Japanese Agedashi Dofu Tofu Frying Technique and Sauce Architecture Revisited
Japan (national; izakaya and kaiseki tradition; technique documented from Edo period)
Agedashi dofu (揚げ出し豆腐 — deep-fried presented tofu) is one of Japanese cuisine's most technically demanding simple preparations: silken tofu is drained, dusted with potato starch, deep-fried until a paper-thin crispy surface forms while the interior remains soft and custardy, then presented in a shallow pool of tentsuyu (出汁 — dashi-based broth) that immediately softens the crust as the diner eats. The contradiction at the heart of agedashi dofu — a crispy coating that is meant to dissolve — is intentional: the entire textural arc from crispy to soft happens at the table, and the diner must begin eating immediately. The sauce architecture: a lighter tentsuyu (dashi:soy:mirin at 12:1:1 rather than the stronger dipping sauce ratio of 8:1:1) ensures the tofu isn't overwhelmed. The potato starch coating must be minimal — a light dusting that barely adheres creates a delicate, translucent crust; a thick coating creates a doughy shell. Moisture management before frying is the primary technical challenge: silken tofu is 87% water; the surface must be as dry as possible before starch application.