Let us address the elephant in the room, or more accurately, the white block of soybean curd sitting in your refrigerator that you are vaguely afraid of: tofu tastes bland. This is not a myth, not an exaggeration, and not something that can be solved by “just believing in it harder.” Raw, unseasoned tofu has approximately the same flavor intensity as a damp paper towel.
But here is the critical insight that changes everything: tofu is bland on purpose. This is not a flaw. It is a feature. Tofu was invented in China over 2,000 years ago not as a standalone ingredient, but as a flavor vehicle — a protein-rich, neutral canvas designed to absorb and amplify whatever seasonings, sauces, and aromatics you surround it with. Complaining that tofu is bland is like complaining that a canvas is white before you paint on it.
The problem is not tofu. The problem is that most Western home cooks treat tofu the way they would treat a chicken breast — open the package, throw it in a pan, and expect it to taste good on its own. Tofu does not work that way. It needs three things that most people skip:
- Water removal (pressing). Tofu is approximately 80% water. That water is occupying space that could be filled with marinade, seasoning, and flavor. Every drop of water you leave in the tofu is a drop of flavor you cannot add. Pressing is not optional — it is the foundation of every successful tofu dish.
- Aggressive seasoning. Because tofu is a neutral sponge, it needs more seasoning than you think. Where you might use ½ teaspoon of salt for chicken, you need a full teaspoon for tofu. Where you might use 1 tablespoon of soy sauce, you need 2. Tofu absorbs seasoning, which means the surface concentration dilutes as flavors migrate inward. Season boldly.
- High-heat cooking with proper technique. Tofu needs a crust. Without high heat to create a golden, crispy exterior, you are left with that unappealing soft, jiggly texture that gives tofu its terrible reputation. The crust provides textural contrast, concentrated flavor, and visual appeal.
The Sponge Science
Tofu is made by coagulating soy milk with a mineral salt (traditionally nigari, which is magnesium chloride) or calcium sulfate. This creates a protein gel matrix — a three-dimensional network of soy proteins with water trapped in the spaces between them. The firmness of tofu depends on how much water is pressed out during production: silken tofu retains the most water, extra-firm the least. When you press tofu at home, you are continuing this process — collapsing the protein matrix to expel water and create denser, firmer tofu that browns better and absorbs more flavor.