1 to 1 1/2 cups sliced small white or cremini mushrooms
1 pound soft tofu
drained and crumbled
2 to 3 scallions
sliced
1/2 to 1 teaspoon mild curry powder
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Instructions
Heat the margarine in a large skillet.
Add the mushrooms and cook over medium heat until they are done to your liking.
Turn up the heat to cook away any liquid that has formed.
Add the remaining ingredients and cook over medium heat, stirring frequently, until everything is heated through, about 5 minutes, and serve.
Though tofu is now a household word and quite widely available, it still causes a fair amount of befuddlement.
I call this phenomenon fear of tofu.
The most common complaint I hear is that it is just so bland.
People have told me they think it tastes like soap or a sponge.
I politely refrain from asking them when they last made a meal of soap or sponges, and instead, I point out that tofus blandness can be its greatest asset.
Actually, tofu is sort of like a spongeand I mean that in the most positive sense.
Its absorbent texture helps it soak up the flavors of whatever it is being cooked or seasoned with.
Just as cheese is coagulated from milk, tofu is coagulated from soymilk.
A culturing medium is used to solidify it and form it into rectangular blocks.
Its those quivering white blocks that seem to send tremors of fearor at least extreme reluctanceinto the hearts of many skeptics.
In Natalie Goldbergs classic book, Writing Down the Bones, she relates an amusing saying used by her late Zen teacher, Katagiri Roshi: Fighting the tofu.
This refers to the ego putting up a pointless struggle.
Its fruitless to wrestle with [tofu], goes her analogy.
You get nowhere.
So dont struggle with tofuuse it in simple preparations that harmonize with its basic bland goodness.
But if you honestly cant make peace with it, dont feel bad or guilty.
Tofu skeptics who want to put more soy in their diets can do so in other wonderful ways, as you will see in the list on page 147.