August 19, 2008
Soba noodles with baked tofu crisps
I am posting this dish for the JFI-Soya event by Sia of Monsoon Spice.
Buckwheat/Soba noodles are a good source of protein, iron and fiber and very commonly used in Japanese cuisine.
They are much darker than the regular noodles, and yes, I am taking the advice about- brown vs. white food (brown eggs, brown bread, brown rice, oh yeah... and we have buckwheat noodles). The browner the better!
I dont have a great knowledge of Japanese food but I have come to love vegetarian sushi, miso soup (tradional Japanese soup), and those little desserts that my friend used to make from rice flour and beans. She is a great cook and she was the one who introduced me to Japanese cooking. There has been a great many tastings liberally shared by her during our best times together. Her presentations are just impeccable. I just wish I had spent more time learning about Japanese food and food in general from her.
My recipe, Buckwheat noodles with baked tofu crisps leans more towards the Indian version of noodles which I have tasted in Chinese restaurants in India. They taste great, but would'nt vouch for the nutritional/healthy aspect of it. I had to throw in the Tofu crisps, just because I am vegetarian, they are nutritious & taste good together with the noodles.
You could of course substitute chicken or any other protein that deem fit.
And the best thing about making noodles... the wok! Those wide open large pans, make that non-stick, because I ain't making an oil pool to drench my noodles.
Buckwheat noodles with baked tofu crisps
Ingredients:
Buckwheat noodles - 1 pack (just enough so you can wrap your hands around the bundle)
Julienne cut Cabbage - 2 cups
Julienne cut Carrots - 1 cup
Julienne cut green pepper - 1 cup
Julienne cut green onions - 1 cup
Finely sliced green chillies - 1 tbsp
Cilantro - 1/4 cup
Dill - 1 tbsp
Extra firm tofu - 1 pack
Freshly ground pepper - 1 tbsp
Chilly powder - 1/4 tsp
Salt - To taste
Olive Oil - 3 tbsp
Method:
Baked tofu: Cut tofu cubes of 1/2 inch thickness, toss with a tablespoon of oil, 1/2 tsp of salt, and 1/2 tsp of chilly powder. Lay it out on a flat baking tray in one layer and bake at 400F for 30 min. Keep checking after 20 min till it turns golden brown and crispy.
Noodles:
Cook noodles according to package instructions. Drain and rinse in cold water (if mentioned in the package), add a tablespoon of oil, mix to prevent noodles from sticking to each other and set aside.
Heat oil in a wok/ wide pan on a little higher than medium-high heat.
Add the chilly powder to the oil and then immediately toss in the carrots, saute till partially cooked, then add the cabbage and chillies.
Add salt and black pepper.
Saute with baked tofu, green bell pepper, cilantro, and dill.
Add the cooked noodles and follow with green onions just after turning off the heat.
Transfer to a plate and serve hot.
Hey Noodles looks real gud with soya chunks...I'm feel hungry looking at the picture ;)...
ReplyDelete& thanks for passing the Prawn recipe to someone else :-)
Hey divya .. i loved your noodles, pic looks awesome ..
ReplyDeleteComikng to okra,
choose the tender once, cuz they are less slimy.
do not overcook the okra, overcooking makes it slimy ..
I bake okra in the oven for about 8-10 mins before stir frying in oil. this reduces the slimy substance
another trick i follow, dont know if it works, i dont cut okra into very small slices, my okra is usuallu cut into 1 inch long pieces or even a little longet that that ..
also, add salt only after okra is completely cooked
Let me know, if it works .. if u need to know anything else, mail me at vegetable.platter@gmail.com
Cheers
Deepthi
Noodles are looking gr8. Nice pic too. Tofu is looking like paneer. Really yum recipe.
ReplyDeleteThats a healthy meal Divya, looks mouth watering, making me hungry :)
ReplyDeleteNoodles are looking yumm yumm and gr8.Nice pics.
ReplyDelete