A collection of healthy recipes that taste too good to be good for you, but they are! You will also find links to articles about health and nutrition.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Easy Sweet and Spicy Baked Tofu
Both Dan and I like Asian salads. I don’t know exactly why we like them, but we do. I wanted to try to make one that didn’t include a lot of sodium. Since I normally use liquid aminos and/or miso I know keeping the sodium down was going to tough.
While liquid aminos is lower in sodium than soy sauce it still contains a good bit of sodium. According to the nutrition label on the bottle it has 160mg of sodium per ½ teaspoon. Seriously? How many of us consider ½ teaspoon a serving of liquid aminos. I used to use one, two or three tablespoons depending on what I was making. I am only pointing out the sodium in liquid aminos so that you are all aware that each tablespoon contains 960mg of sodium.
I decided that we would start with tofu for the salad and then work on a dressing that wouldn’t add too much sodium. Here is the tofu I baked today:
Easy Sweet and Spicy Baked Tofu
Makes 7 slices
Ingredients:
14 ounce block extra firm tofu, well pressed and cut into seven slices (frozen and defrosted if you want a more chewy texture)
1 ½ tablespoons apricot preserves or orange marmalade
Sriracha, to taste
quatre epices, or Chinese 5 spice powder, or cardamom and powdered ginger, to taste
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with silpat or parchment. Place the tofu slices on the prepared pan.
Heat the apricot preserves in your microwave until it just starts to melt. Twenty seconds was enough in my microwave. Add a little sriracha, stir and taste. Continue to add sriracha until you like the heat level.
Use a spoon to apply a little of the spicy sweet sauce to your tofu. Sprinkle the top of the tofu with quatre epices, Chinese 5 spice powder, or cardamom and ginger. Any of those would work fine.
Bake the tofu until you like the texture. We tend to like ours more firm so I bake it for at least 45 minutes, sometimes longer.
Store in a covered container in your refrigerator until needed. This would be great cold on an Oriental style salad with edamame.
Nutritional Information (for 1/7th of the recipe):
Amount Per Serving
Calories - 62.94
Calories From Fat (44%) - 27.68
Total Fat - 3.32g
Saturated Fat - 0.31g
Cholesterol - 0mg
Sodium - 20.54mg
Potassium - 78.21mg
Total Carbohydrates - 4.1g
Fiber - 0.26g
Sugar - 2.29g
Protein - 5.65g
Comments:
This tofu is a little too good if you know what I mean. I did taste it in the interest of quality control of course. I may have to keep this on the rarely list or risk eating too much of it. Something tells me the hubby will love this one.
I will be working on a low sodium Oriental salad dressing tomorrow. After I get that taken care of I will post it and the salad that accompanies this tofu.
Unrelated notes:
Somehow I ended up spending quite a bit of time in the kitchen today. It appears I am making up for the last few days. I also made an eggplant dip this afternoon. That recipe will get posted tomorrow. I am running out of the time to write that post tonight.
Talk to you all again tomorrow. I hope everyone is having a good Wednesday. We are more than half way to the weekend!
MMMMM this sounds fantastic. I love spicy and am starting to really like spicy/sweet together. I love how the sweet (usually sticky LOL) helps give the tofu more texture/crunch/crispness.
ReplyDeleteHeather,
ReplyDeleteI really like spicy and sweet together though I didn't always. I agree with you on the texture from the sugar coating. ;-)
talk to you later,
Ali
½ teaspoon a serving of liquid aminos...yea right!
ReplyDeletethis is great idea, i think i might use it as a salad dressing. i have been trying to get creative with salad dressings since store bought is always high fat or high sugar. this is am excellent combo, i already know im going to love it!!
Michelle,
ReplyDeleteGood idea to use it as salad dressing. You might try thinning it a little with rice wine vinegar or lime juice and maybe add a little freshly grated ginger and finely diced green onion. That should be really good on a salad. ;-)
Talk to you later,
Ali
This sounds so excellent; love the use of apricot or orange preserves...I can almost taste it from the picture; elegant simplicity...and delicious I'm sure...thanks for the cool idea.
ReplyDeleteRose,
ReplyDeleteThanks! :-) Sometimes I am not in the mood for complicated dishes. I make variations of this often. In the past I would have added a little liquid aminos and maybe finished it with a drizzle of toasted sesame oil once it was baked. However this version is just as good and healthier.
talk to you later,
Ali