Step 7: Finished
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Thanks
What kind of texture of tofu do you get from this? From looking at it, it looks quite firm and solid, which is what I want. I'm new to tofu, and the stuff I get in the supermarket tends to be way too crumbly for my liking.
Set mold into a pan to catch the drainage, line the sides and bottom with strips of muslin, pour in the curds, place small block of wood on top (cut to fit inside the mold frame) and a couple of cans of food from the pantry on top of the wood block.
I just store my molds, muslin strips, home made straining bag all in my large canning pot in the garage. Everything is all together when I'm ready to make tofu.
1. I use about 1 lb of dried beans and get at least 1 1/2 lbs of extra firm tofu.
2. I strain my okara before heating. I picked that up from a youtube video and it makes it less likely to over flow the pot
3. Please pay close attention once the temperature gets above ~160F. Stir a lot to keep it from rolling over the pot.
4. I dissolve my nigari in another pot and pour the cooked milk in all at once from about 2 feet high. May seem odd, but this caused a very even mixture and I get a very consistent curd when it sets. No uncurdled spots.
5. I sewed my own straining bags and pressing bags from muslin, to fit the containers better.
6. I use the okara to make omlettes that even my kids love.
7. I clean the bags by boiling in water for a couple minutes once everything is done.
8. I have a pressing box (got it as a gift) and use 3 paver bricks as weight. They are wrapped in plastic wrap, and taped shut. I use one brick that was cut short (during my driveway project) first, as it fits in the pressing block
Thanks!
Or possibly it didn't coagulate completely and when you strained the tofu curds out you lost some. Did the water get yellowish-clear?
This goes for both the milk and tofu
Okara Cookies
• 2 cups flour (Up to a 1/2 cup wheat)
• 1 teaspoon baking soda
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 1 cup sugar
• 2 cup okara
• 3 teaspoon vanilla extract
• Chocolate Chips? Almonds? Peanut butter? Craisins?
Mix everything together, dry first then okara and vanilla. If needed add water a little at a time until doughy. Add chips or what have you. Shape into cookies and bake 20minutes at 375 degrees.
This site has some good ideas.