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When the weather’s like today, the thing that comes to mind first is a steaming, crystal-clear bowl of beef-and-daikon soup. Homemade versions often miss that restaurant-level depth and clarity, though. Chefs — including the ones on YouTube like Kim Daeseok’s channel — say the magic is in the order you cook things and one seemingly small tablespoon.
### A Fresh Way to Remove Off-Flavors: Flour to Draw Out Blood
Most people just soak beef to remove blood, but adding one tablespoon of flour makes a huge difference. Sprinkle flour over 500 g of brisket and gently rub it in. The flour’s absorbency pulls out impurities and blood quickly. Rinse the meat several times in cold water, and the typical beefy or gamey smell is gone, leaving a much clearer, cleaner broth.

YouTube ‘Chef Kim Daeseok TV’

YouTube ‘Chef Kim Daeseok TV’
### Skip the Sear — Boil for a Cleaner Broth
Many people sear meat in sesame oil first, but if you want a bright, clean soup, add the meat straight into boiling water. Searing can leave an oily film; dropping the meat into 1.5 L of boiling water and skimming off the scum produces a much lighter base. Simmer on medium for about 15 minutes to tenderize the meat — that initial simmer is key.
### The Game-Changer: Marinated Daikon and Kanari Fish Sauce
The next secret is how you treat the daikon. Slice it 4–5 mm thick and marinate it in two tablespoons of soup soy sauce for 20 minutes. That lets the flavor sink in so the daikon isn’t bland at the center. When you add the marinated daikon to the pot, stir in one tablespoon of kanari fish sauce. That salty-umami kick amplifies the beef’s flavor and gives the soup a deeper, restaurant-quality finish.

YouTube ‘Chef Kim Daeseok TV’

YouTube ‘Chef Kim Daeseok TV’
### Perfect Pairings to Finish Your Beef-and-Daikon Soup
The soup actually tastes better if you let it cool once and then reheat it. As it cools, the seasoning draws into the daikon and meat, so the flavors become more integrated when you warm it again.
Pair it with bright, crunchy sides like sweet-and-sour cucumber-and-balloon-flower-root salad or well-fermented radish kimchi. Those tangy bites cut through the richness of the beef and refresh the palate. If you have kids, serve it with vitamin-A–rich zucchini pancakes to round out the nutrition and appeal.
### Daikon: A Natural Digestive and Nutrient Powerhouse
Daikon is more than a humble ingredient. It’s rich in enzymes that help break down starches and proteins, aiding digestion, and its pungent compounds, isothiocyanates, have antibacterial and anti-inflammatory properties. With plenty of water and fiber, daikon also supports waste elimination and can even help relieve hangovers.
Tonight, why not soothe your family with a bowl of lovingly made beef-and-daikon soup that hits both health and comfort notes?











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