Boil

Vermicelli Tofu Salad With Peanut Sauce From Lara Lee

August  7, 2023
5
2 Ratings
Photo by Louise Hagger
  • Prep time 15 minutes
  • Cook time 10 minutes
  • Serves 2 to 3
Author Notes

As Lara Lee writes in A Splash of Soy, “This vermicelli noodle and tofu salad recipe is inspired by ketoprak, a dish so popular in Jakarta that the street-food vendors have usually sold out by 2pm. It’s so delicious that swathes of school children race out of the door as the two o’clock bell rings marking the end of the school day, and rush down to the vendors in an attempt to catch the last of the food cart’s supply.

“This iconic dish is eaten by many people as a way to start their day. It’s traditionally served with fried tofu, steamed rice cake (lontong), cabbage, vermicelli, beansprouts, cucumber, and a generous serving of peanut sauce spiked with garlic and chiles.

“The kettle is your friend in this no-cook version: boiling water makes instant peanut sauce, softens the rice vermicelli, blanches the edamame and warms through the cubes of tofu in one fell swoop. You can swap the edamame for frozen peas.”

A few more tips: Kecap manis is a palm sugar-sweetened fermented soy sauce, a savory, caramel-y staple in Indonesian cooking. It’s well worth picking up at Asian markets or online, or Lara suggests this substitute: equal parts dark soy sauce and coconut sugar or brown sugar, stirred together. If your noodles are still too firm at the end of soaking, you can heat them (with the soaking water and other goodies) in a pot until they’re the texture you’re looking for, a minute or two, then drain. —Genius Recipes

Test Kitchen Notes

Recipe adapted slightly from A Splash of Soy: Everyday Food from Asia (Bloomsbury Publishing, June 13, 2023). —Food52

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • For the instant peanut sauce:
  • 3/4 cup peanut butter (crunchy or creamy)
  • 3 tablespoons kecap manis (see tips above)
  • 1 garlic clove, peeled and crushed, or 1 teaspoon garlic paste
  • 2 teaspoons fresh ginger, peeled and grated or ginger paste (optional)
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons sambal oelek or sriracha, to taste
  • 2 teaspoons tamarind paste or the juice of ½ lime, plus more to taste
  • For the vermicelli tofu salad:
  • 4 ounces dried rice vermicelli noodles
  • 1/3 cup frozen edamame beans, shelled (soybeans)
  • 5 ounces smoked or marinated tofu, patted dry and cut into ¾-inch cubes
  • 2/3 cup bean sprouts (optional)
  • 1 avocado, skin removed, pitted, and cut into wedges
  • 1 (1 ½-inch) piece English cucumber, halved lengthways, seeded and sliced
  • Kecap manis, for drizzling (see tips above)
  • 2 tablespoons crispy fried onions (optional; store-bought are fine)
  • Lime wedges, to serve
  • 1/4 medium-heat red chile, sliced diagonally (optional; seed if you prefer less heat)
  • Shrimp chips or root vegetable chips, to serve
Directions
  1. Make the instant peanut sauce: Put a kettle on (or boil a large pot of water). Put the peanut butter, kecap manis, garlic, ginger (if using), sambal, and tamarind or lime juice in a heatproof bowl. Add ¼ cup hot boiling water and stir with a fork until combined. It can look split at first, but keep stirring until homogenized. Peanut sauce thickens as it sits, so loosen the sauce with water to a thick pourable consistency for serving, if needed.
  2. Read the dried vermicelli noodle packet instructions to see if they need to be cooked on the stovetop or submerged in boiling water. If they cook when submerged, put them in a large heatproof bowl along with the edamame beans, beansprouts (if using) and tofu cubes. Pour boiling hot water over everything until submerged, then leave to sit for 3 to 4 minutes, or until the noodles are cooked and the tofu and edamame are warmed through, then drain.
  3. If the noodles don’t cook when submerged and have a required cook time, follow the package instructions to cook and drain the noodles. Put the kettle on again to soak the edamame beans, beansprouts (if using) and tofu cubes in a heatproof bowl, as above.
  4. Divide the peanut sauce between two serving bowls. Put the noodles on top, along with the edamame beans, bean sprouts (if using), avocado, tofu and cucumber. Drizzle generously with kecap manis, then garnish with the chips, fried onions, lime wedges and chile slices. Serve immediately.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • CrystalFeder
    CrystalFeder
  • Umami Chef
    Umami Chef
Genius Recipes

Recipe by: Genius Recipes

2 Reviews

CrystalFeder March 17, 2024
The most incredible dressing.
 
Umami C. August 28, 2023
My husband and I greatly enjoyed this recipe. I largely made this recipe as written but subbed a few things due to making this solely off of what we had available in-house. The sauce was made as written and was perfect. I made our own marinated tofu (used a whole 14oz block) and subbed water chestnuts for the edamame and bean sprouts. Topped with avocado, cucumber, and homemade crispy fried shallots. Was a very satisfying noodle dish that we'll certainly make again.