I have to recommend against marinade. It doesn’t penetrate very deeply even if you squash tofu.
Instead I would say that tofu is best blanched first in very salty water to firm up the skin but leave it tender, then cooked and served in either a flavourful broth or some sort of sauce.
The western style is more pressing and marinades, but it doesn’t flavour it as much and restricts you to limited textures.
Blanch, deep/shallow fry to puff up, then braise is also excellent but a lot of trouble. The blanching lets it survive frying, the frying puffs it up, and the braising broth then penetrates.
For a meaty preparation try freezing and thawing 2 times to open up holes and disrupt structure, then squish water out. Follow by braising, or battering and frying for a junk good style snack.
I will try some of this, I’m an uncultured cracker who never ate tofu before being exposed to it at work, now im the vegan chef and while your methods might be better at least the marinade -> fry method I’ve been doing consistently gives better results than what the other cooks do, because they will typically just season and roast it or marinate it very briefly (so very little flavor gets absorbed).
I usually marinate it over night in a dilute soy sauce (so it doesn’t get too salty) with some vegan chicken stock mixed in, drain it, fry it and then reheat it later in whatever sauce or preparation i’m doing. I don’t press it because it takes too much time to do that and i’m lazy. Unless I’m using it for like vegan feta cheese at least
yeah I’m definitely gonna experiment the next time I have free time. I’m not sure if I will tomorrow, I gotta make paninis and I forget what else and it’s gonna be annoying because I didn’t really prep at all on Friday
lmk how it goes if you do? photos if you take any would be amazing.
I am just a goose mucking around in a kitchen and I would love to know what someone who cooks professionally finds/if my findings replicate/if you have a different impression of what the masses would enjoy eating.
I have to recommend against marinade. It doesn’t penetrate very deeply even if you squash tofu.
Instead I would say that tofu is best blanched first in very salty water to firm up the skin but leave it tender, then cooked and served in either a flavourful broth or some sort of sauce.
The western style is more pressing and marinades, but it doesn’t flavour it as much and restricts you to limited textures.
Blanch, deep/shallow fry to puff up, then braise is also excellent but a lot of trouble. The blanching lets it survive frying, the frying puffs it up, and the braising broth then penetrates.
For a meaty preparation try freezing and thawing 2 times to open up holes and disrupt structure, then squish water out. Follow by braising, or battering and frying for a junk good style snack.
I will try some of this, I’m an uncultured cracker who never ate tofu before being exposed to it at work, now im the vegan chef and while your methods might be better at least the marinade -> fry method I’ve been doing consistently gives better results than what the other cooks do, because they will typically just season and roast it or marinate it very briefly (so very little flavor gets absorbed).
I usually marinate it over night in a dilute soy sauce (so it doesn’t get too salty) with some vegan chicken stock mixed in, drain it, fry it and then reheat it later in whatever sauce or preparation i’m doing. I don’t press it because it takes too much time to do that and i’m lazy. Unless I’m using it for like vegan feta cheese at least
If you’ve got the time try some experiments with cutting it open to see how far the sauce penetrates.
Cut thin and fried will pick up flavour I just think it’s restrictive and slow vs other methods. I copy Chinese prep generally
yeah I’m definitely gonna experiment the next time I have free time. I’m not sure if I will tomorrow, I gotta make paninis and I forget what else and it’s gonna be annoying because I didn’t really prep at all on Friday
lmk how it goes if you do? photos if you take any would be amazing.
I am just a goose mucking around in a kitchen and I would love to know what someone who cooks professionally finds/if my findings replicate/if you have a different impression of what the masses would enjoy eating.