Tuesday, July 7, 2009

How To Make Tau Huay (Tofu Fa): Featuring the Si Chuan Dou Hua Recipe


Homemade Tau Huay using the recipe from Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant

Why Bother?

You might be wondering, "Why bother to make Tau Huay when it is so cheap and you can buy it just about anywhere?" Well, I can think of three reasons. First, there is a certain "Wow" factor about Tau Huay especially if you can serve it fresh at home to your friends. Secondly, when you make your own Tau Huay, you can use organically grown soybeans to ensure that you get the best tasting and nutritious Tau Huay. Thirdly, once you mastered this skill, you can start to experiment with many interesting twists like adding vanilla pods, green tea or even Baileys to the soymilk. Oh, did I mention that Tau Huay is my wife's all time favourite dessert? All these years and I am still trying to impress her.

In this post, I hope to share with you what I have learnt about Tau Huay making so that you too can make Tau Huay as smooth as those in Dim Sum restaurants right in your own at home.

According to our polls last year, Tau Huay is Singapore's favourite dessert. There is a certain level of mystique surrounding this, most traditional of Chinese desssert whose secret seems to be closely guarded by a select few. Yes, there are lots of bean curd stalls sprouting up all over the island selling fresh Bean Curd, but there are only a few stalls who can achieve a level of mystique like Rochor Bean Curd whose Tau Huay is regarded by many to be the best in Singapore. Part of the mystique surrounding Rochor, apart from the family rivalry, is its use of the traditional Gypsum powder or Shi Gao to make the Tau Huay. Gypsum, which has been traditionally used for more than 2000 years and partly responsible for producing the 1.3 billion Chinese today, has been having some bad rep for being the cause of kidney stones. So for some people, eating Tau Huay made with Gypsum is like eating Fugu where you suspect that it might kill you but heck, its so good you'd take a risk. (More about this point later)

Although I like the smooth texture of Rochor Bean Curd, I have always felt that there is a lack of soybean fragrance in the bean curd. Most of the best Bean Curds I have eaten have been in Dim Sum Restaurants (overseas mostly), including the Si Chuan Dou Hua restaurant which in my opinion sells one of the smoothest Bean Curd in Singapore. For me, a great Bean Curd must not only be smooth, but it has to be firm enough to be chiseled and at the same time, there must be a fragrant beany flavour. Since I can't get this Tau Huay unless I go to a Dim Sum restaurant, I decided that I would try to make it myself at home and try to debunk this Bean Curd myth once and for all. After all, there are only two ingredients in Tau Huay: Soybeans and coagulant. So it can't be all that difficult right?

Wrong!

Bean Curd making is really more like a science than an art. I say this categorically after I have been trying to make Bean Curd almost everyday for over a month. It is true that Bean Curd is basically soybean milk that has been curdled. But as I have found out (the hard way), there is a technique involved which need to be followed religiously. This is a dish that a Chemist will be able to do very well! If you think about it, the process of turning a bean into a jelly is akin to what they are doing in Molecular Gastronomy nowadays. So, it is not far fetched to say that Bean Curd is one of the earliest forms of Molecular Gastronomy!

So I decided to make my own Tau Huay

As with many things nowadays, my search for a Tau Huay recipe started with an internet search. If you google "How to make Tofu Fa" you will get to see quite a few recipes. I think I must have read almost every site there is on making Tau Huay. The recipe from most sites seem to be quite standard. It calls for 25o grams of soybeans processed with 2 litres of water, filtered and boiled, then added to 1 teaspoon of gypsum powder and 1 teaspoon of cornflour. Some use a shortcut method which means that they buy ready made soybean milk and just add the coagulant. I have tried many of these recipes but even when I succeed in getting the soymilk to set, the texture of the bean curd was a far cry from what they serve in the best Tau Huay places.

After two to three weeks of near consistent failure, I was about to give up and leave Tau Huay on its hallowed altar. It was then that I decided to pluck up the courage to ask Linda from Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant if she would be willing to give me a few pointers on how their Dim Sum chefs make their famous Tau Huay. To my surprise, Linda responded quickly with a recipe which I could try at home! After that, I managed to pick up a few more tips from Chef William of Copthorne King's Hotel and also Chef Han of Meritus Mandarin, while filming for Buzzing Cashier. That was really the turning point of my Bean Curd adventure and after a few successful pots of Tau Huay, I have now reached a point where I am confident enough to pen down all the important points which I have learnt, so that whoever wants to make Tau Huay can achieve it in a much shorter time than I did. I hope that Tau Huay enthusiasts and experts out there can also chip in and add onto the pool of knowledge by writing what you know in the comments section.

So rather than giving you just a recipe, I am going to try to list down the some important tips on Tau Huay so that you can also work out what went wrong when your Tau Huay doesn't set properly. Let me encourage you, you will fail a few times, but the numerous failures only makes the success sweeter.


The coagulants: Lactone and Gypsum

About the Coagulants: Gypsum and Lactone

Before we lose the readers who do not want to make their own Tau Huay, just a quick word on the coagulants. In Singapore, there are essentially two coagulants you can buy. The more traditional is Gypsum powder which is essentially Calcium Sulphate, a chemical which occurs naturally as rock. It is the same stuff that you make plaster walls out of, which is why a lot of people believe that taking too much calcium will lead to kidney stones. This is true. BUT you have to consider that when you make Tau Huay, you are adding around 1000mg of calcium sulphate to every litre of soymilk. Since the daily requirement of calcium for an adult is 1000mg, you will need to take four bowls of Tau Huay in order to get enough calcium for the whole day. If you want to grow some kidney stones, you will have to exceed this amount by quite a bit and do that for an extended period of time before you have some kidney stones which you can show off on an Xray!

Gypsum is available at your friendly neighbourhood medicinal shop (Yo Chai Tiam). But you have to be careful as there are two versions. The Gypsum that you want is the "cooked" version. If you buy the "raw" version, which is used in Chinese medicine as a "cooling" agent. Your Tau Huay will not set and you will be very frustrated, wondering what happened. (I learnt that the hard way too). Incidentally, if you buy "cooling water", that is essentially water with a bit of Gypsum dissolved in it. The cooked Gypsum looks a bit greyish and more grainy than the raw Gypsum.

The other coagulant you can buy is Glucono delta Lactone (GDL) or Lactone for short. This is available from Phoon Huat. If you speak to some Bean Curd makers, they might mention that they use fruit pectin to make their Tau Huay. That is essentially what Lactone is called in Chinese. You can read it on the label itself. Lactone is the more popular coagulant which is supplied to most stalls selling bean curd as it is easier to use. This is also a "natural" coagulant since it is made by fermenting glucose. Lactone gives a smoother, more jelly like texture, while Gypsum gives a softer, more custardlike texture. The thing that I don't quite like about Lactone is that it does give the bean curd a bit of a sourish taste if you add too much of it. Gypsum is tasteless.

The following slideshow will give a step-by-step account of how to make your Tau Hway at home. The recipe is from Sze Chuan Dou Hua and the technique is a summary of all the things I learnt from reading the net and talking to the experts.

Si Chuan Dou Hua Bean Curd Recipe:

500g Soybeans
2.5 litres water
3.5g Lactone (1/4 teaspoon is approx 1 g Lactone)
150ml water

It is interesting to note that the Si Chuan Dou Hua Recipe uses double the amount of beans compared to all the recipes on the internet.


Ieat's Tau Huay Recipe:

The recipe as above but use 2 teaspoons of Gypsum instead of Lactone

Important Notes:


1. The quality of beans will affect the taste of the bean curd. So since you are going to put all that effort into making your own Tau Huay, go and buy some nice organic beans!

2. By removing the skin, you get rid of that waxy taste. This step is optional, but since you want to make your Tau Huay, you might as well spend another 5 minutes doing this.

3. Some recipes tell you to cook the slurry first then filter. But traditionally, soybean milk is filtered then cooked. There is a good reason for this. Heat deactivates some of enzymes in outer layers of the bean. These enzymes are actually needed to produce that beany flavour. The westerners don't like this but we Asians do. So, if you buy Soymilk produced in the US, you always find it doesn't taste like the soymilk we are used to. That is because, when they process their soymilk, they will blanch the beans first the deactivate the enzyme that gives the beany taste. I have cooked it both ways and I find that you should just stick to filter than cook as it is easier and gives a better fragrance.

4. It is vitally important that the soymilk is stirred and brought to the boil slowly to avoid burning the milk. Burnt Tau Huay is yuckly! (You can tell I am talking from experience right?)

5. It is important to simmer the milk for 10 minutes after you bring it to a boil in order to bring out the full flavour and fragrance of the soy milk.

6. The best temperature to coagulate the soymilk is 85 degrees celcius. Don't pour boiling soymilk directly into the coagulant. There will be too many bubbles and it will affect the texture of the Bean Curd. If you do not have a thermometer, let it rest for 5 minutes before pouring it in. When you pour, you are trying to produce turbulence so that the coagulant mixes with the milk properly. Don't stir the milk once it is poured as coagulation starts almost immediately.

7. You can tell almost immediately if your Tau Huay is going to work. If the surface looks nice and smooth, either you are ok or there is too little coagulant. If it breaks ie precipitates to solids and water, then you have put too much coagulant. If you have too little coagulant, your Tua Huay will be like a thick milkshake.

8. Using a cloth to cover the bowl will prevent condensation droplets falling onto the surface of your Tau Huay.

9. The behavior of Lactone is different from Gypsum. It is more forgiving when it comes to texture, but not taste. If you add too much lactone, it just gets firmer but the taste is sour and quite unpalatable. I have found that 1 teaspoon of Lactone is roughly equivalent to 2 teaspoons of Gypsum.


Lactone gives a smoother jellylike texture, while Gypsum gives a fluffier, custardy texture

11. Gypsum as a very narrow window of success. Too little and the soybean milk just remains a thick liquid. Too much and the milk curdles and you can forget about your Tau Huay and proceed to drain the water and press it to make Tau Kwa. The window in between where the Tau Huay sets like silk is very narrow. So it is vitally important that you measure your beans and coagulant precisely. Do use a proper measuring teaspoon rather than a teaspoon that you use to stir your coffee. And remember 1 tablespoon is equal to 3 teaspoons, not 2.

12. Tau Huay is made by coagulating soybean protein. So the amount of bean protein to coagulant is critical. The amount of water can be adjusted to the texture you want. So if you find that your Tau Huay is too hard, add more water, but keep the amount of bean and water constant. By far the most important point in making Tau Huay is the ratio of the bean to the coagulant.

13. A lot of the recipes on the net call for the addition of Potato Starch or Cornflour. I haven't figured out exactly why because the recipe that I use does not have it and the texture is excellent. The only reason I can think of is that it is used to thicken the milk in recipes which uses a smaller bean to water ratio.

14. I have found that it is important to keep the temperature at around 85 degrees during the coagulation period. This is no problem if you are making 5 litres of Tau Huay, but if you are doing 1 litre or even half a litre, then it is vitally important that you buy one of those rice warmers so that the temperature does not drop too fast. I find that it is easier to make at least 2 litres at one go. When you play with small amounts like 250mls because you don't want to waste the soymilk, your margin for error when measuring the coagulant is very narrow.

15. If you wish to skip the laborious work of making your own soymilk you can buy soymilk from stalls which make their own milk. Then you have to work out the amount of coagulant based on the observations I provided in point 11. That is because different stalls might use different amount of beans and the machines used in extracting the soya milk might differ. If you use soymilk like off the supermarket shelves, do note that they usually add extra soybean oil and emulsifiers to give it that creamy texture.


Spoonful of silky smooth Tau Huay made with Gypsum.

Conclusion

It is my hope that this post will enable anyone out there to make good Tau Huay. I don't think my Tau Huay is quite perfect yet, but it is good enough as a starting block to work towards perfection. I hope that some enterprising person might just start making Tau Huay with the texture of Rochor's but with a nice lingering beany taste and a bouquet that you can savour. It would be great if we can get a Tau Huay that can rival the best in Hong Kong right here in our Hawker centres! I don't think it is too difficult as it just calls for a bit of passion and better quality beans.

Now, if you have been patiently reading my post till this point and are feeling a little overwhelmed by the amount of work it takes to make a good Tau Huay, but still wish you could just pop into the kitchen and whip up something quick. Then this is what you do. Buy some Sobe brand unsweetened soymilk. Measure out 300ml of soymilk and add 200ml of water to make 500ml. Put it in the microwave for around 6 mins until it starts to boil. Let it settle for a few minutes and then add it to 1/4 teaspoon of Lactone that has been dissolved in water. It is not as great as the recipe above, but it will satisfy that craving especially if you are overseas and the nearest Tau Huay stall requires a passport to get to!

I look forward to hearing some good reports from you and please write in the comments to share what you have learnt or if you have additional points to add.

Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Linda from Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant who graciously shared her recipe with us! If you are too lazy to make your own Tau Huay, this is one of the best Tau Huays you can find in Singapore! And don't forget that their $18 High Tea with Dim Sum pairing special (one set free for every 3 sets) for ieatishootipost readers is still on!

Update: 21 Jul 2009



Finally managed to buy a proper packet of "Cooked" Gypsum Powder! Haven't tried it yet, but it looks a bit greyish instead of pure white, so it should be right. After all it says 熟石膏 on the packet, so it should be right. But really can't guarantee anything until I try it.

Oh btw, I had one failure last week when trying to make a batch of Tau Huay. I made the soy bean milk in the morning and tried to coagulate it in the afternoon, but it came out rough instead of smooth. I suspect it has something to do with leaving the soybean milk for too long. Chef Han from Meritus mentioned once before that the making of Tau Huay must be a continuous process. The next day I made another batch using the same Gypsum Powder but this time I did not stop in between and it came out beautifully. Does anyone here have a similar experience?

You can buy this gypsum powder at San Teck Soon Medical Hall at Hong Lim Complex, #01-53. it costs $6.50 and will last you forever!

29 comments:

Blur Ting said...

Oh, that's alot of work. Wifey must be suitably impressed!

tj han said...

Yeah GDL is basically just to reduce the pH so that certain soy proteins coagulate, we learnt that at school lol! But you're probably the only person I know who has bothered to try making.

Speaking of Rochor, I actually like their chinchow quite a bit, and everytime a family member or myself passes by the area, I'll make sure to get at least 5 cups of it to last a few days.

ieat said...

Yes tj, you can also coagulate soy proteins with vinegar or lemonjuice.

Fresh Fry aka 福星 said...

OMG....it's really science! i've no pointers to share for making tau-huay but i do think you can use this line for this entry now......

"If Dr Tay can make tau-huay, so can you!"

*cues studio music*

hehehehe......

ieat said...

Yes Blur Ting, my wife is very fussy about her Tau Huay. After putting in so much time and effort into it, I eventually got her approval.

tj han said...

I dug up some of my old notes to share the info.

When soybeans are processed into soy flour, we are mainly getting 3 major fractions of proteins - 11S (glycinin), 7S (conglycinin) and 2S, in order of decreasing molecular size. 11S and 7S are the ones which are responsible for gel formation and aggregation as they are large proteins, 300-350 kDa and 180-210 kDa respectively. The networks they form after coagulation trap water.

2S is used as a foaming and emulsification agent to either create a liquid-gas phase or disperse oil phase as bubbles.

The main coagulation mechanism for soybean protein is the oxidation of the cysteine amino acid's SH side chain, with another of its kind, to produce a disulphide bond which is heat stable.Hence the lower the pH, the greater the hardness.

GDL converts over time to gluconic acid, a weak acid, to drop the pH, which is why the sour taste is present even if you don't taste it at the start.

Marianne said...

Hi,thanks for sharing this article you have inspired me to make my own tau huay too! Wondering where you purchased the wooden tub and tau huay scoop? Thank you!

Also I find serving the tau huay with ginger syrup (like in Hong Kong) another very delicious variation.

ieat said...

Hi Marianne,

Great! Join the Home Tau Huay club! Yes, I have used ginger syrup, wolfberry syrup, pandan syrup. My latest is rocksugar syrup. Next Baileys in cold Tau Huay.

You don't really need the wooden tub, but for $30+ it really does celebrate all that effort to make the Tau Huay. You can easily get rice warmers from your neighbourhood stores at $10-$15. Your rice cooker will also suffice.

I got my tub at Sia Huat along Temple street. They also have the bean curd scoops.

Holy Drummer said...

Tau Huay thesis...

ieat said...

Thanks for the info tj.

Do you know how long you are supposed to leave the tau huay to set for lactone? And how do we minimise the sour taste?

What proportion of beans to lactone did they suggest for Tau Huay?

fish fry said...

Is it possible to mention the chinese terms you use when you buy gypsum or lactone at the medical shop?

Great post, overseas singaporeans are indebted to you.

cactuskit said...

Amazing tanacity you have Les. You nailed your pizza crust when you set your mind to it, and now this tau huay recipe. Take my hats off, seriously. I doubt I'll make my own tau huay. I'd rather drop by your place when you make a tub. : ). Keep up the good work.

tj han said...

Sorry I'm afraid I do not know. After all, education is Talking Soldiers on Paper, if you get what I mean. For such details, I'm sure a person who has never made a single beancurd like myself wouldn't know!

jencooks said...

Serius stuff in the making of that PERFECT Tau Hway. You have been searching for the best tau hway in town and now you scored a perfect one yourself; My respect for the great effort and thanks for sharing such a traditional receipe with us, the perfect one too, I mean. Also tj han, you have unearthed the scientific explanation lol.

Hannah said...

Great determination there, ieat!

Maybe you can start working on an ieat-cookbook and get contributions from ieaters & chefs? Can be a fund-raising project for charity. I'll buy!

soundman said...

Do you top off your tau huay with syrup? The Rochor/Geylang stalls uses an orangeish syrup which is frangrant, setting them apart from the market stalls. Also, their tau huay are still consumeable after 2 days in the fridge (of course not that fresh) which those from the markets go lumpy after a day.

ieat said...

Thanks Cactuskit, Jencooks, Hannah. My Momma always said "if you want to do something, do it properly, or else don't do it!" I guess as a kid I also observed how she kept doing her Chiffon Cake until she succeeded. Our parents have a great influence on our lives.

Fresh Fry, when you go to the Medicinal shop, ask for Shi Gao or Jio Gor (Rock powder). Oh your little phrase sounds a lot like Martin Yan.

I am hoping to hear some reports on successful Home Tau Huays soon!

ieat said...

Soundman, the syrup is the easy part. The orangy syrup can be made with orange coloured sugar like the ones you get with Putu Mayam. I made many different syrups rangingfrom Rock Sugar, gula melaka, wolfberries, pandan, ginger and honey. Even with honey, you can go into Korean, NZ etc, each has its own flavour and is much better for you than sugar. Baileys, Orange Liquour and other liquour should go quite well too. I am also thinking of using tea flavoured syrups like green tea, oolong or even flower scented syrups like Rose, lavendar. The list is endless!

oinkoink said...

A simple Tau Huay, but quite a lot of work.

-Pong-

food-4tots said...

It's a great write-up! You have saved me a lot of time doing research for this topic. Maybe I should ask my hubby to give it a try since it is my all-time favourite. *Day dream* ;)

ieat said...

Thanks!

Man, I don't know how many husbands I got into trouble!

cherns said...

I remember reading a news article on Rochor tau huay and how they add plaster of paris to achieve the super smooth texture... would that be the same as using gypsum?

ieat said...

Yes, plaster of paris is gypsum

cactuskit said...

You just got me into trouble. Wife just ordered me to learn from you! : (

ieat said...

You mean its trouble to come visit a friend, play around with some kitchen utensils and TKSS?

liverpool1965 said...

visited ieat today and he gave me a personal tutorial on how to make a good tub of tau huay!...easier than trying to make taukwa stop talking! or trying to stop cactuskit or mien from eating! :)

ieat said...

Well we are all waiting to see your Tau Huay being served at Nanyang Cafe!

Anonymous said...

Hi !

I tried this stuff everyday for over 2 months now and never success.Today I try this recipe and when I pour the soy milk in,I see some curdled milk already.And after 60 min,I get a pot of hard,curdled soy.I have to press them into Tau Kwa.I did measure the coagulant and bean like u said.I wonder what I did wrong ? :-( feeling like giving up! Help me!

I enjoy your post very much! It's so cool!Thank you for the notes!

Chloe

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