“Effortlessly good and made my day”
Yewande Komolafe’s new vegetarian dish is easy, quick, economical and, of course, delicious.
Cooking
June 30, 2025
Masala chickpeas with tofu and blistered tomatoes are shown in a white bowl with a fork and a lime wedge.
Yewande Komolafe’s masala chickpeas with tofu and blistered tomatoes. Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini

A new go-to tofu

Lately I’ve been spending more quality time with tofu, having made it my business to find out how to give it the crispiest, most burnished skin. Broil or roast? Coat in cornstarch, potato starch or leave it naked? Press, poach or freeze to get rid of excess moisture? These are the questions that keep a food writer up at night. (Well, some of the questions.)

Of course, I could have saved myself from a lot of sleepless nights and just asked Yewande Komolafe — she knows all of the soy secrets. She sears slabs of tofu in ghee in her latest recipe for masala chickpeas with tofu and blistered tomatoes, letting their surfaces get deeply browned, then tears them into pieces and layers them with chickpeas and onions cooked with garam masala.

Tearing the tofu allows for a craggy surface area that better absorbs the flavors of the tomatoes and the spices. Yewande suggests rice or a poached egg with this, and I think it would also be terrific spooned into a bowl of baby spinach, some of which will wilt on contact. Half salad, half stew, 100 percent weeknight delight — it’s a food writer’s dream. Once she gets to sleep, that is.

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Masala Chickpeas With Tofu and Blistered Tomatoes

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More food for thought

Lemon turmeric chicken salad: Based on the earthy flavors of Afghan murgh kebab (chicken kebab), this sunshine-hued chicken salad is elegantly spiced with turmeric and garlic, and creamy from a dill-speckled dressing that’s equal parts mayonnaise and yogurt. Use it with pitas or other bread for a chicken salad sandwich with an herby edge.

Spaghetti Napolitan: Eric “Uses His Noodle” Kim adapted this quick-to-make recipe from Chiaki Ohara of Davelle, a Japanese cafe on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Spaghetti is fried yakisoba-style in a ketchupy sauce filled with bacon, onion and carrot, then topped with runny eggs. A classic Japanese yoshoku (“Western-style”) take on Italian tomato pasta, it’s a little sweet, deeply savory and universally adored, especially by kids.

Fish skewers with herbs and lime: One of the easiest and quickest ways to grill a fish is to cut meaty fillets like tuna or swordfish into chunks and sear them hot and fast so the edges singe while the inside stays juicy and soft. I love to soak the fish cubes in a quick marinade first, which imbues them with a garlicky flavor to mingle with the smoky char.

Chicken tikka: This recipe from the chef Chintan Pandya has a few extra steps, but each one of them brings you closer to a stunning tikka. Chintan marinates pieces of boneless chicken thigh meat in spices and yogurt, then skewers and roasts them in a conventional oven instead of the traditional tandoor. The liberal amount of butter used for basting adds richness and balances out the chile kick. Make it for anyone who savors complexity and a slow, deep burn.

Strawberry slab pie: Pie is the place to use up the surfeit of strawberries that are peaking right now, especially the ones going soft before you can eat them. This one from Nicole Taylor has grapefruit juice and zest in the filling and a touch of cracked black pepper in the crust, adding brightness and zip to the sweet fruit. It feeds a crowd, too, so party on, pie lovers!

Now, to get these and all the other thousands of recipes at New York Times Cooking, you’ll need to (want to!) subscribe. Subscriptions support our work, and we thank you if you’re already on board. If you need any help with a technical issue (all those printing problems and the like), send an email to cookingcare@nytimes.com. And I’m at hellomelissa@nytimes.com if you want to say hi.

That’s all for now. I’ll see you on Wednesday.

Article Image

Nico Schinco for The New York Times, Food Stylist: Kaitlin Wayne.

Lemon Turmeric Chicken Salad

By Zaynab Issa

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

24

25 minutes 

Makes Serves 2 to 4

Article Image

Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food stylist: Monica Pierini. Prop Stylist: Sophia Eleni Pappas.

Spaghetti Napolitan

Recipe from Chiaki Ohara

Adapted by Eric Kim

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

144

25 minutes

Makes 2 to 4 servings

Article Image

David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

Fish Skewers With Herbs and Lime

By Melissa Clark

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarUnfilled Star

356

20 minutes, plus grill heating

Makes 4 servings

Article Image

David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

Chicken Tikka

By Chintan Pandya

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarUnfilled Star

661

45 minutes, plus 3 hours marinating

Makes 4 to 6 servings

Article Image

Jessica Emily Marx for The New York Times

Strawberry Slab Pie

By Nicole Taylor

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarUnfilled Star

782

4 hours, plus 2 hours' cooling

Makes 12 to 16 servings

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