Identify Sea Radish

Sea Radish / Edible / Spring / Summer 

Common Names

Sea radish

Botanical Name

Raphanus Maritima

Scientific Classification

Kingdom – Plantae

Order –Brassicales 

Family – Brassicaceae

Physical Characteristics for Sea Radish

Sea radish is a Biennial growing 0.8 m (2ft 7in) It the first year only a rosette of leaves forms, with flowers and seeds coming in the second year

Leaves

Long up to 30cm and divided into lots of rounded lobes coming off the central vein, which is often a pinkish-red colour. They grow in a rosette and are very rough textured.

Flowers

The flowers are cross-shaped with 4 bright yellow petals, similar to its relatives in the cabbage family. 

Krzysztof Ziarnek, Kenraiz, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Fruit

The seed pods are a very distinctive shape, with 2 or 3 distinct ‘peas’ and a long tapering end. 

Stems

Stems are thin and spindly, growing to around 1m and branching to hold a cloud of small flowers

Habitat

Europe, including Britain, from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean and Black sea. It grows on the coast line, preferring sandy and stony shorelines just above the driftwood line. 

Known Hazards 

None known. Consuming large amounts could irritate the mouth and intestines

Could be Confused with

It is very similar to Wild radish (raphanus raphanistrum), which has white or pink flowers rather than yellow. The two can pollinate each other and form hybrids. The flowers and leaves could be mistaken for others in the cabbage family, but all of them are edible .

Edible Uses

The whole plant is hot and peppery tasting, a bit like cultivated radishes, wasabi and a hint of cabbages. Young leaves, flowers and young seed pods can be eaten raw or cooked. When the seed pods mature and harden too much to eat raw, they seeds can be ground and used as a spice, like mustard seeds.  The leaves can be added to salads, blitzed into a spicy sauce or mixed with other leaves and cooked as a potherb. The flowers can be sprinkled on a salad for a peppery kick, and the root can be used as a substitute for horseradish. 

Appears in early spring, before many other greens. It is in flower from May to November

Notes on Herbal uses

None known, although the closely related Wild Radish has some history being used for skin complaints 

Extra notes from the Foragers