Chickpea Tofu

⚠️ Untested Recipe: This recipe hasn’t been tested yet. Measurements and instructions may need adjustment. Homemade tofu made from chickpea flour. Versatile protein base for frying, baking, or air-frying. Ingredients 100 g chickpea (gram) flour (3½ oz / generous 1 cup) ½ tsp salt 1 tbsp nutritional yeast (15 ml) 200 ml water (7 fl oz / ¾ cup) additional 200 ml water (7 fl oz) for boiling Instructions To a mixing bowl, add the chickpea flour, salt, nutritional yeast and 200 ml water. Whisk to combine. In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring 200 ml water to the boil. Turn down the heat and pour in the chickpea flour mixture. Now, this is the part where you whisk very quickly for 5 minutes, otherwise the chickpea mix will start to stick to the bottom of the pan and be a bit of a pain to clean off. You’re looking for a thick, glossy texture which is still pourable, but only just pourable! Once this has been achieved, take it off the heat. Immediately pour the mixture into a glass food container and smooth out the top with the back of a spoon, so it’s nice and even. Leave to set in the fridge for at least 1 hour, then you should be able to use it right away. After one hour, test to see if it lifts cleanly away from the side of the container with a knife, if not, leave to set for longer. Carefully upturn it onto a chopping board and give it a little wiggle to release. Cut it into 2 cm (¾ in) cubes, or your shape of choice, then either use right away or store in the fridge for up to 4 days. Notes Cooking: When you’re ready to cook it, experiment with baking, pan-frying or air-frying! Just make sure to give it a coating of cornflour, so the edges get nice and crispy. Pan-fry in olive oil, then add a little tamari towards the end of cooking for some salty, umami goodness. ...

January 12, 2026 · 2 min · Stefan

Red Lentil Tofu

⚠️ Untested Recipe: This recipe hasn’t been tested yet. Measurements and instructions may need adjustment. Soy-free tofu alternative made from red split lentils. No overnight soaking required. Use in curries, stir-fries, bean or pasta dishes, or enjoy on its own with dipping sauce. Ingredients 100 g red split lentils (3½ oz / scant ½ cup) 1 tbsp nutritional yeast (15 ml) ½ tsp salt 300 ml water (10 fl oz / 1¼ cups) Instructions Pour the red lentils into a medium, heatproof bowl and cover with plenty of boiling water (the lentils will start to expand, so pour a good 10 cm / 4 in over them!). Soak for 45 minutes. Once soaked, drain the lentils, rinse them, and add to a blender with the nutritional yeast, salt and water. Blend until no lumps remain and you have a smooth, salmon-coloured liquid. Heat a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan or casserole on medium heat, then pour in the lentil mixture and whisk for 5-7 minutes until it’s thickened to a smooth paste. The mixture should be thick enough to stick to the whisk in globs. If it isn’t thick enough, keep heating and whisking. Grab a glass food storage container or silicone mould (5 × 5 in is a perfect size, however it doesn’t have to be square, a rectangle is fine) and pour the mixture in. Smooth it out on top so it’s even, then leave to cool for 1 hour in the fridge. Once cooled, pop the lid on and store in the fridge for up to 5 days. Notes Cooking: When you’re ready to eat it, upturn the container onto a chopping board and slice into rough 2 cm (¾ in) cubes (or any other shape of choice). Make sure to coat the red lentil tofu in cornflour, spices of choice and seasonings before either baking, air-frying or pan-frying. Pan-fry in plain cornflour, then add a splash of tamari towards the end as the edges start to crisp up nicely. ...

January 12, 2026 · 2 min · Stefan