Gobo Burdock Root Cultivation and Preparation
Japan — one of very few cultures that cultivate burdock as food; wild in Europe treated as weed
Gobo (牛蒡, burdock root, Arctium lappa) is one of Japan's most important root vegetables and globally unusual in being one of few cultures to cultivate burdock as food crop. The long (60-80cm), slender root is cultivated in deep, loose soil beds; wild burdock is shorter and woodier. Japanese gobo has earthy, slightly muddy, pleasantly complex flavor that supports but never dominates. The thin skin holds the most flavor — only scrub with back of knife, never peel. Gobo oxidizes extremely rapidly after cutting; immediate immersion in cold vinegar water is non-negotiable. Primary preparations: kinpira gobo, burdock rice (gobougohan), burdock tempura, and gobo miso soup.