Edamame Tofu
- 50 grams Edamame
- 300 ml Dashi stock
- 300 ml + 1/2 teaspoon or (water + instant dashi granules)
- 30 grams Kuzu (kudzu) flour
- 1 dash Salt
- Boil the edamame in salted water and remove the beans from the pods.
- Weight out 50 g. Add a tiny bit of salt to the dashi stock and add to the edamame.
- Place the dashi stock and edamame into a blender and blend.
- I personally think it tastes best when some of the texture of the edamame is left.
- Place 30 g kudzu flour into a large bowl.
- Add 2-3 tablespoons of the edamame dashi stock from Step 2 to the bowl and mix until the clumps of flour disappear.
- Please make sure the flour has dissolved completely.
- Once completely dissolved, add the rest of the dashi stock and mix.
- Lightly cover with plastic wrap and microwave at 600W for 1 1/2 minutes.
- Remove from the microwave.
- At this point it is still not really firm.
- Stir Step 7 very well and then microwave uncovered at 600W for 1 minute.
- Remove from the microwave.
- The edges have slowly started to harden.
- Stir Step 8 very well and microwave uncovered again for 1 minute at 600W.
- Remove from the microwave.
- The edges have almost completely hardened.
- Stir Step 9 very well.
- It will look like this.
- Lastly, microwave for 30-60 seconds at 600W while keeping an eye on its condition.
- Remove from the microwave and stir.
- It will still be hot, so while it's cooling, line bowls with wide openings with plastic wrap.
- Pour the cooked bean mixture from Step 11 into the wrap-lined bowls and close the plastic wrap.
- Place into your preferred cup, dish, etc.
- and wait until it hardens.
- I made 3 adult servings and 2 child servings using these ingredient amounts.
- Leave them in the refrigerator to chill and harden.
- Arrange on a dish and decorate with edamame if possible.
- Enjoy with mentsuyu or salt.
- They also taste delicious plain.
edamame, stock, kudzu, salt
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/168025-edamame-tofu (may not work)