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Bulgogi-Style Tofu

Updated Nov. 8, 2023

Bulgogi-Style Tofu
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Rating
4(3,537)
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This is a no-recipe recipe, a recipe without an ingredient list or steps. It invites you to improvise in the kitchen.

Here's the prompt: bulgogi-style tofu. It’s simple. Press some firm tofu to extract as much liquid as you can. Make a marinade of soy sauce, brown sugar, sesame oil, minced garlic, grated ginger, a spoonful of gochujang, a splash of neutral oil, some sliced scallions and toasted sesame seeds. Slice the tofu into bite-size cubes, and slide them into the marinade. Let that sit — a half-hour works; a few hours works better. Then roast them in a hot oven on an oiled foil-lined pan until they’re crisp. Serve with bibb lettuce cups to wrap them in, with rice, kimchi and a dipping sauce of ssamjang and a little bit more gochujang thinned out with neutral oil and sherry vinegar. (If not, go with sesame oil and ground white pepper.) That’s a fine dinner.

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Here’s the proportions that I used, which fits my preferred flavor palate- 1/4 cup soy sauce 2 tbsp gochujang 2 tbsp brown sugar 1 tbsp canola oil 1/2 tsp sesame oil 1 clove of garlic 1 inch ginger Sesame seeds sprinkled in

To get the tofu extra crispy, after marinading, toss in 2-3tbsp cornstarch and either roast or airfry at 400 for 15-17 min.

For those wanting recipe amounts, in the third sentence of the introduction the word bulgogi is underlined. This is a link to a marinade recipe. Here Sam uses tofu instead of the beef and leaves out the Asian pear and onion. This recipe is what I used for amounts. Enjoy!

For more authentic and delicious flavor and more nutrition, toast the sesame seeds and then grind them with a pinch of salt: if you toast a cup at a time, you can use the blender, then freeze what you don't use. Add to almost anything by the spoonful: it's a seed, not a spice or an herb.

Trying to adjust to the idea of the cooking section without Sam Sifton. That's going to take more improvisation than I'm interested in

How is this not a recipe? It just seems perverse and maybe a bit pretentious to deprive us of an ingredient list and numbered steps. To encourage improvisation and creativity, it could perhaps have been prefaced with a statement about your intention for the recipe to be flexible—-which, honestly, many home cooks take for granted anyway.

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