Serve lunch with delightful curry and roasted tofu.
Tofu has always been my mainstay as a powerful protein source. At a cheap price because it includes a local ingredient. This is also very helpful for the lower middle class in Indonesia to continue to meet their protein needs. At a time when other protein needs are increasingly expensive.
However, there are things that often become obstacles for me. For side dishes, tofu is quite complicated to cook because the texture of tofu is soft and breaks easily. If the tofu has a chewier, denser texture, it is certain that it contains chemicals.
Indonesian people often fry the tofu first to make the tofu firmer and less easily destroyed when mixed with other ingredients at the next stage of cooking. Unfortunately, these often contain a lot of oil and are not recommended for people who are cutting back on oil due to several health factors.
That's why this time, I will share a recipe that reduces oil in the tofu cooking process. Of course, I roasted tofu in an oven instead of frying which involves a lot of oil.
I will use light curry seasoning, without curry powder, just using turmeric and some spices and herbs. For veggies, I used cauliflowers and mung bean sprouts to complete this lunch dish.
The Ingredients
- 200-300 grams of tofu, cubed and roasted
- 1/2 head of big cauliflowers, or use 1 head of cauliflowers
- 1-2 handfuls of mung bean sprouts
- 200 ml of water
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon sugar
- 1/2 teaspoon ground pepper
curry seasoning
- 200 ml of coconut milk
- 1 segment of turmeric
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 5 cloves of small red onions
- 100 ml of water to blend garlic and red onion
- 2 bay leaves, dried ones are better
- 3-5 cm of cinnamon stalk
- 2 lemongrass, cut into 2 pieces per stalk and flattened
Cooking Instructions
Serving Ways
After doing a lot of garden work in the morning, my husband and I need a lot of energy. So, I served this side dish with rice.
Arrange the rice on a serving plate, then follow by arranging the roasted tofu on top of the rice.
I like how roasted tofu is firm and has a little crunch on the surface of the roasted tofu.
It's just that this roasted tofu has a blended taste because I don't use salt for this roasted tofu. That's because I have served curry seasoning and it will add flavor to the whole dish automatically :)
Cauliflowers and mung bean sprouts look great together in curry gravy. Delightful!
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Best Regards,
Anggrek Lestari
Anggrek Lestari is an Indonesian fiction writer who has published two major books. Now She is a full-time content creator. She has a goal to share life, poem, and food content that makes others happy and can get inspiration.
Contact Person: authoranggreklestari@gmail.com
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