Vegan
A community to discuss anything related to veganism.
I fry tofu in a cast iron skillet with a little oil on heat just below the oil's smoke point.
The trick is to just let the tofu sit in place. Do NOT try to flip it. Let it sit until it gets crispy on the frying side. When it does, I use a thin metal pancake-flipping sort of spatula to turn all the pieces. If they are diced (rather than slabs), I start with pieces in the center of the pan, scooping towards an edge and flipping the first flipper-full, then scooping and flipping the sides and so on so I don't disturb the pieces I've already flipped.
I've been using cast iron for years. I'm not even sure how I'd get tofu of tempeh to stick to it.
I just use about a tablespoon on olive oil, heat it to low medium, then put whatever I'm cooking on.
Clean with soap. Leave to dry on stovetop (low heat) for about 5 minutes. If it needs more slide, reapply a tiny bit of oil and smear it around into a thin layer. Turn off the element when it starts smoking.
That's all there is to it.
I think previously I used too much heat and before the pieces could be turned they were already burned. Now with my new carbon steel pan I use lower heat and let food sit for a while and it works great!
Yeah, for heat I pretty much never go over the middle (medium) setting on my stovetop unless I'm boiling water or trying to make a resto style stirfry. I pretty much treat medium as my highest setting for virtually all of my stovetop cooking.
How does carbon steel compared to stainless steel would you say? I don't really have any complaints about stainless if it's oiled and preheated properly.
debuyer makes some lighter carbon steel pans that are easier on your wrists compared to cast iron tanks ☞ https://www.debuyer.com/fr/454-cuisson-acier
we use stainless, carbon and cast iron. Don't torture yourself with cast iron unless you want a workout too while cooking.
I bought a de buyer mineral b in the end and i'm quite happy so far!
🤜🤛