August 28, 2017

Mapo Doufu – a typical Chinese dish



Mapo doufu is a dish made from tofu and minced meat. Originally it came from Sichuan as a dish that is hot and spicy and also with “numbing” spiciness (called “麻辣 / málà”, / má / numb, / là / hot and spicy), which is typical for Sichuan cuisine. The recipe has been varied to many less spicy versions as the dish became increasingly popular all over China and in other countries.

Tofu is prepared from soy bean milk and, according to a legend, its invention originated from accidentally adding gypsum or impure seasalt into soy bean milk, which caused the milk to clot. Tofu is known for more than 2000 years and according to a legend its preparation technique was developed by prince Liu An (179-122 BC), who had some contact with alchemy that aimed at developing medicine that makes it possible to live eternally. Other sources suggest soy milk and bean curd had already been known earlier, before Han dynasty.

Although tofu doesn’t bring eternal life, it may well have prolonged the life in times of food shortage, because particularly its richness in protein can complement nutrition if meat is scarce. The cheap and nutritious tofu was the daily food of poor labor workers, who according to a story about the origin of Mapo Doufu ate this dish first in Chengdu prepared by Liu, the wife of Chen Senfu who owned of a small restaurant in Chengdu in the 19th century (or the wife of Chen Fuchun according to another story). Because Liu was said to be pock marked, she was called “pock marked grandma” or 婆婆 / mázi pópo ( / mázi / pock marked, 婆婆 / pópo / grandma, elderly lady). The dish was named after her, in short: “麻婆豆腐 / mápo dòufǔ”.

Mapo Doufu is prepared from tofu cubes, fried minced beef, broadbean paste, chili and fermented beans as the typical main ingredients. To thicken the sauce, starch is added.

Recipe for Mapo Doufu:
http://www.chinasichuanfood.com/mapo-tofu-recipe/


/ cài / dish



Sources and further reading/watching:
Discovering Chinese cuisine part 4 – Tofu (CCTV9)


No comments:

Post a Comment