Tuna mapo tofu
Serves: 6
Josh says: “One of my favourite dishes. The spicy sichuan ingredients mixed with the minerality and richness of the tuna and the creaminess of the tofu is such a good match. You won’t miss the traditional recipe once you’ve tried this version.”
You’ll need:
● 1 tablespoon sichuan peppercorns
● 190g fresh ginger, peeled
● 190g garlic cloves, peeled
● 10 French shallots, peeled
● 375g doubanjiang (fermented broad bean paste)
● 300ml grapeseed oil
● 80 ml shaoxing rice wine
● 50g caster sugar
● 125ml tamari
● 1 tablespoon sesame oil
● 1.8 kg minced yellowfin tuna
● 200g silken tofu, cut into small cubes
● 1 bunch spring onions, finely sliced
● 40g toasted sesame seeds
● 1 dried red chilli, finely sliced (optional)
● Steamed short-grain rice, to serve
Method:
1. Toast the sichuan peppercorns in a dry frying pan until fragrant, then use a mortar and pestle to grind to a rough powder. Set aside.
2. Place the ginger, garlic, shallots, doubanjiang and 150ml of the grapeseed oil in a food processor and blitz to a smooth paste.
3. Heat 100ml of the remaining grapeseed oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over a high heat. Add the paste and fry, stirring occasionally, for 8-10 minutes until dried and fragrant, then reduce the heat and simmer for a further 15 minutes, until the rawness from the vegetables has been completely cooked out. Stir in the shaoxing wine, sugar, tamari and one-third of the ground sichuan peppercorns, then spoon the mixture into a large bowl.
4. Wipe out the pan, add the sesame oil and remaining 2½ tablespoons of grapeseed oil and heat over a high heat. Working in two batches, add the tuna mince to the pan and fry for two minutes, or until the mince is coloured and has separated into individual strands, then stir through the fried paste mixture to combine.
5. To assemble the mapo tofu, return the tuna mixture to the saucepan and warm through over a low heat. Add the tofu, cover with a lid and heat for 3 minutes, then spoon into serving bowls. Top with the spring onion, sesame seeds, chilli, if using, and the remaining ground sichuan peppercorns.
6. Serve with steamed rice, if you like.
Josh’s top tip: I don’t expect anyone to be mincing down sashimi-grade yellowfin tuna belly or the centre cut of a potential tuna steak here – instead use the sinew-heavy area or scrappy chunks that come away from behind the tuna head at the top of the loin, along with any tail cuts and scrapings from the frame of the fish. These are the bits that often get tossed away, so it’s great to find a good use for them.