Tag: nigari

  • Making Tofu

    What does making tofu have to do with raising chickens? Nothing directly, except that chickens love homemade tofu as much as I do. They also go nuts over okara, a byproduct of making tofu. So do the dogs. Okara is the soybean solids left after squeezing out the soymilk. The soymilk is what is used for making tofu, but okara is an incredible food on its own. It makes fluffy, moist muffins, delicious pancakes and waffles, mixed with ground beef it makes mouthwatering croquettes, or is delicious on its own with a little ginger and soy sauce.

    The basics of making tofu are crushing soybeans into a slurry, bringing the slurry to boil, squeezing out the soy milk, heating the soy milk, adding nigari to the soy milk to make it curdle, and then pressing the resulting curds into a block.

    I recently learned that a farm on San Juan Island, San Juan Island Sea Salt, is making salt from sea water, and when I heard that, I knew that they also had to be making nigari because nigari is a byproduct of making sea salt. Basically, nigari is what is left when you take the salt out of seawater. It is also called bittern, and is mostly magnesium chloride. Nigari is very bitter. When you taste it, it is so bitter it feels like you are stabbing your tongue with needles. And yet, with their nigari, I detected a sweetness behind the extreme bitterness.

    San Juan Island Sea Salt was very gracious to send me a sample of their nigari. When the sample arrived Saturday morning, I made a batch of tofu in the afternoon and was very pleased with the result. Their nigari is a wonderful product and it’s great to know I have a local source for nigari. The pictures below are ones I took of the process when I made tofu this afternoon. If you need more detailed information about making tofu, feel free to contact me.

    TofuStep01-soybeans
    TofuStep02-soybeans
    TofuStep03-soybeans
    TofuStep04-soybeans
    TofuStep05-soybeans
    TofuStep06-soybeans
    TofuStep07-soybeans
    TofuStep08-soybeans
    TofuStep09-soybeans
    TofuStep10-soybeans
    TofuStep11-soybeans
    TofuStep12-soybeans
    TofuStep13-soymilk
    TofuStep14-okara
    TofuStep15-heating-soymilk
    TofuStep16-nigari
    TofuStep17-nigari
    TofuStep18-heatedsoymilk
    TofuStep19-addingnigari
    TofuStep20-tofucurdling
    TofuStep21-tofucurdling
    TofuStep22-tofucurdling
    TofuStep23-curdledsoymilk
    TofuStep24-tofumold
    TofuStep25-tofumoldcheesecloth
    TofuStep26-bottomofmold
    TofuStep27-bottomofmold
    TofuStep29-bodyofmold
    TofuStep30-ladlecurds
    TofuStep31-ladlecurdsintomold
    TofuStep32-ladlecurds
    TofuStep33-covercurds
    TofuStep34-putontopofmold
    TofuStep35-presstofu
    TofuStep36-bowlofwater
    TofuStep37-pressedtofu
    TofuStep38-removemold
    TofuStep39-puttofuinwater
    TofuStep40-cuttofu
    TofuStep42-tofuready

    Things to watch out for:

    • If possible, use pure non-chlorinated water to soak the beans and make the slurry. Not an easy thing to do if you have public water. If you have a well with good water, count yourself lucky.
    • When bringing the crushed soy slurry to a boil, stir occasionally, and pay very close attention as it nears boiling as it expands greatly and will easily boil over.
    • Don’t boil the soy slurry mix long, a few minutes at most. If you boil it for a long time, it will not curdle as well – at least that has been my experience.