In season now — April – June and September – November
Snack Easy French

Radish butter toast

Crisp spring radishes sliced over salted butter on rustic bread — the five-minute French appetizer that treats a bunch of radishes like an event.

Slices of rustic bread topped with thick butter and sliced pink radishes scattered with flaky salt and fresh chives.
Prep
5 min
Cook
3 min
Total
8 min
Serves
4

Radish butter toast is the recipe that reminds you that good ingredients barely need a recipe. A fresh bunch of spring radishes, real butter with salt, rustic bread, and flaky salt — four things, five minutes, and you've got a French bistro appetizer at the kitchen counter. Serve before a simple pasta dinner, pile onto a charcuterie board, or make a plate and call it lunch with a glass of wine.

Radish butter toast

Serves 4

Ingredients (7)

You'll need

  • Sharp knife or mandoline
  • Toaster or skillet
  • Butter knife or small spatula
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 toast
210 Calories
4 g Protein
19 g Carbs
13 g Fat
2 g Fiber
2 g Sugar
380 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Cherry Belle — classic round red radish; crisp and mild
  • French Breakfast — oblong red-and-white; the traditional French choice for this dish
  • Easter Egg — pink, purple, white, and red mix; beautiful on a platter
  • Watermelon radish — pale green outside, hot-pink inside; showstopping
  • Black Spanish radish — spicier and sharper; for heat-seekers
  • French Breakfast (D'Avignon) — the heirloom original for this recipe

Ripeness

Radishes should be firm, heavy, and have crisp green tops if still attached. Limp, wrinkled, or soft radishes have lost their crisp edge. Smaller radishes (under 1 1/2 inches) are generally sweeter than giant ones.

Imperfections are fine

Slight dirt at the root end is normal — it rinses. Minor cracks or irregular shapes don't affect flavor. Fresh radishes that were pulled just hours ago often look imperfect.

Good substitutions

  • Watermelon radish for drama — stunning pink slices
  • Thinly sliced cucumber — milder, refreshing version
  • Baby turnips — nuttier and sweeter than radishes
  • Jicama — sweet and crunchy, longer-lasting
  • Thinly shaved kohlrabi — underrated, similar mouthfeel

In season

US radish season peaks April through June and again September through November. Fresh spring radishes are notably sweeter and milder than summer radishes (which get hot in the heat).

How much to buy

About 1 bunch (8 to 10 radishes).

From a grower near you

Find your radish grower and dairy on CollectiveCrop

Radish butter toast is a recipe about three things: the radish, the butter, and the bread. A supermarket radish is watery-bland; a local one is peppery-sweet. A supermarket butter is forgettable; butter from a local dairy tastes like butter used to taste. CollectiveCrop is how you find the grower and the dairy. For a French bistro snack at the kitchen counter, every component earns its place.

  • In season April – June and September – November
  • For this recipe 1 bunch (8 to 10 radishes)
  • Freshness Picked within 3 days
  • Diet-friendly vegetarian
  • While you're there Good salted butter · Rustic sourdough bread · Fresh chives and tender herbs · Flaky sea salt · Good olive oil

At the market

About 1 bunch (8 to 10 radishes).

Best varieties

  • Cherry Belle classic round red radish; crisp and mild
  • French Breakfast oblong red-and-white; the traditional French choice for this dish
  • Easter Egg pink, purple, white, and red mix; beautiful on a platter

Good to know

Tips

  • Use the best ingredients you can — with only four components, there's nowhere to hide. Splurge on the butter, buy a real loaf of bread, and source radishes that morning.
  • A mandoline gives paper-thin radishes that layer beautifully. Worth owning for this alone.
  • Save the radish greens. Young fresh radish tops are edible and taste like a mild, peppery green — great sautéed with garlic or added raw to a salad.
  • A spread of soft herb butter (butter mixed with chives, dill, tarragon) turns this into a more elaborate version.
  • For a dinner party, slice the radishes ahead and hold them in ice water; drain and dry right before assembling.
  • A glass of dry white wine (Sancerre, Muscadet) or rosé pairs perfectly.

Storage

  • Doesn't store assembled — 15 minutes before the toast softens.
  • Sliced radishes in ice water: 2 hours.
  • Butter: room temperature 1 hour, or back to fridge. Room-temp butter keeps 1 week in a covered butter dish.
  • Untoasted bread: 2 to 3 days in a paper bag.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served fresh.

Make ahead

  • Slice radishes up to 2 hours ahead; hold in ice water in the fridge.
  • Soften the butter up to 30 minutes ahead (not longer).
  • Toast the bread within 30 minutes of serving.
  • Assemble immediately before eating.

Variations

  • Radish butter toast with herbs: spread herb butter (butter mashed with chives, dill, parsley, tarragon) instead of plain.
  • Anchovy radish toast: spread butter, add 1 or 2 anchovy fillets to each toast, then radishes.
  • Whipped ricotta and radish: whip ricotta with olive oil and lemon, then top with radishes and chives.
  • Cultured cream cheese radish toast: swap butter for cream cheese or Boursin.
  • Lemon-butter radish toast: mix 1/2 teaspoon lemon zest into the butter.
  • Tartine style: open-faced with a poached egg on top for breakfast.
  • Radish avocado toast: mash avocado on toast, top with radishes and salt.
  • Smoked salmon and radish: add a slice of smoked salmon under the radishes.

Swaps

  • Vegan: use vegan butter (Miyoko's cultured butter is exceptional); add a pinch of extra salt.
  • Dairy-free: same — vegan butter or good olive oil in place of butter.
  • Gluten-free: use GF bread or serve radishes and butter with rice crackers.
  • No fresh herbs: skip or use 1/4 teaspoon dried chives or a pinch of dried dill.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is radish and butter really a thing?

Yes — it's a classic French spring snack called "radis au beurre." The combination of sharp peppery radish, rich cold butter, and crunchy salt is one of those simple pairings that sounds too plain until you taste it. It's been served in French bistros for centuries.

What kind of butter should I use?

European-style salted butter (Plugrà, Kerrygold, Isigny) with higher fat content and a cultured tang. The butter is half the dish, so this isn't the place for generic supermarket butter. If using unsalted, add extra flaky salt to the toast.

What bread works best?

A good rustic sourdough or baguette, sliced 1/2 inch thick and lightly toasted. You want something sturdy enough to hold butter without getting soggy, with a crackly crust that contrasts the soft butter and crisp radish. Avoid sandwich bread — it collapses.

What kind of radishes are best?

Spring radishes at peak season — Cherry Belle, French Breakfast, or Easter Egg are all excellent. Watermelon radishes add drama with their hot-pink interior. Skip mature or old radishes, which can be woody or bitter.

Can I make this ahead?

Barely. You can toast the bread 30 minutes ahead and slice radishes 1 hour ahead (store in ice water to keep crisp). But the butter shouldn't sit at room temperature too long, and the toast softens under butter within 15 minutes. Assemble right before serving.

Should the butter be cold or room temperature?

Cool but spreadable — about 60°F (15°C). Rock-hard butter tears the bread; fully softened butter absorbs and disappears. Leave out for 15 to 30 minutes before spreading. The butter should sit distinctly on top, not soak in.

Why do some people soak radishes in ice water?

To crisp them up. Fresh radishes straight from the garden don't need it, but store-bought or day-old radishes benefit from a 10-minute ice-water soak before slicing. The cold water rehydrates them and intensifies the crunch.

What do I serve with radish butter toast?

It's a starter, so pair with soups (especially spring pea soup), a light salad, or as part of an hors d'oeuvre platter. With a glass of dry white wine, it's a complete light lunch.

Know what's worth cooking this week

Get one recipe a week — always timed to what's actually in season near you. No filler, no fluff.

Get the dispatch