originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by Yule Kim:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Tom Blach:
I love tofu, it's one of my favourite things to eat, though I prefer it in its original contexts, often prepared with meat.
That's more like it. I recommend ma po tofu myself, which has enough flavor to mask the tofu's lack of it and enough other ingredients that you can pick around the tofu and still have a nicely filling meal after the tofu is safely disposed of down the fatsink.
I grew up eating tofu. It's a good vehicle for sauces, stews or soups (at least in the culture and cuisine I grew up in)
If you have a great, flavorful, pungent stew or sauce, tofu is a great way to add substance and textural variety to a dish, particularly soft or silken tofu in a kimchi or doenjang-based stew or firm tofu with soy sauce/sesame oil/vinegar based dressings. I would find most Korean stews (jjigae or jeongols) incomplete without tofu.
Tofu's blandness and ability to absorb flavors is its culinary appeal (at least in Korean food).
I don't know if tonnato sauce would be the best accompaniment just because it seems a little too thick to get absorbed into the tofu, but the general reasoning seems pretty sound.
Thanks for this, all great points. While my experience is far more limited than yours, we don't lack for Korean restaurants in the East Bay and some of the tofu-laced stews are among my favorite winter dishes (especially doenjang-based).
Indeed, when just ladled onto the tofu, and made in the traditional proportions, the tonnato didn't really penetrate it. Next time I do it, I'm going to increase the ratio of olive oil and let it sit on the tofu a while and see what happens.
In my experience and taste, if tofu is going to be in the starring role, it has to be exceptional quality, custardy soft in texture, and topped with a few ingredients of impeccable quality, e.g. very young and fresh grated ginger and very good soy sauce and sesame oil.