Iron Chef Chinese - Chef Chen's Mapo Tofu
photo by SkipperSy
- Ready In:
- 25mins
- Ingredients:
- 18
- Serves:
-
6
ingredients
- 15 -16 ounces tofu, regular
- 1⁄2 teaspoon salt
- water, for parboiling tofu
- 3 ounces ground pork
- 1⁄2 cup green garlic chives, chopped in 1/2 inches (nira)
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1 tablespoon chinese chili bean sauce (toubanjan or doubanjiang)
- 1 tablespoon chinese brown bean sauce (tenmienjan, tenmenjan, or tenmenjiang)
- 2 teaspoons fermented black beans, chopped finely
- 1⁄4 - 1⁄2 teaspoon ichimi togarashi pepper or 1/4-1/2 teaspoon japanese dried red chili pepper, minced
- 1 teaspoon chili oil
- 3⁄4 cup chicken stock
- 1 tablespoon sake or 1 tablespoon dry sherry
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 1 tablespoon szechuan peppercorn (optional)
-
Cornstarch paste
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- 1 tablespoon water
directions
- Cut tofu into 1 inch cubes. Heat enough water in a large saucepan, add 1/2 teaspoon salt and tofu pieces. Bring to boil and cook tofu on medium high heat for 8 to 10 minutes and remove from heat. Precooking tofu in water prevents tofu from breaking apart easily later. Set aside.
- While tofu is cooking, make cornstarch paste by mixing 1 T cornstarch and 1 T water. Set aside.
- Set wok on high heat for 1 minute until hot. Add 2 T vegetable oil and swirl the pan, then add ground pork, stirring to separate.
- When ground pork is browned, add Chinese brown bean sauce ie tenmenjan, tenmienjan, or tenmenjiang, Chinese chili bean sauce ie toubanjan or doubanjiang, fermented black beans, and ichimi tougarashi or minced dried red chili pepper. Continue to cook for 1 minute.
- Add chili oil, drained tofu pieces, chicken stock, garlic chives, soy sauce, and sake. Stir fry gently for 1-2 minutes.
- Add cornstarch paste to thicken and add sesame oil. Swirl gently and cook for another 3-4 minutes on medium high heat. Sprinkle Szechuan peppercorn on top.
- Serve with steamed white rice.
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Reviews
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Hello Nona,<br/><br/>I often make Mapo Tofu Chinese style and have posted within my "recipes" at Zaar/Food.com my version of this dish. However, I learned a few things by making your recipe; like pre-cooking the tofu in salt water, so it will not break apart easily. I also have to say that I did not follow this recipe exactly (sorry to say, but it has to be a 5 star one) and used ingredients which I already had on hand. I used ground chicken, Sichuan Spicy Noodle Sauce (fermented soybeans, chili), chili paste with garlic, added some garlic cloves, spring scallions, fermented black beans (more then the recipe called for)...and Harveys Bristol Cream. The spicy flavors and taste was excellent and surely was a 5 star meal ! Finally, if you are looking for a Mapo Tofu which is a nice combination of Japanese-Chinese flavors, make sure you follow the ingredients listed... for a great recipe! <br/>P.S. I liked this recipe so much that I made it again the next day and also added some shrimps to the dish!
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I too think a great deal of Chef Chen and did of his father as well. I am under the weather with a sinus infection and always go for this or Thai when I am ill. This is a fiercely fiery dish but addictive and always just what the doctor ordered! I love this recipe and I swear I recover more quickly. Thanks for posting; nice to see this here!!
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Wish I could give this 10 stars - the flavor is incredible! I knew it would be since I like anything with fermented black beans, but it's extra good combined with the garlic chives, chilis and two bean sauces. The spicy flavor, combined with the small amount of meat, flavors the tofu perfectly and will convert people who aren't huge tofu fans to love it. I followed the recipe exactly except substituting peanut oil for the vegetable oil. I was excited to learn the technique of cooking the tofu in water first, which worked great! Our only wish was that we had more sauce. To serve six people with rice, I'd try doubling the sauce ingredients and also reducing the final cooking time to 2-3 minutes. This dish is very special as we used garlic chives planted and grown by my next door neighbor Peter who passed away on June 29. He was the executive chef of the Buena Vista Hotel and always the most generous person, giving us delicious food and sharing herbs from his garden. He was an extraordinary person and this is an extraordinary dish - do try it!
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This is very good! I subbed a red pepper and a can of water chestnuts for the meat to make this vegetarian. I also used half the oil, less chili, and used more brown bean sauce in lieu of the black beans, as I don't care for them. It had more sauce than the last ma po tofu dish I made, so I liked that. I used a final simmering time of 2 minutes, and the sauce was generous, but the two of us ate almost all of this with brown rice, so feeding 6 might be if you are making this along with other dishes. The flavor of the brown bean in this sauce make this a yummy dish!
Tweaks
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This is very good! I subbed a red pepper and a can of water chestnuts for the meat to make this vegetarian. I also used half the oil, less chili, and used more brown bean sauce in lieu of the black beans, as I don't care for them. It had more sauce than the last ma po tofu dish I made, so I liked that. I used a final simmering time of 2 minutes, and the sauce was generous, but the two of us ate almost all of this with brown rice, so feeding 6 might be if you are making this along with other dishes. The flavor of the brown bean in this sauce make this a yummy dish!
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Wish I could give this 10 stars - the flavor is incredible! I knew it would be since I like anything with fermented black beans, but it's extra good combined with the garlic chives, chilis and two bean sauces. The spicy flavor, combined with the small amount of meat, flavors the tofu perfectly and will convert people who aren't huge tofu fans to love it. I followed the recipe exactly except substituting peanut oil for the vegetable oil. I was excited to learn the technique of cooking the tofu in water first, which worked great! Our only wish was that we had more sauce. To serve six people with rice, I'd try doubling the sauce ingredients and also reducing the final cooking time to 2-3 minutes. This dish is very special as we used garlic chives planted and grown by my next door neighbor Peter who passed away on June 29. He was the executive chef of the Buena Vista Hotel and always the most generous person, giving us delicious food and sharing herbs from his garden. He was an extraordinary person and this is an extraordinary dish - do try it!
RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
Rinshinomori
United States
You can find me reviewing book, magazine and online recipes with a name of Rinshin at eatyourbooks.com.