06/01/2025
Posted • 麻婆豆腐 aka Mapo Tofu aka Pock-Marked Old Woman’s Tofu
According to , Mapo Tofu “is named after the wife of a Qing Dynasty restauranteur who delighted passing laborers with her hearty braised tofu… Mrs. Chen’s face was marked with smallpox scars, so she was given the affectionate nickname ma po, ‘Pock-marked Old Woman’.”
Mapo Tofu is a dish that is extremely nostalgic to many, and opinions on how the dish should taste are fiercely subjective. It’s a dish that we never thought we’d put on our menu, but somehow ended up on there anyway.
During the Altadena fires, was shut down, and we weren’t able to serve our Dan Dan Campanelle for a minute. Without that dish on our menu, we didn’t have a vegan entree available, so with the deliberation of some guests-turned-friends ( ), we decided to tackle a vegan version of Mapo Tofu.
We replace the ground meat with our house made ‘mushroom meat’ 🍄🟫, and pay homage to the original Sichuanese version with Pixian Doubanjiang, and a heavy hand of Sichuan peppercorns. And of course we use the very best
This has probably been one of our most controversial dishes since we’ve started dinner… we’ve tweaked the recipe at least 10 times to really dial it in, and we know the dish still doesn’t make everyone happy.
The thing is… people from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Japan all have their ideas of what mapo tofu should be (no thanks to and other processed food manufacturers 🤪). Unapologetically, we stick with what teaches (except for the substitution of mushrooms for meat).
The end result is a dish that is spicy, salty, AND numbing. We took a page from the genius creativity of and suggest adding a side of deftly sliced, California avocado to sooth the palate🥑. All to be served with organic kokuho rice 🍚.
It would be rude to call someone pock-marked old woman in this day and age… but we hope we’re doing Mrs. Chen proud with our version here. (Dinner only)
ps: I think Mrs. Chen would be delighted to have this with a glass of off-dry Riesling if I’d say so myself…