On 12 May 2010 we finally got round to using up
some doufu that had been left to us by Sue
Blake some weeks before. It's based on one in “Chinese Home-Style Cooking”,
published by the Foreign language press, Beijing, 1990. And it suffers from all the usual
problems of cookbooks the world over. I recognized that some of the proportions
just had to be wrong, but I still didn't get things right. But it didn't taste that
bad; we'll have to improve on it next time round. The only issue is that a dinner
with just doufu is a little one-sided.
The recipe below suffers from the same problem as many cookbooks: it's what I want to cook,
not what I cooked. It may change again.
Ingredients
quantity |
|
ingredient |
|
step |
500 g |
|
soft doufu |
|
1 |
|
80 ml |
|
soya sauce |
|
2 |
40 ml |
|
rice wine or dry sherry |
|
2 |
20 g |
|
ginger, chopped |
|
2 |
20 g |
|
spring onions, chopped |
|
2 |
|
140 g (2) |
|
eggs |
|
3 |
80 g |
|
flour |
|
3 |
|
2 stars |
|
star anise |
|
4 |
|
500 ml |
|
water |
|
6 |
|
10 ml |
|
pepper oil |
|
7 |
20 g |
|
garlic, chopped |
|
7 |
|
Preparation
-
Cut the doufu into squares about 6 mm thick and roughly 3 cm on a side.
-
Mix soya sauce, wine, ginger and spring onion and marinate the slices in it for 30 minutes.
-
Beat the egg. Take the slices, dry them, dip them in the egg and then flour on both
sides.
-
Deep fry the star anise at 180° until lightly browned. Remove.
-
Deep fry the doufu, a few pieces at a time, at 180° until browned.
-
Meanwhile, crush the star anise and add marinade, star anise and water in a pan and bring
to a boil. Add the doufu and simmer gently until the liquid has significantly reduced.
-
Add pepper oil and garlic. Serve.