Life
        

Specials

Tofu culture in China

Updated: 2011-02-12 18:41

(chinaculture.org)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

Process of Tofu-making

Tofu culture in China

 

Tofu is very simple in production. Put soybeans in water until they are soaked. Then grind. Filter it, and the liquid is bean milk. The remains are bean dregs, which can be used to feed domestic animals. If you put a little gypsum or lushui (magnesium chloride) in the bean milk, it solidifies and becomes tofu. After that, people usually wrap the fresh tofu with cloth and wring out some water for better flavor. If you wring a lot of water out, it becomes dried tofu, which has a different taste but is equally delicious.

Tofu Products

There are a lot of soybean products in China: tofu, fried tofu, dried tofu, soybean milk films, dried tofu cream sheets and soybean residues. All these products are ideal ingredients for gourmet dishes with distinctive flavors.

Tofu culture in China

 

Soft/silken Tofu

With white color and a very tender texture, it contains the highest moisture content of all fresh tofu. This is the typical tofu in southern parts of China. It is usually used to make soup.

Tofu culture in China

 

Firm Tofu

Typical tofu in north China has a yellowish color and bounces back when readily pressed. Because of its firm texture, it is suitable for stir-fry and can be picked up easily with chopsticks.

Tofu culture in China

 

Dried Tofu

This extra firm tofu contains the least amount of moisture of all fresh tofu. It is usually pressed very flat and sliced into long strings, which looks like loose cooked noodles. It can be served cold or stir-fried.

E-paper

Green light

F1 sponsors expect lucrative returns from Shanghai pit stop

Buying into the romance
Born to fly
Light of hope

European Edition

Specials

Share your China stories!

Foreign readers are invited to share your China stories.

No more Mr. Bad Guy

Italian actor plans to smash ‘foreign devil’ myth and become the first white kungfu star made in China.

Art auctions

China accounted for 33% of global fine art sales.

Beloved polar bear died
Panic buying of salt
'Super moon'