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臭豆腐
chòu dòu fǔ

Stinky Tofu

Quick Info

Flavor
Funky, savory, and crispy with fermented depth. Like blue cheese meets fried mozzarella sticks — pungent on the nose, surprisingly mild and delicious on the tongue.
Texture
Shatteringly crispy golden shell encasing a soft, creamy, almost custard-like fermented tofu interior
Spice Level
🌶️ — Just a gentle tingle from the chili sauce — less heat than a mild Buffalo wing
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Jiangsu 苏菜
Cooking
Deep-fried
Main Ingredients
Tofu

Ingredients

Fermented tofuVegetable oil (for frying)Chili sauceGarlicSoy saucePickled vegetables (optional)

Allergens

Confirmed

Soy

Possible

GlutenSesame

These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.

The Story

Let us be upfront: this dish smells terrible. The odor has been compared to dirty socks, open sewers, and garbage on a hot day. And yet, stinky tofu is one of the most beloved street foods in China, and Shanghai’s version — deep-fried to a golden crisp — is considered one of the best. The smell comes from the fermentation brine (which can include fermented milk, vegetables, and meat), where regular tofu blocks soak for days or weeks until they develop their characteristic funk.

The Chinese saying goes: “Smells bad, tastes great.” Millions of people agree. Stinky tofu stalls are identifiable from a block away by the aroma, and the lines of eager customers prove that the smell is not a deterrent but a feature.

What to Expect

You will smell it before you see it. Golden, deep-fried cubes of tofu sit in a paper tray or on a stick, drizzled with a chili garlic sauce and sometimes topped with pickled vegetables. The exterior is crispy and looks like any other fried tofu. The interior is where the adventure lives — soft, creamy, and intensely savory with a fermented tang.

Here is the secret that converts skeptics: the taste is vastly milder than the smell. If you can get past the aroma and take that first bite, you will discover a crispy, savory, umami-rich snack that is genuinely delicious. The chili sauce adds a gentle kick that complements the funkiness. Many Westerners who try it become instant fans.

Tips

Buy it from a busy street stall where the turnover is high — freshly fried is significantly better than sitting-around stinky tofu. Eat it immediately while it is hot and crispy. If the smell is truly unbearable, try holding your breath for the first bite and focusing on the flavor. Some restaurants serve a milder version that is less pungent — ask for “qing dan de” (lighter flavor) if you want to ease in.

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