basket
    Ultimate picnic food – chilled wine, fruit cider, elsanta strawberries, very crusty french loaf, brie du meaux, tabouleh, nice salami, cherry and cardamon tarts….
    Think I could get carried away with this one.

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  11. chelsea Avatar

    Mmmmm – good bread and cold, roasted chicken with a bit of wine and a few oil-cured olives – and good company, of course!
    Those radishes sure are pretty, though – and intriguing.

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  12. Rebecca Avatar

    Wow, I was just thinking that I need to be making some pickles. Thank you!

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  13. Kate Lifecell Reviews Avatar

    Wow, such great pixs and fantastic blog! Love those daring radish pickles. We are having an extremely slow spring this year and I am so envious of your weather.
    Lifecell

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  14. Michelle Avatar

    I would love to hear how you are making your yogurt. I would love to start making my own.

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  15. Noa Avatar

    I love radishes. I love pickles. I really dislike sweet pickles… what will happen if I skip the sugar?

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  16. Emily Avatar

    I love radishes!! These look simply delicious!
    http://www.mrscapretta.com
    Recipes Fashion Marriage

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  17. Denise | Chez Danisse Avatar

    I’ve made radish pickles, but not with ginger. I know I’d like the addition of ginger.
    I’m curious about your cold meatballs and herb jam on flatbread, specifically about the herb jam. Herb jam is new to me. Did you make it or buy it?

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  18. Charlotte Avatar

    These look wonderful. Hmmm – picnic. Basically it is usually anything I can throw in the basket from the fridge but an ideal picnic – cold roast chicken, beans in vinegrette (almost pickles), cold hard boiled eggs, crusty bread, cheese, cherries, strawberries and something alcoholic to drink – lemon martinis anyone? Especially nice on a beach at sunset or on a hilltop overlooking ocean and city…

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  19. Luisa Avatar

    Suvir – thank you!! For all your kind words. 🙂
    Nadine – where did you move to? There are lots of shopping options in Berlin. From neighborhood grocers like Rewe and Edeka to high-end places like Frischeparadies or the basement floor of Karstadt. The 6th floor of Kadewe, too. Green markets are all over the city, my favorites are in the West (Winterfeldtplatz, Karl August Platz, Wittenbergplatz). For discount grocers, check out Lidl, Aldi or Netto, you can find pretty great quality stuff there. As for cheese, you can go to a place like Maître Philippe for a tiny, perfect selection or to Kadewe for the most mind-blowing range of choices. Check out Turkish grocers for chickpeas, dried beans, vats of yogurt and feta, cilantro, etc. Have fun discovering the city.
    Caffettiera – hope you’re feeling better now!
    Deb – oh yes, these are already gone! 🙂
    Michelle – I just followed this: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/15/dining/15curi.html
    Noa – all pickles have some degree of sugar in them. These are not particularly sweet. But why don’t you try the recipe without it and see? Since I haven’t tried these without sugar, I can’t tell you how they’ll taste.
    Denise – both recipes comes from Paula Wolfert’s Slow Mediterranean Cookbook and are DELICIOUS. That cookbook is a real gem.

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  20. jif Avatar

    I, so sadly, in the epicenter of the e. coli outbreak here in Hamburg, am not eating any raw veggies. I would have caved by now but I am pregnant and know a “friend of a friend” who is pregnant and in an artificial coma right now with EHEC/e.coli and they are not talking about saving the fetus but whether or not this woman will live…sickening, scary, heartbreaking. I am desperately craving a big fat salad with mounds of raw cukes, tomatoes, sprouts, etc but until they Robert Koch figues something out (which may never happen, I know) or until things subside, I am sticking with veggie curries, veggie pizzas, soups and other WINTER foods arrrggghhh! Anyway, a post on pregnancy in the time of e. coli here http://smashandsniff.blogspot.com/2011/05/perils-of-being-pregnant.html. Safe and healthy eating everyone!

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  21. Luisa Avatar

    Jif – that’s absolutely horrifying, my goodness. I agree that pregnant ladies should be extra careful! I wish I could have you over for lunch today – I soaked my lettuce in chlorinated water for 15 minutes (my mother brought these disinfectant, food-safe tablets from Italy last week)… Anyway, hope they do end up figuring out what the culprit is/was. The not-knowing is the worst. Stay safe, please!
    Here are some cooked vegetable dishes that are summery and wonderful (some of which can be served nice and cold):
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2007/08/russ-parsonss-b.html
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2007/08/russ-parsonss-1.html
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2008/02/nigel-slaters-p.html
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2007/10/molly-wizenberg.html
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2008/02/james-petersons.html
    http://wednesdaychef.typepad.com/the_wednesday_chef/2006/08/mehernosh_modys.html

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  22. Nuts about food Avatar

    I pickled my first vegetables about a month ago (green beans) and found it an utterly satisfactory experience. So I will definitely try these for one of the many upcoming picnics, perhaps with some nice rustic salami or a chunk of sbrinz cheese.

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  23. Bori Avatar
    Bori

    Maybe we are “too” cautious, but we don’t eat any raw veggies, too, like Jif, although I’m not pregnant. We terribly miss them, but will not risk anything at the moment. It isn’t an easy situation, and the German government and institutions aren’t handling it well, either…sure, I know it is complicated. I don’t know how long this is going to last, but I truly hope a solution will be found soon, because (as an EU parliament representative put it): It is not OK that people die from eating a salad!

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  24. Oana from dishchronicles Avatar

    June without raw tomatoes? I would have freaked. Good lord. Radishes & ginger together, that sounds cool, unique and spicy. I love most things pickled and I am always amazed at how easy pickles are to make. Thanks for reminding us Luisa.

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  25. lisa Avatar

    agreed. pickles of any sort really. carrots and jalapenos, onions…garlic. very lightly pickled cucumbers. green beans. asparagus.
    oh and cold chicken. wine! bread, and anything to tuck inside.

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  26. KMS Avatar

    yes! pickled radishes! my picnics are going to be so happy! xo.

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  27. Anna@ The Littlest Anchovy Avatar

    Poached chicken breast, celery, almond and mayo sandwiches with homemade ginger beer! Love those radishes, think I know what I will grow next!

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  28. kristina - no penny for them Avatar

    the whole situation is getting at me too. luckily though, a few friends and i share a vegetable garden, and after that has been tested and turned out fine, we are eating lettuce, rocket and spinach harvested there. staying clear off tomatoes though is the worst, and we don’t have any yet in the garden.
    also, again because of the garden, i’m soaking up receipes and links about pickling and preserving vegetables at the moment, so yours just hits the spot!

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  29. Luisa Avatar

    Kristina – buy your tomatoes at the green market! Local produce has never been under any Verdacht: you can eat it without concern.

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  30. Amanda Avatar

    Good. I’ve fermented two batches of radishes (spicy radish kimchi? radish-kraut? anyone?) in the last couple of weeks, and still have a garden full of them! Your radish pickle is a heaven-sent and timely recipe for something in the same genre, but different enough. So happy I stopped by this morning!

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  31. Sherilyn @ Wholepromise Avatar

    I love radishes but never quite know what to do with them. You have just solved that.

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  32. Natalie Avatar

    Love your blog! Share the foodie love and check out my food blog! http://www.myaffairwithtruffles.blogspot.com

    Like

  33. Jane Avatar

    I adore your writing, so poetic, so humorous. I absolutely must have bread and cheese at picnics and ooh diced watermelon would be divine!

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  34. Malli Avatar

    You have a great blog and love your recipe for radishes… check out my food blog

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  35. kitchenvoyage Avatar

    Love radish, i will try to add to my collection of radish recipes in my blog. Thanks

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  36. Kitchen Witch Jenny Avatar

    Everything tastes better outside! I’m so torn about radishes: they are the most gorgeous of vegetables, so I plant some every year and then do not eat them. Pickled radishes sounds like a great solution, plus the colour is even more intense. Have you ever eaten the tops? Radish greens are great for soups and delicious braised. I’m digging out my checkered tablecloth!

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  37. sydney Avatar

    Ahh these look nice. They look like something I recently had in Japanese udon in Paris recently. Thanks for the recipe! http://www.tastysidetolifetours.com
    http://www.thetastysidetolife.blogspot.com/

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  38. Jess Avatar

    Pickled anything is pretty much my favorite right now, so thank you for this. I made these with last week’s farm share radishes and HELLO. So good! xo.

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  39. Beau Morgan Avatar

    i haven’t tried pickling anything yet but i will give this a try. i really like the layout of your site…this is my first time visiting it. i just started blogging a few months ago about food and wine. if you have any tips for me my site is beaumygod.blogspot.com thanks!

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  40. Sophie Delphis Avatar

    You’re speaking my language! Vinegar pickling + radishes means I’m in heaven.

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