Hi everyone,
I've been making tofu for a while, starting from home-made soy milk from dried beans.
Originally I was using gypsum/calcium sulfate which is the coagulant for the traditional tofu. Recently moved up to GDL which is an absolute game changer for me.
I usually use 1.5% GDL relative to dried bean weight, and so far, I have been making my soy milk with a 1:5.5 bean (dry weight) to water ratio.
So for instance, when making 4000mL soy milk, I will use 730g soy milk (dry weight), and coagulate with 11g of GDL.
The tofu that comes out produces a slight sour note, as GDL is an acid, and thought that was just an unavoidable trade-off.
That was until a new container (that I make the tofu fa in) arrived and I was dying to test it out in the laziest way possible - I bought soy milk.
And because I have no way of knowing the bean concentration, I simply used the same ratio as though it were my home-made soymilk. Ergo, I bought a 2000mL bottle, and coagulated it with 5.5g GDL. To my shock and horror, there was absolutely no sour taste - it was completely neutral!
The soy milk was "Fortune" brand (unsure if this is popular globally), and the protein concentration per 100mL is usually around the 2.8g to 3.1g mark. Not sure how the math works to determine their bean concentration. There's the obvious loss when grinding, mulching and filtering the beans that would make it hard to accurately calculate what my soy milk is like.
Anyway, what I'm confused about is that I would have thought the sourness/acidity observed by the consumer would be determined by the acid material (i.e. the GDL) relative to the volume of whatever it is (in this case, the tofu/soymilk). So when I have the exact same ration of GDL to soy milk, it's surprising that they taste different.
So all else equal, I suppose that the store bought milk and my milk has different concentrations. However which direction should I travel towards? Does the store bought stuff have more protein, or less protein (the texture came out quite identical, but maybe slightly firmer)? Anyone have experience with this?
Cheers all!
- Rook
I've been making tofu for a while, starting from home-made soy milk from dried beans.
Originally I was using gypsum/calcium sulfate which is the coagulant for the traditional tofu. Recently moved up to GDL which is an absolute game changer for me.
I usually use 1.5% GDL relative to dried bean weight, and so far, I have been making my soy milk with a 1:5.5 bean (dry weight) to water ratio.
So for instance, when making 4000mL soy milk, I will use 730g soy milk (dry weight), and coagulate with 11g of GDL.
The tofu that comes out produces a slight sour note, as GDL is an acid, and thought that was just an unavoidable trade-off.
That was until a new container (that I make the tofu fa in) arrived and I was dying to test it out in the laziest way possible - I bought soy milk.
And because I have no way of knowing the bean concentration, I simply used the same ratio as though it were my home-made soymilk. Ergo, I bought a 2000mL bottle, and coagulated it with 5.5g GDL. To my shock and horror, there was absolutely no sour taste - it was completely neutral!
The soy milk was "Fortune" brand (unsure if this is popular globally), and the protein concentration per 100mL is usually around the 2.8g to 3.1g mark. Not sure how the math works to determine their bean concentration. There's the obvious loss when grinding, mulching and filtering the beans that would make it hard to accurately calculate what my soy milk is like.
Anyway, what I'm confused about is that I would have thought the sourness/acidity observed by the consumer would be determined by the acid material (i.e. the GDL) relative to the volume of whatever it is (in this case, the tofu/soymilk). So when I have the exact same ration of GDL to soy milk, it's surprising that they taste different.
So all else equal, I suppose that the store bought milk and my milk has different concentrations. However which direction should I travel towards? Does the store bought stuff have more protein, or less protein (the texture came out quite identical, but maybe slightly firmer)? Anyone have experience with this?
Cheers all!
- Rook