Japanese Pickled Ginger (Gari) Recipe - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

By Andrea Nguyen

We are in the season of young ginger. Tender, mildly spicy
and gorgeous to look at, the creamy hands are making their way to Asian
markets. I saw super beautiful ones in Oakland Chinatown last week but
refrained from buying because I was bound for the banh mi photo shoot. I said
to myself, “The next time you see young ginger, buy it to pickle.” Yesterday I
surprisingly found the ginger at my local hippie-dippy market. It was
organically grown, from Hawaii. The cashier had no idea what it was.

In Asian vernacular, there’s young and old ginger. The young
stuff has paper bits of translucent skin whereas the mature ginger is covered
by tan, dry skin. Most of the year, we’re all cooking with old ginger, whose
bite punches up many foods and warms our bodies. Young ginger can be eaten raw
– I’ve had Thai fermented sausage with raw ginger, which complements the
sausage flavor and functions as an antibacterial.

But there’s only so much young ginger I can eat. My main
method of using it is by pickling it Japanese style for what most of us recognize as sushi ginger (gari in Japanese).I enjoy it with sushi (obvious) but also mixed into sushi rice and stuffed into fried tofu pockets. It's a terrific side to grilled oily fish such as salmon or mackerel.


Japanese Pickled Ginger (Gari) Recipe - Viet World Kitchen (1)There are fabulous recipes
in cookbooks by Elizabeth Andoh and Hiroko Shimbo but this time around I used Karen
Solomon’s recipe from Asian Pickles:
Japan
. It’s currently sold as a $2.99 ebook and is part of her upcoming
book called – you guessed it, Asian
Pickles
– which will be released in its entirety in Spring 2014. Publishing
a book in parts is an interesting way to offer readers the option to buy the
chapter that they’re interested in.

I got the enhanced iBooks version that came
with audio pronunciations of the recipe titles and ingredients, which is
helpful if you’re not versed in Japanese food terms. Otherwise, the regular
ebook of Asian Pickles: Japan sold online
will be fine.



Karen lived in the Japan in the 1990s and writes with an infectious
verve. I bought two hands of ginger, about 1.5 times the amount she called for
so I simply did the math for the recipe below. Some things to note:

  • If you can’t find young ginger, use regular old
    ginger but peel it. During the blanching, let the ginger sit in the hot water
    for 45 to 60 seconds instead of the 20 seconds called for below.
  • Homemade pickled ginger may turn a blushing pink
    but not the torrid pink of storebought pickled ginger, which may have a little
    help from dye.
  • Use a mandoline or super sharp knife to cut the
    ginger. You need very thin pieces. I put my mandoline in a square baking pan
    (see photo above) to keep it in place and safely use it.
  • Don’t throw away the pickling brine. It’s
    delicious.
  • The dried kelp is my addition, a little umami
    trick I learned from Japanese food authority Elizabeth Andoh.

Karen’s recipes are fun, written without the burden of
bowing to tradition. As a non-native, she gives readers an undaunted take at
Asian foodways, opening the door as if to say, “What have you been waiting for?
Don’t be silly. Just dive in. I have.” You can’t lose with a $2.99 investment.
Along with the Japan e-booklet, there’s also an Indian, Korean, and Chinese
one.

Recipe

Japanese Pickled
Ginger

Gari

Yield: About 1 ½ cups

Ingredients

  • 9 to 10 ounces (270–300 g) young ginger
  • 6 tablespoons plus 1 ½ tablespoons sugar
  • 1 ½ tablespoons kosher salt
  • 9 tablespoons unseasoned Japanese rice vinegar
  • 2 squares of dried kombu (kelp), each about the
    size of your thumbnail (optional)

Instructions

  1. Use an inverted spoon to scrape off the thin,
    paper bits from the ginger. Use a mandoline or very sharp knife to cut the
    ginger across the grain into super thin pieces. They should be nearly
    see-through.
  2. Toss the ginger with the 1 ½ tablespoons of
    sugar and salt. Set aside for 30 minutes to reduce its harshness.
  3. Meanwhile, partially fill a small saucepan with
    water. Ready a fine-mesh strainer and 2-cup (.5 liter) glass jar. In another
    saucepan, combine the remaining 6 tablespoons sugar, vinega,r and kombu (if
    using). Set this stuff aside near the stove.
  4. About 10 minutes before the ginger finishes
    mellowing out, start the water pot going on the stove. When the ginger is done,
    add it all to the boiling water, stir and blanch for 20 seconds to further reduce
    the harshness. Drain in the mesh strainer but don’t rinse. Shake a few times to
    expel water, then put into the glass container.
  5. Bring the mixture of sugar and vinegar to a
    boil, give things a stir to ensure the sugar has dissolved. Then pour into the
    jar of ginger. Push down with chopsticks or a spoon to submerge. Cool, uncovered,
    then cap and refrigerate. Depending on the ginger, it may be ready to eat in 1
    to 3 days. Taste and see. Store refrigerated for months.

Adapted from Karen Solomon’s Asian
Pickles: Japan
(ebook edition, Ten Speed Press, 2012)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Suzette

    Oh, this is awesome! I went out for sushi the other day and felt that I needed way more ginger to munch on! Thanks!

  2. Ram Jha

    great knowledge about indian masala...
    thanks for share...

  3. Lauren

    Do you sterilize your jar in any special way before hand?

  4. Claudia Reali

    Mine haven't turned pink and the flavor is too strong.
    Maybe I should have cut thinner slices? Or boiled them longer?
    I think it was pretty fresh ginger.
    Thanks!

  5. Andrea Nguyen

    Nope, because I stick the jar in the fridge. No sterilization needed.

  6. Andrea Nguyen

    Both, Claudia. Since it's already made, just keep them longer before you eat the ginger. It mellows over time.

  7. Zzbyrd

    What can you make with the brine?

Japanese Pickled Ginger (Gari) Recipe - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Is pickled ginger gari good for you? ›

Pickled ginger sometimes contains food dye or shiso leaves to give it a light pink color. Like fresh ginger, pickled ginger is rich in antioxidants, and it also has the added health benefits that come from vinegar.

What makes Japanese pickled ginger pink? ›

Pickling gives sushi ginger its distinctive pink color. Most sushi ginger that is manufactured is either mixed with E124 (or beet juice) or beet. E124 is required to make the sushi ginger pink because most factories only use mature white ginger.

How long does Japanese pickled ginger last? ›

With proper storage, pickled ginger can last up to a year without significant degradation in quality. It's important to keep it in an airtight container within the refrigerator to maintain its flavor and prevent spoilage.

Is too much pickled ginger bad for you? ›

Ginger is safe to eat daily, but experts recommend limiting yourself to 3 to 4 grams a day — stick to 1 gram daily if you're pregnant. Taking more than 6 grams of ginger a day has been proven to cause gastrointestinal issues such as reflux, heartburn and diarrhea.

Does Japanese pickled ginger have sugar? ›

It can be found with other dishes such as poke. Pickled ginger is made by boiling thin slices of the root and boiling it in sugar and vinegar until tender and almost translucent.

What is the difference between white gari and pink gari? ›

The color in white sushi ginger comes from the pickling process and the red/pink color in ink sushi ginger comes from an artificial dye (usually E124 -cochineal red- or in other brands beet extract). The generic name for sushi ginger is gari.

Is Japanese pickled ginger healthy? ›

While it is often served alongside sushi or sashimi as a palate cleanser, pickled ginger also offers several potential health benefits, including: Digestive Health: Ginger has been shown to have digestive benefits, such as reducing nausea and vomiting, improving gastric emptying, and easing indigestion.

What is the difference between Japanese ginger and regular ginger? ›

The ginger you get at the market it fresh. The sushi ginger ( gari) is pickled, therefore it has been soaked and marinated in a brine, usually water, vinegar of various types, salt, spices, herbs, coloring. And therefore it will have a variety of different flavor and texture profiles.

How do Japanese eat pickled ginger? ›

Pickled ginger is called gari or amazu shoga in Japanese. It's served with sushi or sashimi and helps enhance the flavors and clear your taste buds. It's also great with Century Eggs, a Chinese delicacy.

Is pickled ginger the same as fermented ginger? ›

Here's what you need to remember: Pickling involves soaking foods in an acidic liquid to achieve a sour flavor; when foods are fermented, the sour flavor is a result of a chemical reaction between a food's sugars and naturally present bacteria — no added acid required.

What is Japanese ginger called? ›

Myoga, myoga ginger or Japanese ginger (myōga (茗荷)) is the species Zingiber mioga in the family Zingiberaceae. It is a deciduous herbaceous perennial native to Japan, China, and the southern part of Korea. Only its edible flower buds and flavorful shoots are used in cooking.

Why didn't my pickled ginger turn pink? ›

With huge disappointment I went on line and searched for the answer to learn why some new ginger doesn't turn to pink There were not many helpful answers, but it seems that new ginger has to be very fresh. Fresh ginger has higher anthocyanin content than ginger that has been stored for weeks.

Does all pickled ginger have aspartame? ›

Everyone loves pickled ginger with their sushi, but store-bought pickled ginger is often loaded with food colouring and artificial sweeteners (for some reason, aspartame is added to just about all brands of commercial pickled ginger).

What pairs well with pickled ginger? ›

Pickled ginger is terrific with chicken, turkey, and (surprisingly) roast beef.

What are the benefits of Gari? ›

Gari is high in fibre and so it helps with digestion, diarrhoea, constipation and even irritable bowel syndrome. The catch though is to not eat too much within a period otherwise you'll get constipation. Because of the Fibre content in Gari, it reduces your appetite for a while which prevents you from eating more.

Is Gari good for digestion? ›

2. Great for your digestive system : Garri contains fibres that are not soluble in water. It helps in the absorption of toxins that enter your intestines. In that way, it improves your digestive health and keeps it chugging along nicely.

What are the health benefits of fermented ginger? ›

Fermenting garlic and ginger can enhance their already numerous health benefits. As garlic and ginger go through the fermentation process, the number of probiotic bacteria in them increases. Consuming probiotic bacteria has many benefits including improving your digestive system and immune system.

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