Crispy Gochujang Tofu (Sticky Korean-Inspired Popcorn Tofu)

Tofu)

Craggy fried popcorn tofu tossed in a sticky, spicy-sweet gochujang glaze that clings to every crispy edge. Better than takeout, ready in 35 minutes, and easy to make vegan and gluten-free.

Some recipes earn a permanent spot in the rotation, and this is one of them. Torn tofu gets a heavy, shaggy starch coating, fries up into golden popcorn-style nuggets with deep nooks and crannies, then gets tossed in a glossy gochujang sauce that is spicy, sweet, garlicky, and impossible to stop eating. Piled over a bowl of fluffy rice with extra scallions and sesame seeds, it eats exactly like your favorite Korean fried chicken takeout, except it is entirely plant-based and you control every ingredient.

The two tricks that make this recipe special are tearing the tofu instead of cutting it and blooming the sauce with hot oil. Torn edges create dramatically more surface area, which means more crunch. And pouring shimmering hot oil directly over the raw garlic, ginger, gochujang, and sesame seeds wakes up every aromatic in seconds, the same technique used for chili crisp. The result is a sauce with serious depth that tastes like it simmered far longer than it did.

Why You’ll Love This Crispy Gochujang Tofu Recipe

High protein. Two full blocks of extra firm tofu make this a complete, satisfying main.

Better than takeout. All the sticky, spicy, crispy satisfaction of Korean fried chicken, made meat-free at home for a fraction of the price.

Maximum crunch, minimum fuss. The torn tofu and heavy starch coating create craggy popcorn bites that stay crispy even under the glaze.

Two cooking methods. Deep fry for the ultimate texture or air fry with just a spray of oil for a lighter version.

Pantry-friendly sauce. Gochujang, soy sauce, garlic, ginger, and sugar. Everything is available at Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Sprouts, or any regular grocery store.

Want to save this recipe?

Enter the email address and we'll send it straight to the inbox. Plus, weekly recipes from Dr. Vegan

How to Make Crispy Gochujang Tofu

The flow is simple: coat, fry, sauce, toss. Here is how it comes together before we get to the full recipe card.

Torn tofu pieces in a metal bowl coated with cornstarch, rice flour, smoked paprika, and grated ginger for crispy gochujang tofu
Tear and coat the tofu: Tear the pressed tofu into bite-size chunks, season with garlic, ginger, vinegar, paprika, and salt, then toss with a generous amount of cornstarch and rice flour until thickly coated. If it still feels wet, add more cornstarch until every piece is dry to the touch.
Golden crispy fried popcorn tofu pieces in a spider strainer lifted over a pot of hot oil
Fry until golden: Fry the coated tofu in 350°F oil until deeply golden and crisp, then lift it out with a spider strainer and drain on a wire rack.
Gochujang paste, gochugaru, sugar, sesame seeds, minced garlic, ginger, and sliced spring onions arranged in a stainless steel pan
Build the sauce base: Add the gochujang, sugar, gochugaru, sesame seeds, scallions, garlic, and ginger to a cold pan, keeping everything in little piles.
Crispy fried tofu pieces added to a pan of sticky gochujang sauce before tossing
Add the fried tofu: Tip the crispy tofu into the pan of glossy red sauce.
Glossy red gochujang sauce with sesame seeds and spring onions swirled in a stainless steel pan
Bloom with hot oil: Pour shimmering hot oil over the aromatics and stir as it sizzles, then add the soy sauce and vinegar to bring the glaze together.
Wooden spoon lifting sticky glazed gochujang tofu coated in spicy red sauce from the pan
Toss and serve: Toss until every piece is coated in the sticky glaze, then serve immediately over rice with extra scallions and sesame seeds.

Why Torn Tofu Beats Cubed Tofu for this Crispy Gochujang Tofu Recipe

A knife gives you smooth, flat surfaces that fry up uniform and a little boring. Tearing the tofu by hand creates rough, irregular edges and exposed pockets, and that is exactly where the starch coating grabs hold and where the hot oil works its magic. Every ridge becomes a crispy crag, which is what gives this dish its popcorn chicken character. Freezing and thawing the tofu first takes it even further, since the ice crystals create a chewier, spongier texture that drinks up the glaze.

The Gochujang Glaze (and the Hot Oil Trick)

Gochujang is a fermented Korean chili paste made from red chili powder, glutinous rice, and fermented soybeans, and it brings heat, sweetness, and deep umami all at once. Instead of simmering the sauce from the start, this recipe borrows the hot oil bloom from chili crisp: the aromatics go into a cold pan, and shimmering oil gets poured straight over them. The sizzle instantly toasts the garlic, ginger, sesame seeds, and chili without any risk of burning, and the residual heat melts the gochujang and sugar into a glossy glaze. If the sauce looks thin, a minute or two over medium heat tightens it right up.

What to Serve Crispy Gochujang Tofu With

Steamed rice is the classic move, since the fluffy grains soak up every drop of the glaze. Short grain or jasmine both work beautifully. For a bigger spread, add quick cucumber pickles, steamed broccoli, or a simple sesame slaw to balance the heat. Leftover glaze is also outstanding drizzled over a grain bowl.

Tips for the Crispiest Gochujang Tofu

  • Press the tofu well. The drier the tofu, the better the starch sticks and the crispier the fry. Fifteen minutes under a weight is enough.
  • Do not skimp on the coating. The tofu should look thick and shaggy before it hits the oil. The moisture from the tofu hydrates the starch into craggy clumps, and those clumps are the crunch. If the pieces still look wet, just add more cornstarch, a tablespoon at a time, until everything is dry and coated.
  • Fry in batches. Crowding the pan drops the oil temperature and steams the tofu instead of crisping it.
  • Drain on a wire rack, not paper towels. Paper traps steam underneath and softens the crust.
  • Sauce at the last minute. Toss the tofu in the glaze right before serving so the coating stays crisp.

Make It Your Crispy Gochujang Tofu

Dial the heat down by swapping half the gochujang for ketchup and skipping the gochugaru, or push it up with an extra spoon of gochugaru. A teaspoon of maple syrup stirred in at the end gives the glaze a deeper sweetness, and a splash of toasted sesame oil off the heat adds a nutty finish. You can also toss in steamed broccoli florets with the tofu, or serve the bites as a party appetizer with toothpicks.

Frequently Asked Questions about Crispy Gochujang Tofu

Gochujang is spicy, subtly sweet, and deeply savory thanks to fermentation. Think of it as a thicker, funkier, more complex cousin of sriracha. Heat levels vary by brand, so check the spice indicator on the tub.

Gochujang is almost always vegan, since it is made from chili, rice, and soybeans. Gluten is the one to watch: many brands include wheat or barley malt, so if you need this dish gluten-free, pick a certified gluten-free gochujang and use tamari instead of soy sauce. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten-free.

Yes. Spray the coated tofu generously with oil on all sides and air fry at 400°F for 15 to 18 minutes, shaking the basket halfway, until golden and crisp. The crust is slightly less craggy than deep frying but still very crunchy, and the sauce works exactly the same way.

Torn tofu has rough, irregular surfaces that hold far more coating than smooth knife cuts. More surface area means more crunch and more glaze in every bite. It also makes the pieces look and feel like popcorn chicken.

Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat in the air fryer or a hot oven at 400°F for 5 to 8 minutes to bring back some crispiness. The microwave works in a pinch but the coating will be soft. If you are meal prepping, store the fried tofu and sauce separately and combine after reheating.

More plant-based recipes you’ll love:

Crispy Gochujang Tofu

Crispy Gochujang Tofu

No ratings yet
Crunchy torn tofu bites tossed in a sticky, fiery gochujang glaze that clings to every craggy edge. Serve over rice for a takeout-style dinner at home.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Fusion, Korean-Inspired
Calories: 544

Ingredients
 
 

For the tofu:
For the sauce:

Method
 

  1. Tear the tofu. Tear the pressed tofu into rough bite-size chunks straight into a large bowl. The craggy edges are what make it extra crispy, so don't cut it with a knife.
  2. Season the tofu. Add the garlic, ginger, vinegar, paprika, and salt and toss gently so every piece is seasoned.
  3. Coat heavily. Add the cornstarch and rice flour and mix thoroughly until the tofu is completely covered in a thick, shaggy coating. The moisture from the tofu will hydrate the starch and create craggy clumps, and that's exactly what you want. If the tofu still looks wet or sticky, sprinkle in more cornstarch a tablespoon at a time until every piece is dry to the touch and fully coated.
  4. Fry until golden. Heat about 2 inches [5 cm] of oil in a deep pan to 350°F [175°C]. Fry the tofu in batches for 5 to 6 minutes until deeply golden and crisp, then drain on a wire rack and set aside. Air fryer option: spray the coated tofu generously with oil on all sides and air fry at 400°F [200°C] for 15 to 18 minutes, shaking the basket halfway, until golden and crisp.
  5. Build the sauce base. In a large cold pan, combine the gochujang, sugar, soy sauce, vinegar, gochugaru, garlic, ginger, sesame seeds, and spring onions.
  6. Pour over the hot oil. Heat the oil in a small pot until shimmering, then carefully pour it over the sauce ingredients. Stir well as it sizzles to bloom all the aromatics.
  7. Adjust the consistency. The sauce should be glossy and thick enough to coat a spoon. If it's too thin, place the pan over medium heat and simmer for 1 to 2 minutes until sticky.
  8. Toss and serve. Add the fried tofu to the pan and toss until every piece is glazed. Serve immediately over rice, topped with extra spring onions and sesame seeds.

Nutrition

Calories: 544kcalCarbohydrates: 70gProtein: 20gFat: 21gSaturated Fat: 3gPolyunsaturated Fat: 11gMonounsaturated Fat: 5gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 2mgSodium: 756mgPotassium: 532mgFiber: 3gSugar: 10gVitamin A: 925IUVitamin C: 5mgCalcium: 132mgIron: 4mg

Notes

  • Freeze and thaw the tofu before pressing for an even chewier, more absorbent texture.
  • Don’t toss the tofu in the sauce until right before serving, or the coating softens.
  • For gluten-free, use tamari and a certified gluten-free gochujang.

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!