Let the food lovin’ begin – Vegan MoFo is here!
I don’t know about you all, but I’m extremely excited for a month of food blogs bursting at the proverbial seams with recipes, reviews, giveaways, photos, and general vegan awesomeness. Like the last two years I participated, I’m going full steam ahead and planning to post every day. I’ve got some great posts planned, like Recipe Showdowns (where I’ll pit three recipes against one another), Muffin Mondays (a new muffin recipe every Monday!), and all sorts of other fun things. Heck, I might even finally use some of the awesome (yet overly ambitious) ideas I came up with last MoFo!
But I’m going to kick off MoFo with something much simpler than a big compendium of recipes or an ambitious multi-stage cooking experiment. Today I’m going to talk about tatsoi.

Greenery!
This is tatsoi. Like its other leafy green cousins, it packs a nutritional punch, a wallop of vitamins, calcium, and beta carotenes. My co-op offered locally grown, organic tatsoi on sale for $1.79, and I couldn’t resist its beautiful green hue and leafy abundance. To give you a sense of how truly mammoth this head of tatsoi is, here’s a photo of Moria sitting next to it:

Moria and the Giant Tatsoi (a Roald Dahl knock-off novel?)
All that goodness for less than $2.00! Having never eaten tatsoi before, I decided to saute it with some mushrooms and garlic and serve it with tofu. First, I soaked about half the bundle in cold water, then gave it a vigorous spin in my salad spinner. After spinning, the leaves looked irresistibly verdant:

After a spin cycle.
Before spinning my tatsoi, I’d marinated a few thick slabs of extra-firm tofu in a mixture of soy sauce, agave nectar, powdered ginger, and granulated garlic. As I prepped my tatsoi, I sauteed the tofu slices until they were just barely blackened on each side. I [very] loosely followed this recipe for the tatsoi, adding mushrooms and substituting sambal oelek for the curry paste. I also omitted the vegetable broth and soy sauce, because my greens didn’t need extra liquid. I sprinkled my cooked greens with sesame seeds, plated them with some raw tatsoi leaves, topped them with tofu, and ended up with this pretty plate:

Tatsoi - it's what's for dinner.
This was really, really good. I wanted the tatsoi to play the star role in this one-time-only performance of “The Sun is Setting; Crap, Let Me Take a Quick Photo on My Balcony,” but I must admit that the tofu stole the show – it was perfectly cooked, a little chewy on the outside and creamy on the inside, with a fantastic subtle flavor. It complemented the tatsoi nicely; my greens were simple and tasty, and they gave a solid performance of their own. I loved that the raw leaves had just the tiniest bite to them, like a tamer version of mustard greens.
I can’t wait to use up the remaining half of my tatsoi! Have you had tatsoi before? How did you (or would you) prepare it?
I’ll leave you with an outtake from my balcony photo shoot – here’s Moria’s introduction to tatsoi:

Curious dog is curious.
P.S. Don’t forget to enter my giveaway!
I don’t think I’ve ever had tatsoi before, but I should give it a try, especially since my theme this year is “greens, greens, and more greens”! The dish you created sure does look tasty!
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Neat! I’ve never heard of tatsoi!
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That plate to tofu and tatsoi looks sooo yummy!! I grew tatsoi in the garden this, and have been mainly harvesting the baby leaves for salad.
Your MoFo ideas sound like fun!
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I can’t wait for Muffin Mondays :) I make so many that different variations are always welcome!
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Muffin Mondays sounds awesome! I’m looking forward to reading those recipes showdowns too – that’s a really good idea :)
I’d never even heard of tatsoi! Is it like bok choy?
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Intriguing! I haven’t come across tatsoi, but will look for it since you make it sound so yummy:) Happy MoFo!
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I may try tatsoi in the garden next year. I had great luck with turnip greens. Planted in June and they are still producing.
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You should definitely try making Terry’s tamales!
And Moira is adorable :) I’ve never tried tatsoi either but it looks like you made a great meal out of it
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Sounds like a potent green. But why name it after a Russian author?
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I’ve never heard of this stuff, but it looks fantastic! I get all sorts of happy when I see such a large amount of greens.
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What a gorgeous bunch of greens! I like tatsoi in stir-fries and in soup, especially Asian-inspired soups.
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Wow, I’ve never had tatsoi before (okay, I’ve never even heard of it), but this would definitely be something I would buy if I ever do see it. All that green! Lovely meal choice too!
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