Hakusai Chinese Cabbage Kimchi Pickled Japanese Winter
China (origin); Japan (national winter vegetable since Edo period); winter hot pot essential
Hakusai (Chinese cabbage, Brassica rapa pekinensis) is Japan's most important winter vegetable—a substantial, mild-flavored, leafy brassica that functions as the primary vegetable in winter nabe hot pot, as the base for numerous tsukemono (pickled preparations), and as a standard vegetable in miso soup. While Korean cuisine transformed hakusai into kimchi with fermentation and chili, Japanese hakusai pickles (hakusai-zuke) are typically salt-only preparations—fresh leaves are massaged with salt, pressed under weight for 1-3 days, producing a clean, mild, lacto-fermented pickle with a pleasantly sour finish. The simplest form (ichiya-zuke, one-night pickle) uses only salt and produces a lightly salted, barely fermented pickle ready the next day. For longer fermentation (3-5 days), the natural lactic acid bacteria produce more acidity, resembling sauerkraut in its lactic quality. Japanese adaptations of Korean kimchi also exist—adapted kimchi using hakusai with chili and gochugaru has become extremely popular in Japan under the name kimuchi (キムチ). In hot pot, hakusai adds bulk, mild brassica sweetness, and absorbs surrounding broth flavors; its natural water content adds moisture to the pot. Hakusai is at peak quality from December through February when cold temperatures produce sweetest flavor.