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Recipe: Thanksgiving Tofu Loaf

2008_11_21-tgtofu.jpgFor many of us, a vegetarian Thanksgiving means loading up on side dishes. No complaints here; I look forward to mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, and cranberry sauce every year. But there's also something special about having a seasonal main dish, to be enjoyed in place of your relatives' turkey or served to vegetarian friends. In my family, the vegetarians celebrated Thanksgiving with a tofu loaf.

 
 

This recipe has been adapted from Brother Ron Pickarski's Friendly Foods cookbook and my mother's handwritten notes and e-mails. Even when we don't make it home for Thanksgiving, my brother and I have tried to carry on the tradition wherever we happen to be at the time.

You can fill the loaf with your favorite dressing, although I recommend one that is bread- rather than rice-based as the texture holds up better in the loaf. Something buttery and sage-y goes especially well with the tofu, and I've included my family's traditional recipe below. Other ideas may be found in the Thanksgiving Stuffing Recipe Roundup.

Serve it with the sauce or gravy of your choice. My favorite is the Vegetarian Gravy recipe linked in our Nutritional Yeast post.

Finally, a note about ingredients: agar flakes and arrowroot powder are thickening agents that can be found at Whole Foods and other health food stores. Look for agar in the baking section or with the seaweed products. Arrowroot can often be found on supermarket spice racks, as well.

Thanksgiving Tofu Loaf (adapted from Brother Ron Pickarski's Friendly Foods)
Serves 4-6

1 1/2 pounds firm tofu
2 tablespoons arrowroot powder
Vegetable broth base, to taste*
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
1 1/2 teaspoons agar flakes
About 3 cups stuffing

Preheat oven to 350F. Oil and flour a 1 1/2-quart (6-cup) loaf pan.

Rinse tofu, pat dry, and cut or crumble into small pieces.

Place tofu, arrowroot, salt, white pepper, and agar flakes in a food processor and blend until smooth. Season with vegetable broth base to taste and blend until combined.

Spread a layer of the tofu paste on all sides of the pan, leaving aside 1 cup of paste.

Firmly but gently press stuffing into the pan. Cover with the remaining paste and seal the edges.

Cover the pan with an aluminum foil "tent"; the foil should not touch the tofu.

Bake for 50 minutes.

Remove from oven and let cool for 10 minutes before unmolding.

Invert pan to unmold. Slice and serve with sauce of your choice.

*The original recipe calls for 3 tablespoons of Vogue VegeBase. I have also used about 1 tablespoon of Better than Bouillon. Any vegetable broth powder or paste should work; just add a little at a time, blend, and taste.

Classic Stuffing
Makes about 6 cups

1 (1 pound) loaf of bread, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
4 tablespoons unsalted butter (can use EarthBalance, oil, or other butter substitute)
1 large onion, diced
3 celery ribs, diced
3 tablespoons chopped fresh herbs (mostly sage, also rosemary, thyme, marjoram) or 1 tablespoon poultry seasoning
About 1/2 cup vegetable broth
Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

A few hours or the night before cooking, spread bread cubes out on a pan to dry. (Mom's note: To protect from kitties, place this pan in the closed oven!)

Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add onions and celery and sautée until onion is translucent.

Add herbs or poultry seasoning and sautée for another moment.

Remove from heat, add bread cubes, and stir to combine.

Gradually stir in broth until the stuffing is moistened but not soggy.

Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Related:
Recipe: Savory Kabocha Tofu Pie

(Image: Emily Ho)

Tags

Thanksgiving, Healthy, Vegetarian, Main Dish, Vegan, tofu, dressing, stuffing

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Comments (9)

Thank you! This is terrific. Way cheaper than tofurkey (which I love), too.

posted by Pixie on November 21st 2008 at 1:26pm
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My usual veg main is an adaptation of an old Laurel's Kitchen recipe for Tennessee Corn Pone: a layer of spicy tasty pink beans topped with a layer of buttermilk corn bread. Omnivores enjoy it as a side but it's a nice hot protein main dish and tastes so good with squash and cranberries.

posted by cmcinnyc on November 21st 2008 at 2:09pm
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In my family, we serve black beans and rice as the main dish with all of the traditional sides.

posted by Lexo on November 21st 2008 at 2:42pm
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I love traditional turkey and stuffing, but this recipe was delicious. I had two servings, scout's honour!

posted by gregory on November 21st 2008 at 3:01pm
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i'm making tempeh loaf as the main dish; it tastes a lot like meat loaf.

from the real food daily cookbook- my go-to for comfort foods

posted by jillrenee in boston on November 21st 2008 at 4:12pm
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this looks so amazing. i hope i have the patience to try this.

posted by melanief on November 22nd 2008 at 10:23am
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Did anyone else have too little tofu? I could barely cover the top with a thin level, and I used only about a cup and a half of the stuffing.

It smells good in the oven right now, though!

posted by jeffzelli on November 27th 2008 at 2:38pm
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I realized that my loaf pan was larger than the one the recipe called for. I scaled the recipe up to use 2 lbs of tofu and it came out great.

posted by louiedog on November 27th 2008 at 7:08pm
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My boyfriend and I made this for thanksgiving and doubled it to fit the pan (I am glad it came out, because we definitely have leftovers). The tofu part wound up being a little bland, so we added some more white pepper, garlic and thyme to the tofu mix. We also used rye bread for the stuffing, which I think added a lot of flavor. Because it was kind of creapily white, we removed the foil tent for the last 15 minutes or so and it was lightly browned by the time we served it. Some of the vegetables and the thyme showed through the top (we didn't flip it) and it looked really lovely. I think it came out great. We also made a home made veggie gravy that really made it great, even the omnivores liked it.

posted by petitefemme22 on December 1st 2008 at 3:23pm
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