Recipe

Collard Oshitashi

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Collard Oshitashi

Photo by student epicure

  • This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Greens
  • WinnieAb's Testing Notes: This recipe for Collard Oshitashi is as good or better than all the spinach versions I've had countless times in Japanese restaurants. I love how the collards are sturdy without being remotely...

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  • Chef

    student epicure's Notes: I've been inspired lately by Amanda's recipe for collards with oyster sauce (in her amazing book!). I like the idea of preparing traditional Western vegetables with Asian flavors and techniques...

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Serves 4

  1. Cut the stems off the collards and chop into inch-long pieces. Cut the leaves into ribbons.

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  2. Working in batches, blanch the leaves and stems in a large pot of boiling water. After adding the collards, wait for the water to boil again and then cook for ~5 minutes or until the leaves have darkened and the stems are tender. Note: collards are forgiving greens, so don't fret if you overcook them a little. When cooked, remove collards to a strainer and run under cold tap water (I'm too lazy to make an ice bath).

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  3. In a bowl large enough to hold the collards, mix together all the remaining ingredients except the sesame seeds and bonito flakes.

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  4. Squeeze excess water out of the greens (you can really give them a strong squeeze) and add to sauce. Refrigerate for 30 minutes at least (the longer the better!). Season with sesame seeds and a generous amount of bonito flakes before serving.

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9 Comments on Collard Oshitashi

Img_0391 Reply

I made this with my CSA collards haul this week - it was soooo good! It's nice to have a quick cook method - and an unusual collards recipe. (Left out the bonito flakes first serving - still tasty.) Will make this again and link to it on my CSA website. Thanks!

Dsc_0034 Reply

wonderful!! so glad you enjoyed it!!!

Reply

It's ohitashi not oshitashi

Dsc_0034 Reply

i've actually seen it spelled both ways (google search with both spellings turns up similar recipes). i wonder if both are accurate due to different japanese romanization systems? i don't speak japanese, but in chinese, for example, you can write sichuan or szechuan depending on which romanization you use.

Yaa Reply

Correct, in Japanese it's "お浸し", or o-hitashi, which means boiled greens in soy (or bonito) sauce.

Oshitashi doesn't mean anything. The closest word I can think of is 押し倒し (oshitaoshi), which means to push somebody over!

Sit2 Reply

I love that your using collards in a Japanese style dish.

Dsc_0034 Reply

thanks, sam1148!

Dscn3274 Reply

This looks and sounds so good! And I love collards!!

Dsc_0034 Reply

thanks!!! =)

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