March 12th, 2008 Posted in Dishes
A cake of soft tofu almost always lives in my fridge. The expiration date on tofu is usually pretty forgiving, so I tend to get around to cooking it long after the more perishable ingredients of my fridge get used up.
When it’s ultrafresh, however — like when I get it from Hodo Soy at the Ferry Plaza on Saturday mornings — it’s like eating a beautiful grain salad; no baking needed. The supercreamy tofu they call “custard tofu” is what I’m talking about–it’s almost liquid ,and resembles panna cotta or flan. I’ll be posting
My favorite non-custard tofu is the “sukui” tofu made by House, available at Nijiya and other Japanese markets. It bakes up beautifully. So with a pile of crimini mushrooms and a cake of sukui tofu, I was able to make an extremely satisfying dinner. Here’s how it’s done. Note that you could substitute pretty much any kind of mushroom for the criminis; I’m tempted to try one with pulverized shiitake to see how much it permeates into the tofu. But for now, this version is really good.
Mushroom Baked Tofu
butter and extra virgin olive oil
4 cups crimini mushrooms, chopped roughly
1 red onion, sliced into thin strands
1 tub sukui tofu
2 eggs
about 1/2 cup fresh chopped parsley
½ cup spiced breadcrumbs (see instructions below)
2 tablespoons fresh thyme
umami salt
Heat the butter and olive oil in a claypot, and cook the onions and shrooms over medium heat until most of the moisture disappears and things are beginning to carmelize. While that’s cooking, in a mixing bowl place the tofu, eggs, and parsley, and gently mix. Season with umami salt and freshly cracked black pepper.
Make the breadcrumbs: whir several small chunks of stale bread together in the spice grinder with dried spices of choice. Today I used a combo of coriander seed, fennel seed, kosher salt, and green peppercorns.
Add a a few heaping spoonfuls of the onion/shroom mixture to the tofu/egg mixture, gently mix, and transfer it all back to the claypot with the remaining mushrooms and onions. Mix and smooth it out.
Sprinkle on the breadcrumbs and fresh thyme and bake uncovered in a 400 degree oven for about 25 minutes, or until the breadcrumbs get toasty and crunchy and everything sets. Serve very hot, in wedges.
3 Responses to “Mushroom Baked Tofu”
By jan in nagasaki on Mar 13, 2008
wow. I am so going to give that a try, with about 3 kinds of mushrooms I think. Hey, lately your recipes have been meat free… is your Japanese cookbook mostly meat recipes or mostly veggie recipes….. ???? actually I cook meat for the fambly (husband and 3 kids) but survive meat and fish free myself…..
anyway…. these last posts have all looked really delicious!!!!
By Eric on Mar 13, 2008
Hi Jan, it’s funny you mention it — I have indeed reduced my meat consumption lately, but still eat my share, that’s for sure. I’m almost always completely happy eating vegetarian meals though, especially if they have some creativity to them. Today I made a vegetarian lasagne that turned out great, I’ll be posting about it next week. And, just so no one worries that I’m going totally veg, I’ve also got a beef jerky post queued up.
By ellen on Mar 20, 2008
this one sounds wonderful. I’m not clear what about a clay pot would make a difference though. since I don’t have one (or much unused storage space,) I’ll try doing the onions/mushrooms in a saute pan, then transfer it all to a baking dish. will report back…