But you are probably much nicer than I am and will happily share this feast of vegetables, tea-smoked tofu and finger-licking sauce. I did actually share this with my daughter the last time I made it, but Mr A had to make due with a few meagre tastes of fridge-chilled sauce and raw carrot while Miss R and I declared ourselves too full for dinner.
Essentially this is a winter version of an Indonesian vegetarian staple dish. If you don’t know about gado-gado it can be summed up as a peanut sauce-drenched salad. On steroids. To use the vernacular of many years ago – and for which I do not know the current, wholesome, equivalent – gado-gado rocks. It is so good that in Indonesia it is served not only from hawker carts but also in the finest restaurants.
Although we here in the West categorise gado-gado as a salad course, in Indonesia it is a proper meal in its own right, served with all manner of goodies, crunchy and soft. In addition to raw or lightly steamed vegetables it is usually served with fried tofu – or its more challenging cousin tempeh, hard-boiled eggs, prawn crackers and sometimes a steamed, sliced rice cake called a lontong. In other words, it is a proper meal. But there is another, essential element that raises the stakes considerably. That peanut sauce. *sigh*
For my seasonal tweak I’ve subbed the more usual long/green beans, hard-boiled eggs, boiled potatoes, lettuce and tomato for thinly sliced purple cabbage, steamed sweet potatoes, steamed broccoli, carrots and radishes (which I made a bad attempt at turning into flowers). But really use what vegetables you like because the main thing about gado-gado is the spicy peanut sauce. Lots of it. No wimpy light drizzle; we are talking full-on tropical storm of peanut sauce. Of course you don’t need to make it super spicy (mine is mild and family-friendly), but you do want a balance of spicy, salty, sour and sweet. That’s non-negotiable. I don’t always measure when making the sauce – just tasting and adjusting as I go along, sometimes more sour, sometimes more salty. I encourage you to do the same. Maybe make it once as written and then make it your own next time.
As for the tea-smoked tofu in the title, coincidentally I made it the day Jeanette posted her tea-smoked chicken, using a near-identical method. I had always wanted to make tea-smoked something or other, having seen a local chef knock up tea-smoked mackerel in all of five minutes. But to be honest it was a bit scary doing it in the wok. We can buy pretty good smoked tofu so if that’s an option for you, buy it. If you are a bit daring try smoking on an outdoor grill, in a wok or in a smoke box using these ideas from what the hell does a vegan eat anyway, where they smoke all kinds of things (LOL), but for longer than I do here. On this video they use wood, but tea is amazing (see below for recipe).
Some of you may be wondering about cancer-causing HCAs and PAHs that form when smoking or (accidentally) burning meat, but the tofu is not burned in any way (no caramelisation either), and there is no creatine to precipitate out, change molecularly, and be reabsorbed. And it doesn’t have salt or nitrates to complicate matters (I paint on a marinade afterwards and bake in the oven). This isn’t everyday food in any case. I will give it another go, smoking several slabs of tofu and tempeh at once as the taste result was pretty amazing for so little actual effort. If nothing else it is a good way to see if your smoke alarms work 😀 (actually no smoke leaks outs if you are careful).
For ease use bought marinated or smoked tofu if you like, or even replace the tofu with cooked prawns/shrimp or hard-boiled eggs. I may have a go at smoking some cooked chickpeas and making a barbecued hummus!
Have you ever done any home-smoking? What did you smoke and with what? Do you have any tips for us?
Announcement: Becs at laythetable has won the Nakd bars prize! Congratulation Becs and expect a healthy parcel of goodies very soon!
Tea-smoked Tofu Gado-Gado (Indonesian Satay Vegetable Salad)
Last year: Sticky Bonfire Night Parkin (Sticky Gingerbread) with Vanilla-Apple Compote; Shepherdess Pie – a vegan family favourite
Two year’s ago: Lamb Tagine with Prunes and Chickpeas (one of the few meat dishes on this site); Prawn, Tomato and Spaghetti Squash ‘Pasta‘
Miss R’s track of the week: Kings of Leon – Temple (who does that intro remind me of??)
This is my winter version of an Indonesian vegetarian staple. If you don’t know about gado-gado it can be summed up as a peanut sauce-drenched salad. On steroids. The main point of gado-gado, as far as I can see, is having a grand excuse for eating a load of heavenly peanut sauce-doused vegetables and tofu and still feeling quite virtuous.
Leftover sauce can be used as a dip for raw vegetables, or spread on bagels and made into a delightful sandwich, with strips of raw veg, sriracha and maybe some slices of hard-boiled egg. If however you are like me, you will just eat it straight off the spoon.
As always with food to glow recipes, scan it and make any dietary or taste changes as you see fit. For instance anyone with an estrogen-sensitive cancer will want to avoid the tofu, replacing it perhaps with prawns or hard-boiled eggs.
And just another note: although for the sake of a less messy looking dish I have demurely spooned my sauce into a wee bowl, the sauce should ideally be tossed through all of the vegetables, or at the very least spooned extremely generously and carelessly over the whole salad. Generous + careless do not make good photographs.
Salad stuff (let your appetite be your guide on amounts – fill yer boots):
Sliced red cabbage, carrots, cucumber, radish
Steamed sweet potatoes and broccoli
Blanched bean sprouts (30 second plunge into boiling water then refreshed in ice water and drained)
Baby gem lettuce leaves (optional)
Coriander/cilantro
Lime wedges
Tea-smoked tofu (or other firm tofu that you fancy)
Spicy Peanut Sauce
1 tsp rapeseed oil coconut oil
½ small red onion, finely minced or grated
2 cloves garlic, finely minced or grated
½ red chilli – deseeded if you like – finely minced
1 tbsp each ginger and lemongrass (inner leaves only), finely minced
½ tsp turmeric or curry powder
2 very heaped tbsp peanut, almond or cashew butter
1 tbsp soy sauce, kecap manis, tamari or shoyu
1 and ½ tbsp lime juice or tamarind water (I tend to use lime juice)
1 and ½ tbsp palm sugar, coconut sugar or dark brown sugar
175 ml water*, or enough to thin the sauce to your liking (if refrigerated the sauce firms ups so stir in more hot water to loosen)
Heat the oil in a small pan and lightly sauté the onion, garlic, chilli, ginger, lemongrass and turmeric until the onion is soft. Stir or whisk in the remaining ingredients, adding water slowly as the sauce thickens. I find that whisking the ingredients and only adding a little water helps to get it mixed, and then I whisk in the remaining water. Keep warm.
* you can use coconut milk instead of water
Tea-smoked Tofu (for a gas hob/stove)
I smoked ½ lb (250g) of tofu using a smoking mix of 1 tbsp brown sugar, 1/3 cup of lapsang souchong tea (or other black tea) and 1/3 cup of rice. You could use any amount of tofu you like that will fit in the wok in one batch. You can’t reuse the smoking mixture.
Method:
1. Wrap the tofu in several linen tea towels (or just don’t used the furry, terry kind) and set on top it a heavy pan or a chopping board with cans atop. Let this sit for at least half an hour, but ideally two hours. This gets rid of the water inside the tofu. If you have frozen tofu, defrost and do the same.
2. While the tofu is being pressed, prepare the wok for smoking by lining your wok with a double layer of foil. Add the tea mixture and then top with a metal trivet and basket, or round cake rack. See also this video for visual instructions and options.
3. When the tofu is ready for smoking, slice it and place it in the basket or on the rack. Tightly top the whole wok with foil, with a tiny bit still open to see when the whole thing starts smoking. Turn on the heat to medium and when you start to see smoke (that’s the sugar), carefully close the foil gap and put on the wok lid or a heavy baking tray. Let smoke for 10 minutes, staying close by.
4. When time is up turn off the heat and let the whole thing cool down before opening up and removing the tofu. I took my wok outside but there was no need as I let it cool enough for it not to smoke. Now do the next step if you like, or use as is on the salad.
5. Oven-baking step: mix together 1 tbsp of soy sauce and 2 tsp of sesame oil and gently coat the smoked tofu. Lay this on a foil-lined baking tray and bake in the oven for 15 minutes at 180C/350, or until golden and starting to get firm. Use the tofu in this recipe or save for other uses. Keeps in the refrigerator for five days.
Making Up The Salad
When you are ready to make up the salad lay the vegetables, coriander leaves and tofu on a wide plate and cover well, or toss with, the peanut sauce. Serve with lime wedges and Indonesian crackers or prawn crackers (I used Waitrose’s spicy vegetable crackers with lemongrass – delish!).
