Creamy Vegan Tofu Noodles
Silken Tofu With Spicy Soy Dressing
- Total Time
- 5 minutes
- Rating
- Notes
- Read community notes
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Ingredients
- ¼cup soy sauce
- 1tablespoon rice vinegar
- 1tablespoon sesame oil
- 1tablespoon chile oil
- 1tablespoon toasted white sesame seeds
- 2teaspoons granulated sugar
- 1scallion, green and white parts, finely sliced
- 2(14-ounce) blocks silken tofu, cold
- 1scallion, green and white parts, thinly sliced
- Handful of cilantro leaves
For the Spicy Soy Dressing
For the Tofu
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the dressing: Combine the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, chile oil, sesame seeds, sugar and scallion in a small bowl. Whisk until the sugar has dissolved.
- Step 2
Carefully drain the liquid from the package of tofu, and gently tip the block onto a kitchen towel. (Try to keep the block in one piece, if possible, but don’t worry if it falls apart; it will still taste great.) Pat with another clean kitchen towel, removing as much liquid as possible. Transfer the blocks to one large plate or two smaller plates — leave whole or cut into 1-inch blocks — and spoon the soy dressing over the top until the tofu is completely covered. Top with scallions and cilantro leaves, and eat on its own or with rice or noodles on the side.
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Private Notes
Cooking Notes
A favorite. Uncut, cut into blocks, cut into cubes, cut into strips, lightly crushed, cut into stars with a small cookie cutter, scooped into balls with a melon baller. If you want it spicier, add more chili oil, but if you want it less spicy, add less chili oil, or even no chili oil at all, and it still works! If you like cilantro, add cilantro, or if you don’t like cilantro, don’t add cilantro, and still, it works. It is… a block of tofu, with stuff on it!
A more Cantonese preparation would be to water down the soy sauce (same amount water as soy, or less). Makes the a lot more "drinkable", so that you don't accidentally get too much salt in one bite.
We often have this dish, but I can’t imagine it without the liberal addition of fresh grated ginger!
actually, the dish would be just as tasty and presentable with a solid block of tofu. you'd get the additional pleasure of being able to spoon bite-size pieces of tofu. sometimes the best way to read these recipes is as a suggestion.
I like to place the block of tofu in a small saucepan, cover it with cold water, bring it to a gentle boil, turn off the heat and let it sit in the hot water to warm through. Drain and dress and spoon and enjoy.
A shockingly delightful meal for so little work. This recipe is meant to be altered so use it as a base. I served a chopped tofu block served over rice. I added a chopped cucumber and let it marinate in the sauce while the rice was cooking, added a great crunch to the dish. I'll be adding this to my no-recipe needed quick meal arsenal for sure.
I’ve been making the Moosewood Cookbook tofu salad for decades. This simpler version has appeal. The trick fir me is to cut into blocks and marinate overnight in the sauce. The tofu will soak up the rich, umami flavors and gain texture.
I think i would add less sesame oil and some lime juice. It helps balance out the flavors so that the oil doesn’t overpower everything else. Extremely tasty either way though!
Does anyone else sub sauerkraut for kimchi in these situations? I love having the texture of fermented cabbage in dishes like this, but prefer to have control over the spice and funkiness levels (which I can regulate with chili oil, Lao gan ma, fish sauce, etc) and I sometimes find kimchi kind of overpowering. (I do like it as a flavor, mind you.) Tbh in the pandemic I’ve taken to adding properly-fermented sauerkraut to most over-rice dishes and spicy soups like pozole. Always makes me happy.
This is a nice variation on something I regularly ate in my childhood. For a much simpler version my Japanese dad just grated fresh ginger on top of the tofu cubes then garnished it with thinly sliced scallions and katsuobushi (dried bonito) flakes and finished it off with a light drizzle of low sodium soy sauce. So yummy and refreshing especially in the hot Florida summers!
Instead of raw you can also add boiling salted water to the cubed tofu and let it sit for about 15 min before draining. Dispels the beaniness of the tofu a bit and warms it up (if you're looking to have it on a cool night instead of a warm one).
Silken tofu is different than soft tofu. The texture is different.
What if you don’t have chili oil handy? What is a good substitute?
Sauce in top of cold tofu - doesn’t cut it. And while I drained the tofu, when I cut it into cubes, it watered down the sauce. Threw the sauce over rice noodles with some cubes of warm tofu thrown in. Much better.
Delicious. Can make chili oil fairly quickly: heat two tbsp canola, 1 tbsp red pepper flakes, 1 clove crushed garlic in small pan for 5 mins, being careful not to burn anything. Turn off heat, let sit for 10 mins, strain and use. I made this with one block of tofu and a full recipe of sauce (which didn’t all get used.) Used only 1 1/2 tsp homemade chili oil. Might have done a tad more, but not much. Served with rice—2/3 c. Uncooked Rice. Mixed leftover rice with leftover sauce.
Loved this...so easy and so delicious. I did add a little fried shallot on top for crunch. Definitely will make again. Yum.
This is an excellent, easy dinner served over rice with an egg.
This couldn't be simpler. We absolutely loved it. Made as directed except we used half the tofu and made all the sauce. Served with rice and roasted broccoli. Fab!
This is great. I added cucumber and would recommend it!
I love the fresh flavors and especially as a no-cook light meal on a hot summer day. I didn't have arugula but used an organic spring mix and watercress I had on hand and it made a delicious pairing.
Super easy and quick to make. I used just one block of tofu but kept the dressing amount the same. Served the tofu on top of zucchini noodles and poured dressing over all of it. Great on a hot summer night!
how does this keep in the fridge - could portions be set aside for weekday lunches?
It keeps beautifully. I meal prep it for 2-4 days and then keep separate the carbs, cucumber, kimchi, etc until I want to eat.
This was healthy but a little boring. Then I added a sprinkle of Chaat Masala. Yeah, now it's on repeat all summer.
Very good with firm tofu, cubed. Extra scallions. Chili crisp. Fast and delicious on a hot day.
Made this on a steamy warm June night, and my wife said “Save the rest of that dressing so we can have it again.” No stronger endorsement of a dish! The dressing is the thing here, and with a few Asian staples in your fridge, give this one a try. Strong endorsement!
Is it supposed to be sesame oil or toasted sesame oil?
Not toasted the oil . Sesame seeds yes , toasted
I always use toasted sesame oil. More flavorful.
Added corn from the cob, and water chestnuts for extra crunch, Good, simple, delicious.
Just tastes of spice, salt, and sesame.
I used the soy dressing to marinate firm tofu cut into slabs for 10 minutes (after pressing the liquid out) and then browned it on each side in a pan. Added it to brown rice on greens (in this case, arugula and broccoli slaw). Then spooned on more dressing and and added cilantro. Delish.
Delicious! Much less sesame oil Less sugar Chile crisp instead of chili oil, works Fried shallots nice on top Thai basil nice on top Silken tofu came in 2 pieces and one was enough for me as an appetizer/ small plate Not quite enough sauce for 2 servings (though I winged the measurements)
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