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Japan (traditional Japanese restaurant cooking; temple cuisine origins in tofu preparation) Techniques

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Japan (traditional Japanese restaurant cooking; temple cuisine origins in tofu preparation)
Agedashi Tofu Deep Fried Dashi
Japan (traditional Japanese restaurant cooking; temple cuisine origins in tofu preparation)
Agedashi tofu (揚げ出し豆腐, 'deep-fry-drawing tofu') is silken or firm tofu dusted in potato starch (katakuriko) and deep-fried until a thin, lacy, amber crust forms, then served in hot tentsuyu dashi — a light dashi seasoned with soy sauce and mirin. The genius of the dish is what happens when the fried crust meets the hot broth: the starch coating absorbs the dashi, swelling and softening into a translucent, gelatinous, slightly sticky skin that bridges the interior silkiness of the tofu and the exterior crunch that existed briefly before submersion. This textural transformation — from dry crunch to slick swollen starch — is the deliberate and desired outcome. The tofu must be pressed well before frying to remove excess moisture that would cause dangerous oil spatter. The starch coating must be thin and even; too thick produces a gummy paste rather than a delicate crust. Toppings — finely grated daikon, grated ginger, sliced negi, katsuobushi — complete the dish. Agedashi tofu represents the Japanese cooking philosophy of achieving multiple textures in sequence — crunch, then softening, then silkiness — through a single technique.
Cooking Technique