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Japanese home kitchen tradition — quick pickle for immediate meal accompaniment Techniques

1 technique from Japanese home kitchen tradition — quick pickle for immediate meal accompaniment cuisine

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Japanese home kitchen tradition — quick pickle for immediate meal accompaniment
Asazuke Quick Japanese Pickling
Japanese home kitchen tradition — quick pickle for immediate meal accompaniment
Asazuke (浅漬け, shallow pickling) refers to quick-pickled vegetables requiring only 30 minutes to overnight — as opposed to long-fermented nukazuke or umeboshi. The technique uses salt, rice vinegar, soy sauce, or kombu to create immediate pickles with fresh crunch retained. Most common: kyuri (cucumber) with salt and sesame; hakusai (napa cabbage) with kombu; daikon with yuzu peel. Unlike deep-fermented tsukemono, asazuke retains more raw vegetable character. The kombu variation is particularly elegant — kombu's surface stickiness acts as natural binding agent while releasing glutamate umami.
Fermentation and Preservation