This is our maintained fallback experience and it may not include every feature of the regular site.

Games Hub

Learn cooking skills through fun games!

Kitchen games (quiz, memory, and arcade) are rolling out on the web. Explore what's coming on the Features page.

See Features
A blue and white patterned bowl filled with mapo tofu in spicy red sauce with ground meat and green onions

Recipe

Mapo Tofu

25 min 4 servings

Nutrition (est.)

Per serving: 1 serving

Calories
320
Protein
22g
Carbs
10g
Fat
22g

Tofu and ground pork in spicy, savory sauce. Chinese home cooking, adjust heat to taste.

More

Before you cook

Background Recipe story & origin

From Sichuan province to American Chinese menus, where fiery tofu became a comfort food staple.

Mapo tofu was created around 1862 in Chengdu, Sichuan, at a small restaurant run by Chen Liu, a woman whose face was pockmarked (má means pockmarks; pó means old woman). Her restaurant sat near a bridge where oil merchants and porters rested. She cooked tofu with ground beef (or pork), fermented bean paste (doubanjiang), Sichuan peppercorns, and chili oil. The dish became famous for its 'málà' (numbing and spicy) quality. Chen's restaurant, later named Chen Mapo Doufu, still exists in Chengdu. Authentic mapo tofu should embody seven characteristics: má (numbing), là (spicy), tàng (hot temperature), xiān (fresh), nèn (tender), xiāng (scented), and sū (crispy minced meat). American-Chinese versions often omit the crucial Sichuan peppercorns, missing the defining numbing sensation. The dish represents the bold flavors of Sichuan cuisine and working-class culinary innovation.

Before you start Equipment you'll need
  • wok or large skillet — wide surface for browning pork and gently folding tofu
  • small bowl — mixing sauce before adding to wok
Safety Safety & allergen notes
  • Handle tofu gently; it breaks easily.
  • Chili garlic sauce splatters in hot oil; add carefully.
Non-negotiables Rules for success
  • Use soft or medium-firm tofu, not firm or extra-firm.

    Soft tofu has the silky texture essential to mapo tofu; firm tofu is rubbery in this dish

  • Drain tofu well before cooking.

    Excess water dilutes the sauce and prevents proper coating

  • Add tofu gently and avoid stirring aggressively.

    Tofu breaks apart easily; gentle folding keeps cubes intact

  • Simmer tofu in sauce to let it absorb flavor.

    Brief simmering allows sauce to penetrate; just tossing leaves tofu bland inside

Prep Get set first

About 5 min of prep

  • Drain tofu and cut into 1-inch cubes
  • Mince garlic and ginger
  • Slice scallions
  • Mix sauce ingredients
  • Have cornstarch slurry ready

This is a fast weeknight dish. Everything cooks in under 15 minutes once you start.

Ingredients

Scale
Imperial Metric

Instructions

  1. Prep the sauce

    Whisk together soy sauce, chicken broth, and sugar in a small bowl. In another small bowl, mix cornstarch with water for slurry. Set both aside.

  2. Cook the pork

    Heat oil in a wok or large skillet over high heat (400-450°F surface). Add ground pork and cook, breaking into small pieces, until browned and cooked through, about 4 minutes.

  3. Build the flavor base

    Push pork to one side. Add garlic, ginger, and chili garlic sauce to the cleared space. Stir-fry 30 seconds until fragrant, then mix with pork.

  4. Add the tofu and simmer

    Pour in sauce mixture and bring to a simmer. Gently add tofu cubes, folding carefully to coat without breaking. Simmer 4 to 5 minutes, allowing tofu to absorb flavor.

  5. Drizzle with oil

    Stir cornstarch slurry and drizzle into wok. Gently fold until sauce thickens and coats tofu, about 1 minute. Remove from heat. Drizzle with sesame oil and top with scallions. Serve immediately over rice.

Chef's notes

Ground pork is traditional; ground beef or turkey work as substitutes.

For vegetarian version, omit pork and add extra mushrooms.

Serve over steamed white rice to absorb the sauce.

Heat level is adjustable; start with less chili sauce and add more to taste.

noadscooking.com — Mapo Tofu

What's next?

Keep cooking with more ad-free recipes from our catalog.

How did it go?

Were the directions clear?
Did it meet your expectations?
Would you make it again?
Add optional details