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Chicken Tofu Recipe – Juicy Chicken & Soft Tofu Stir Fry

E
By Emma Delacourt · February 22, 2026 · 11 min read
chicken tofu recipe

This chicken tofu stir fry pairs seared chicken thigh with cubes of firm tofu in a garlic-ginger sauce. The trick most stir-fry recipes miss: cook the chicken and tofu separately, then combine them in the sauce at the end. Tofu needs dry, high heat to crisp. Chicken releases moisture that steams the tofu if they share a pan from the start.

The sauce is a three-ingredient base — soy sauce, sesame oil, rice vinegar — thickened with cornstarch slurry at the very end. It coats every piece evenly without pooling at the bottom of the plate.

Prep15 min
Cook15 min
Total30 min
Servings4
Calories380

Why This Chicken Tofu Stir Fry Works

  • Separate searing. Chicken and tofu cook at different rates and release different amounts of moisture. Searing them separately in the same wok gives both a proper crust, then the sauce brings them together.
  • Double protein. 42g protein per serving from the chicken-tofu combination. Higher than chicken alone (25g) or tofu alone (10g) without doubling the portion size.
  • 30 minutes, one wok. The technique is fast enough for a Tuesday night and impressive enough for guests.
  • Sauce that clings. The cornstarch slurry thickens the sauce into a glossy coat that wraps each piece instead of sitting in a puddle.

Ingredients

Ingredients — Serves 4
  • 1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 14 oz extra-firm tofu, pressed 15 min, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 2 tbsp avocado or vegetable oil, divided
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tbsp fresh ginger, grated
  • 3 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 1 tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 tbsp honey or brown sugar
  • 1 tsp Sriracha or chili garlic sauce
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch + 2 tbsp cold water (slurry)
  • 2 green onions, sliced
  • Sesame seeds for garnish
Thighs over breast. Chicken thighs have more fat and stay juicy through the high heat of wok cooking. Breast dries out in stir-fries because it has almost no intramuscular fat to protect it. If you must use breast, cut pieces smaller (½ inch) and reduce cook time by 1 minute.

How to Make Chicken and Tofu Stir Fry

  1. Crisp the tofu first. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok or large skillet over high heat. Add pressed tofu cubes in a single layer. Cook 3–4 minutes without moving until golden on the bottom. Flip and repeat. Transfer to a plate. The key: don’t stir — the tofu needs uninterrupted contact to form a crust.
  2. Sear the chicken. Add remaining 1 tbsp oil to the same wok over high heat. Spread chicken pieces in a single layer. Sear 2–3 minutes per side until golden with a few charred edges. The wok should be smoking — this is wok hei (breath of the wok) territory.
  3. Build aromatics. Push chicken to the sides. Add garlic and ginger to the center of the wok. Stir for 30 seconds until fragrant, then toss everything together.
  4. Add the sauce. Pour in soy sauce, sesame oil, rice vinegar, honey, and Sriracha. Toss to coat. Return the tofu to the wok. Stir gently — the tofu is fragile now that it’s crispy.
  5. Thicken and finish. Give the cornstarch slurry a quick stir (it settles), then pour it in. Toss for 30 seconds — the sauce goes from watery to glossy almost instantly. Garnish with green onions and sesame seeds. Serve immediately over steamed rice.
Why wok hei matters. At temperatures above 1,000°F (achieved in a properly heated wok), the oil reaches its flash point and ignites briefly on contact with the steel. This micro-combustion creates volatile flavor compounds — smoky, slightly charred, unmistakably “stir-fried” — that can’t be replicated at lower temperatures. Home burners typically top out at 700°F, so compensate by cooking in small batches and not crowding the wok. For more on making tofu taste like chicken, see our dedicated guide. Reference: Serious Eats wok skills guide.

Pro Tips

Press the Tofu or It Won’t Crisp

Unpressed tofu releases water into the wok, which drops the temperature and steams instead of sears. Even 15 minutes under a heavy pan removes enough moisture for proper browning.

Don’t Add the Slurry Too Early

If the sauce isn’t hot when the cornstarch slurry goes in, it thickens unevenly and creates lumps. Wait until the sauce is bubbling, then pour the slurry in a slow stream while tossing.

Recipe Variations

Thai Basil

Replace soy sauce with fish sauce, add Thai basil and sliced red chili. The basil goes in at the very end — 10 seconds of heat releases its aroma without wilting it.

Teriyaki Glaze

Swap the sauce for ½ cup teriyaki + 1 tbsp mirin. Skip the cornstarch — teriyaki has enough sugar to create its own sticky glaze as it reduces.

Black Bean Sauce

Add 2 tbsp fermented black bean paste to the aromatics step. The beans add a deep, funky umami that pairs especially well with the neutral tofu.

Coconut Curry

Add ½ cup coconut milk + 2 tbsp red curry paste. Simmer 3 minutes. Serve over jasmine rice. The coconut milk replaces the cornstarch as the thickener.

Storage

❄️
Refrigerator
Up to 3 days. The tofu softens as it absorbs sauce — still delicious but no longer crispy.
❄️
Freezer
Freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight and reheat in a hot skillet — not the microwave.
🔥
Reheating
Hot skillet with a splash of oil, 3–4 minutes. The high heat re-crisps the tofu surfaces partially.

Nutritional Information

NutrientAmount
Calories380 kcal
Protein42g
Carbohydrates12g
Fat18g
Iron22% DV
Calcium20% DV

Common Mistakes

Cooking chicken and tofu together. They release different amounts of moisture and cook at different rates. Sear them separately, then combine in the sauce at the end.
Stirring the tofu constantly. Tofu needs 3–4 minutes of uninterrupted contact with the hot surface to form a crust. Every stir breaks that crust before it sets.
Adding sauce too early. If the sauce goes in before the proteins are seared, everything braises instead of stir-frying. Sear first, sauce last.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use silken tofu in this stir fry?
No. Silken tofu crumbles under high heat and can’t form a crust. Extra-firm is the only type that holds its shape in a wok.
What can I substitute for soy sauce?
Coconut aminos (lower sodium, slightly sweeter) or tamari (gluten-free). Use the same amount. The flavor profile shifts slightly but the sauce mechanics stay the same.
Do I need a wok or can I use a regular pan?
A 12-inch stainless steel skillet works. You lose the curved shape that makes tossing easier and the extreme heat of a wok burner, but the technique is identical. Cook in smaller batches to compensate for the lower heat.
How do I make this spicier?
Double the Sriracha or add 1 tbsp chili crisp oil at the end. Fresh sliced Thai chilies added with the garlic give the most direct heat. Start with half a chili and adjust.

Sear the tofu alone, sear the chicken alone, combine in a fast garlic-ginger sauce — that’s the method for a chicken tofu stir fry with crispy protein and a glossy, clinging sauce.

Save This Chicken Tofu Recipe

Pin it for your next 30-minute dinner — double protein, one wok.

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Emma Delacourt

Emma Delacourt

Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox

Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.

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