Dry-Fried Tofu
photo by Rita1652
- Ready In:
- 5mins
- Ingredients:
- 2
- Serves:
-
4
ingredients
- 1 lb tofu
- marinade (about 1 or 1 1/2 cups of any store-bought or homemade variety)
directions
- First of all, make sure you have the water-packed tofu, not the silken tofu that comes in the aseptic boxes.
- Heat a non-stick pan or a very well-seasoned cast-iron pan over medium heat, if you have an electric stove, or low to medium-low on a gas stove. Cut your tofu in half lengthwise. Place it between paper towels or clean dish towels and press gently (hard enough to get some of the moisture out but not hard enough to squish it). Cut into about 16 triangles or strips.
- Add the tofu pieces to the pan. Leave plenty of room around each piece (you might want to cook it in two batches). Cook VERY SLOWLY over LOW TO MEDIUM heat. Slow cooking is the key to ensuring the tofu doesn't stick to the pan and that the water has time to evaporate so that the tofu can brown. Do NOT use oil. What you want to do is leach all the water out of your tofu in a dry pan. As the tofu cooks, frequently use a spatula to press down on the top of each piece. You should see some water squeezing out and sizzling in the pan.
- When the bottom sides are firm and golden, carefully flip the pieces and repeat the same process on the other sides. They are done when they are firm and golden on both sides.
- Now that your tofu has given up most of its water, it is perfectly ready to soak up any marinade like a sponge. Place the cooked tofu pieces in your marinade of choice, stir, and let sit for about half an hour. Now your tofu is ready to eat or to use in a stir-fry!
- Uncooked leftover tofu should be placed in a container that has a lid, submerged in water, sealed, and stored in the fridge. Try to remember to change the water every day or two until you use it. Cooked tofu can be stored like any other leftovers.
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Reviews
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This is great if you follow the directions!!! Or at least end following the directions. ;) A non-stick pan or a very well-seasoned cast-iron pan is key as is low heat! I started making this recipe remembering seeing the recipe a while back. Knowing it was no oil I sliced and blotted the tofu, placed it into a dry hot pan. 1st think I did wrong. Please remember I am doing this from my memory. :) At this point I go to the Veggie tag forum where I know someone knows which recipe it is I am making. And yes Mindelicious come to the rescue and reminded me of Prose`s recipe. Since I had the tofu in the hot pan at this point I quickly and very lightly sprayed the top side of the tofu. Because the first side was cooked to fast and to high of a heat in a pan that was non stick! I was able to recover the tofu with no loss. This is a slow and low cooking method. 3 of us had this gone in no time! And this deserves 5 stars even with my faults! Do remember taste is all about what you the reviewer makes for the sauce. Love this technique.
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Skills to last a lifetime :D I did pat each individual piece after slicing just to speed the process up a bit. As I was making these I looked over and saw the Foreman grill sitting there....next time I will attempt it....thinking it might be a little too much pressure but we will see. Thanks for this one Prose!! Made for Veg*n Swap 25!
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
http://www.recipezaar.com/members/home/451456/Paula+Grad+18.JPG
I'm a grad student and also teach at two different schools, so I need some fast/easy recipes. I try to eat vegan, and most of my creations are also gluten-free because my husband is Diabetic/Celiac. I don't post any recipes I have not personally tried and liked.