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Edo period Tokyo — popular teahouse and home cooking side dish since 18th century Techniques

1 technique from Edo period Tokyo — popular teahouse and home cooking side dish since 18th century cuisine

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Edo period Tokyo — popular teahouse and home cooking side dish since 18th century
Kimpira Gobou and Root Vegetable Technique
Edo period Tokyo — popular teahouse and home cooking side dish since 18th century
Kinpira (金平) is a Japanese cooking method and dish category involving sautéed and simmered root vegetables in a sweet-savory soy-mirin glaze. The most classic: kinpira gobou (burdock root) with carrot in julienne. The name comes from Kintoki's son Kintaro's strong character — suggesting hearty, fortifying food. The technique is specific: cut burdock and carrot into thin julienne (or use a peeler for ribbon strips), sauté in sesame oil on high heat until fragrant, add sake to deglaze, then soy and mirin to glaze until absorbed. Togarashi and sesame seeds finish. The same technique applies to renkon (lotus root), gobo (burdock), and konnyaku (konjac).
Vegetable Dishes