Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (2024)

Though we love radishes with salt and butter, we know there are more ways to enjoy them. To help you get the most out of your radishes, we're sharing our favorite ways to utilize these colorful vegetables, raw or cooked, in salads, side dish, pastas, tarts, and more.

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Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (1)

Red radishes are in season year-round at supermarkets, and they're so common that they can often be ignored. But visit your regional farmers' markets in the spring and summer and the selection of rainbow-hued radishes available to you can be so diverse that they're impossible to miss. Elegant French breakfast radishes, photogenic watermelon radishes, and pastel candy-colored Easter egg radishes line up and challenge (and maybe even intimidate) the average shopper: What should you do with these beautiful vegetables? Because the radish suffers the curious fate of being both invisible and seasonally desirable, we're sharing our all-time best radish recipes so that you'll feel inspired to never pass them by again.

What's the first thing you think about when considering a radish? Is it that signature crunch, or do you remember their peppery bite? That snapping combination of crispness and assertiveness is what makes radishes so appealing and useful, allowing the cook to play with complementary textures and flavors.

Then there is the question of raw or cooked: Which is the better way to enjoy your colorful haul? Raw, the purist's approach is a plateful trimmed radishes, a pat of excellent butter, and a dish of flaky sea salt. We have plenty of variations on that theme. In salads, the brilliantly hued outline of shaved, diced, or julienned radishes is stunning. Radishes add an energizing flourish to meals that seem half-dressed without their raw brightness (think tostadas and tacos), and they offer a vital mineral punch to rich foods like breaded pork chops or a roasted side of salmon.

Once cooked, radishes become sweet, and they can both make up the substance of savory meals or be an easy side. In short, they're as versatile as they are bright and colorful. And with the recipes here, you'll soon see that radishes deserve a place on your shopping list—and your dinner plate—all year long.

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Lemon Butter-Dipped Baby-Vegetable Crudités

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (2)

In an even more delicious riff on the radish-and-butter classic, the butter is melted, brightened with lemon zest, and then dipped onto each vegetable before they are chilled. This creates a delicious cloak for each bite of these party-ready crudités.

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Roasted Radish Tart

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (3)

Filled with a creamy purée of cauliflower and topped with vibrant slices of watermelon or Easter egg radishes, this wholesome vegetarian tart is brilliantly appealing.

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Watercress, Radicchio, and Radish Salad

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (4)

The assertive combination of spicy watercress, peppery radishes, and gently bitter radicchio is like a tonic in this simple and pretty salad, which is dressed with a fresh lemon and mustard vinaigrette.

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Lillet and Brown-Butter Glazed Radishes with Kohlrabi

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (5)

Nutty brown butter and the herbal sweetness of Lillet create a syrupy glaze to coat whole, sautéed radishes and wedges of kohlrabi.

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Pickled Radishes

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (6)

If you find pickles as useful as we do (instant snack, sandwich filler, appetizer, or Bloody Mary-garnish) you will love this sharply aromatic brine. Use petite radishes for maximum appeal.

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Vinegared Pork Chop Milanese with Radish Salad

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (7)

Crisply breaded pork chops are returned to their pan where a quick pick-me-up sizzle of vinegar has been splashed into the hot fat. To lighten the richness and emphasize the acid a fresh salad of radish, shallot, and herbs is strewn across the sliced meat before serving.

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Cheese-Stuffed Tostadas

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (8)

Black beans, chipotles in adobo, cheese, and cumin create the comforting filling for these addictive tostadas where raw cilantro and radish are the essential finishing touch.

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Roasted Radishes with Capers and Anchovies

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (9)

Intensely flavored capers and anchovies, garlic, and fresh lemon serve as a mouthwatering foil for radishes that have been sweetened by roasting.

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Buttery Shrimp and Radish Pasta

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (10)

Don't toss those radish leaves! The vegetable's tops are a leafy green in their own right. Make the most of them in this easy pasta dish where the succulence of shrimp is partnered with the wilted leaves and the inherent sweetness of cooked radishes.

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Radishes with Chive Butter

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (11)

These little bites of radish topped with chive-infused butter are exquisite. The chive butter can be made well in advance and chilled until needed.

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Charred-Cucumber-and-Radish Salad with Yogurt

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (12)

A quick trick to transform salads is to char the vegetables. Blackening the radishes and cucumbers over good charcoal adds complex dimension to the moist vegetables and works particularly well with the rich yogurt in this summer salad.

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Poached Chicken Sandwiches with Peas and Radishes

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (13)

Verdant open-faced spring sandwiches call for eye-catching toppings: Bright sugar snap peas and pretty radish rounds are tossed in a spicy vinaigrette with mint, a fresh contrast for the mild chicken, then served atop a creamy spread of peas and ricotta.

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Radish Dip

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (14)

Julienning radishes creates a fantastic texture for this versatile dip that is as good for dipping vegetables as it is slathered on fresh bread or atop eight-minute eggs.

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Cilantro Rice Bowl with Poached Eggs and Greens

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (15)

The success of a nourishing rice bowl depends on a deceptively simple alchemy of textures and flavor—soft and crisp, hot and cool, bright and earthy. Here, silky poached egg and soothing rice are complemented by the snap of raw radish and the pungency of cilantro.

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Salmon with Cucumber-Radish relish

Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (16)

As aesthetically dramatic as it is simple to make, a whole roast side salmon is topped with crisp cucumbers and chopped radishes tossed in a nose-prickling dressing of horseradish and scallions.

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Wondering What to Make with Radishes? Here Are our Best Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What can I do with all my radishes? ›

They can be thinly sliced for salads, dipped in butter for a snack (add a sprinkle of flaky salt if you're feeling fancy), or even roasted to bring out their hidden sweetness. And if you've never tried grilling radishes, make this the summer you change that — trust me.

What is the best way to eat radishes? ›

Cute, crunchy and peppery, radishes are a pretty addition to any plate. They're best eaten raw, and can be easily sliced into salads and sandwiches, or enjoyed whole and dipped into houmous for a healthy snack. The young leaves are delicious in salads or cooked in the same way as spinach.

Why do people put butter on radishes? ›

The butter truly tones down the peppery, hot flavor of radish and turns it into an indulgent treat.

Are radishes better cooked or raw? ›

Raw radishes have a kick. I happen to like that subtle spicy burn, but if you don't (or if you just want a different radish vibe), there's an easy work-around: Cook your radishes. Cooking radishes is a simple way to mute their bark and enhance their sweetness.

What do Mexicans do with radishes? ›

Today, radishes are used in a variety of Mexican dishes, including salsas, tacos, and enchiladas. They add a crunchy texture and a spicy flavor to these dishes, and they can be eaten raw or cooked.

Can I freeze radishes for later use? ›

Wash radishes well, scrubbing off all the dirt, then slice thinly. In a large pot of boiling water, blanch slices for 2–3 mins. Then, remove and plunge in ice water for 2–3 mins. Place in Freezer Zipper bags or FreezerWare™ containers.

Should you eat the skin on radishes? ›

No, you don't need to remove the skin from radishes, but always give them a good scrub to remove dirt and any residue.

Which part of radish is not edible? ›

It is a root vegetable; but has a much more distinct peppery taste compared to turnips or beets. Radishes are related to mustard seeds. All parts of a radish—the bulbs, seeds, and leaf tops—are edible.

Do you peel radishes before cooking? ›

Radishes do not have to be peeled; just wash and cut off the tops and root ends. You can use them sliced, diced, shredded, or whole.

Why do Mexicans eat so many radishes? ›

Radishes add a refreshing, crunchy contrast to dense, savory dishes; for that reason, they're used as a garnish in many Mexican dishes. You can find them raw and thinly sliced on top of enchiladas, tacos, and pozole. They also add a beautiful pop of color to these dishes.

Why do you soak radishes? ›

Peel The compound responsible for the spiciness is on the outer skin of the radish and you can remove it with a vegetable peeler. You can also soak them in ice water for an hour to tone down the heat.

What do the French do with radishes? ›

"A classic French way of serving radishes, simple and yet so good; crunchy radishes are simply served with fresh butter and sea salt. I like to serve mine with Fleur de Sel, which is the caviar of French sea salts.

How many radishes per day should I eat? ›

Since the leaves appear to help lower blood pressure, eating too many of them might make your blood pressure too low if it is currently normal. While it's unclear what constitutes "too many," it's safest to stick to one serving of radishes per day, which the USDA considers a half-cup.

How do you prepare radish? ›

Wash, then chop off the greens, if present, then slice off the root. Leave whole, slice or chop, as required. Always prepare radishes just before using, as they loose their potency when cut. Mooli or daikon radishes can be sliced, diced or grated.

What can I do with a large harvest of radishes? ›

Any type of radish can be fermented into salty pickles that store for months, which is a particularly good use for daikons and other large Asian radishes. Refrigerated pickled radishes are much faster to make, and they keep their crunch for weeks.

What can you do with radishes to preserve them? ›

Many people prefer to preserve their radishes by pickling. Pickled radishes, a milder alternative to pickled onions, add sweet and sour flavor to salads, sandwiches, and more. Learn more with Our Guide to Homemade Pickles. Once you're an expert, you can try one Our Best Pickled Radish Recipes.

How do you preserve radishes? ›

Place radishes in plastic bags, if they are not already packaged, and store in the refrigerator. Most varieties will keep up to two weeks in the refrigerator. Black radishes can be stored for months if they remain dry; store them in perforated plastic bags in the refrigerator.

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