Recipe Research - Mapo Tofu

Recipe Content

Source: https://thewoksoflife.com/ma-po-tofu-real-deal/#recipe

Servings: 6 | Prep: 10 minutes | Cook: 25 minutes | Total: 35 minutes

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. First, we toast the chilies. If you have homemade toasted chili oil, you can skip this step. Heat your wok or a small saucepan over low heat. Add half of the oil and throw in the fresh and dried peppers. Stir occasionally and heat until fragrant, about 5 minutes, ensuring that the peppers don’t burn. Remove from heat and set aside.
  2. Heat the remaining half of the oil in your wok over medium heat. Add the ginger. After 1 minute, add the garlic. Fry for another minute, and then turn up the heat to high and add the ground pork. Break up the meat and fry it until it’s cooked through. Add your ground Sichuan peppercorns and stir for about 15-30 seconds, taking care to not let it burn, as it will turn bitter if it does.
  3. Add the spicy bean sauce to the mixture and stir it in well. Add the chicken broth to the wok and stir. Let this simmer for a minute or so. While that's happening, ready your tofu and combine the water and cornstarch in a small bowl.
  4. Add the cornstarch mixture to your sauce and stir. Let it bubble away until the sauce starts to thicken. (If it gets too thick, splash in a little more water or chicken stock.)
  5. Then add your chili oil from before—peppers and all! If you are using homemade chili oil, ONLY use the standing oil, as it's likely that you have salted it and you only want the oil, not additional salt. Stir the oil into the sauce, and add the tofu. Use your spatula to gently toss the tofu in the sauce. Let everything cook for 3-5 minutes. Add the sesame oil and sugar (if using) along with the scallions and stir until the scallions are just wilted.
  6. Serve with a last sprinkle of Sichuan peppercorn powder as a garnish if desired.

Images

mapo-tofu mapo-tofu2

Recipe Websites

Epicurious

The home page is really modern and friendly, and the search bar is very visible at all times no matter where you are on the page. You always have options to pick from depending on what you want to do, which gives the user lots of control and also freedom.

Omnivore's Cookbook

I like the very homey and authentic vibe this website gives off, and makes sense considering the recipe and cuisine! I think I always want to do something that clearly aligns with the recipe and overall identity.

Budget Bytes"

One of my favorite recipe websites, super easy and intuitive to use. All the recipes are straight to the point, no fluff and provide all the needed information. The colors and visual identity are also very iconic and recognizable.

Non-Recipe Websites

Open Field

A really cool website I found, definitely wouldn’t be the most convenient or simple to implement but that fun factor is something I might like to incorporate in my own design. It instantly draws your attention, and is enjoyable to play around with for a bit.

NY Times

Something that always impresses me is how information is organized on the page, that allows for so many words/articles without being too overwhelming. Recipes are also similar in a way, I’m curious if there are ways to reorganize the website to allow users to digest all the information easier.

Weee!

Wanted to find an Asian/food-adjacent website, and stumbled on the grocery page. Similar style like NYTimes, as there are tons of images and options that are presented neatly for the user to browse through and shop.