Let's Try Making Tofu While You're Cooking Something Else
- 350 grams Dried soy beans
- 1200 ml Water for soaking
- 1000 ml Water to add later
- 7 grams Magnesium chloride
- 2 tbsp Water to dissolve the magnesium chloride
- Rinse the soy beans, put them in the soaking water, and leave in the refrigerator for a day.
- Pulverize the soaked soy beans in several batches until the soy beans are finely blended.
- If you don't blend them well enough, you'll end up with lots of okara, and the tofu may be crumbly.
- Bring the additional water to a boil in a large pot, then add the blended soy beans from Step 2.
- Simmer it for 7 minutes over low heat while keeping an eye on the pot to make sure that it doesn't boil over.
- While it simmers, stir it up from the bottom using a wooden spoon.
- Put a sieve or strainer over a pot or bowl, and line it with a double layer of cotton gauze.
- Add the Step 3 mixture 1/3 at a time, and press out the liquid until there's no more left in the cloth.
- It's hot, so use a wooden spatula while pressing.
- After you've pressed out 2-3 batches, cool your hands under cold water, and then thoroughly squeeze out the last drop with your hands.
- The pulp left in the cloth is called "okara".
- Pressing out the liquid is the hardest part of the process.
- I got 600g of delicious looking okara If you use a coarse mesh cloth instead of fine gauze, you'll get 530g of okara that looks even nicer!
- Put the magnesium chloride in water, lightly mix to dissolve, and let sit for a while.
- Warm up the soy milk that you strained in Step 5 to 70-80 C. Turn off the heat when a film (yuba) is just about to form on the surface (or has just formed).
- Stir the nigari (magnesium chloride) into the warmed soy milk from Step 8, lightly stir with a spoon, and leave it for a while.
- It will separate as shown in the photo.
- When it starts to separate, cover with a lid and let it sit for 15 minutes.
- Put a sieve or strainer on another pot, line it with cotton gauze, and carefully pour in the Step 10 liquid.
- When a lot of the moisture has drained off as shown in the photo, wrap the gauze around its contents, and squeeze it very gently, making sure the contents don't spill out.
- Push the tofu to the center of the cloth as you wrap the cloth around it.
- Put the filtered product wrapped in gauge into an appropriately sized container, then place it upside down on top of a drum sieve or flat sieve.
- Do this over a plate to catch the liquid that may drip out.
- Put the whole thing in the refrigerator to chill.
- Once the tofu sets, take it out of the cotton gauze, and leave it in cold water for a while to leech out the nigari.
- Now you can enjoy it.
- Eat the tofu within 2 days or so.
- Change the water it's soaking in once a day.
soy beans, water, water, chloride, water
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/150006-lets-try-making-tofu-while-youre-cooking-something-else (may not work)