Comfort Food

A Fluffy, Vegan Upgrade to Fried Rice for Any Time of Day

Sponsored
September 20, 2016

We partnered with Amy's to show off Gena Hamshaw's ideas and recipes for how to use their products in simple and flavorful vegan snacks.

Tofu scramble was the first vegan dish I learned to make, which has given it a somewhat special place in my heart. Over time, I’ve watched the dish evolve from being a vegan specialty—the go to alternative to scrambled eggs—to something more mainstream, popular enough that folks who are simply trying to find more ways to enjoy tofu, or to reduce meat consumption, or to find an alternative to eggs, might enjoy it on the regular.

I love it as much now as I did the first time I tried it, and I especially love that nowadays I have the option of using a prepared scramble, which makes it easy to incorporate the dish into all sorts of creative breakfast recipes. There’s so much to like about tofu scramble: the textural contrast of tender tofu and crisp veggies, the fact that it’s inexpensive and nutritious, or the endless variety of what can be done with it.

Tofu scramble and fried rice shake hands, and dinner is served.

When I first started making tofu scramble, I nearly always served it over toast. I still serve it that way (or in a wrap) often, but over time I’ve branched out, and I’ve come to appreciate that tofu scramble doesn’t have to be confined to traditional breakfast accompaniments. One of my favorite ways to transform the simple scramble into a whole meal is to pair it with a cooked whole grain. Sometimes I do this by serving it side-by-side with quinoa pilaf or brown rice, but it can be even more satisfying to fold the grain into the warm scramble itself, while everything is hot in the skillet, so that the ingredients can mingle. Tofu scramble and fried rice shake hands, and dinner is served.

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This is my go to recipe for tofu scramble fried rice. It’s simple and unfussy, nourishing and fast. I tend to have cooked rice sitting in my fridge at any given moment, which makes the preparation particularly quick. If you don’t have rice, you can use pretty much any cooked grain—quinoa, millet, farro, couscous, bulgur wheat—instead. You also can and should start to play around with the vegetable additions and seasonings, depending on what’s in season and what you have at home.

Once the scramble is defrosted, you can simply add it to warm vegetables and the grain. I like to top the dish with a squeeze of Sriracha, a little lime juice, and some chopped scallions, but you can feel free to add toasted nuts, nutritional yeast, or my smoky tempeh strips, which add even more protein and flavor to an already satisfying meal.

Amy's is dedicated to producing high-quality vegetarian, vegan, and frozen packaged foods, from chili and soups to tofu scrambles and wraps, and more. See all their products here.

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The Food52 Vegan Cookbook is here! With this book from Gena Hamshaw, anyone can learn how to eat more plants (and along the way, how to cook with and love cashew cheese, tofu, and nutritional yeast).

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See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Anne Yeoman
    Anne Yeoman
  • piggledy
    piggledy
  • Ttrockwood
    Ttrockwood
Gena is a registered dietitian, recipe developer, and food blogger. She's the author of three cookbooks, including Power Plates (2017) and Food52 Vegan (2015). She enjoys cooking vegetables, making bread, and challenging herself with vegan baking projects.

4 Comments

Anne Y. January 11, 2019
I wasn't clear. I have no problem with sponsored content, such as the links to techniques and recipes. It's just that now, 80% of the space/text/pics in each email is devoted to marketing F52 products or partner products, such as tools, accessories, lifestyle stuff. The recipes and their often very charming narratives are a minor part of the feed. The same thing happened with Cooking Light and Cook's Illustrated, and others. I understand the market earnings imperative but it's not why I subscribed.
 
piggledy January 11, 2019
By all means, use sponsored content. This was well identified, and introduced a concept/product I was unaware of. I am very interested in how one may make their own tofu scramble, though I can probably figure it out for myself.

I am grateful for sponsored content when it means it makes it possible to sustain a website which I enjoy. I cannot often afford to purchase the lovely kitchen items which also serve to fund this site, but am happy to accept sponsored content, especially when it is well written, and introduces products and ideas which readers like me may wish to know more about.
 
Anne Y. January 10, 2019
I agree about the sponsored content. This one is just a little more obvious than the others. I've looked for a way to send an email complaining that the recipes have increasingly played second fiddle to marketing. (I don't do FB, twitter, instagram, etc.) Getting to the point where there's not much reason to open the email. Thinking seriously of unsubscribing.
 
Ttrockwood September 21, 2016
This is obnoxious. The recipe does sound delicious but I don't want to read recipes that are commercials on websites that already have ads everywhere!
No "sponsored " recipes please.