
2026/6/21 · 9:26
This Week's Pick: Bowen Yang's Mapo Tofu
Bowen Yang's Mapo Tofu (NYT Cooking, June 15) wins the June 14–21 window — the fastest-engaging new recipe of the week at 64 five-star ratings in 6 days, a 35-minute weeknight dinner with full grocery-store accessibility, and a boldly spiced Sichuan classic brought to life with the SNL star's personal tweaks.
A comedian shared his mom's recipe without telling her. Within six days of publication, 64 NYT Cooking readers rated it five stars — the fastest engagement pace of any recipe published June 14–21. Bowen Yang (Saturday Night Live cast member and co-host of the podcast Las Culturistas) contributed this Sichuan dish with a family twist: firm tofu instead of silken, ground pork instead of beef, and a slightly drier sauce that still delivers the signature tingle. Weeknight-ready at 35 minutes, and every ingredient is findable at a standard grocery store. 1
The pick
Recipe: Bowen Yang's Mapo Tofu
Source: NYT Cooking (published June 15, 2026) 1
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Total time | 35 minutes |
| Yield | 4 servings |
| Skill level | Easy |
| Cuisine | Sichuan Chinese |
| Diet tags | Dairy-free |
| Engagement | 64 ratings, 5★ (as of June 21, 2026) 1 |
Key ingredients: firm tofu, ground pork (or beef), doubanjiang (fermented chile bean paste), Sichuan peppercorns, Sichuan coarse chile powder, Chinkiang (black) vinegar, chicken stock, ginger, garlic 1
The two ingredients to track down: Doubanjiang and Sichuan peppercorns are sold at most Asian grocery stores and increasingly at Whole Foods and well-stocked supermarkets. No doubanjiang? Gochujang plus a bit of soy sauce is a passable stand-in; the heat profile shifts from fermented-funky to sweeter, but the dish holds together.
Get the recipe: cooking.nytimes.com
Why it won
Three other recipes crossed the engagement threshold this week, and each lost for a specific reason.
Melissa Clark's Best Buttermilk Pancakes (NYT Cooking, published June 16) finished with 65 ratings at 5★ — technically the highest raw count. 2 It's a legitimate result: Clark published a definitive guide to pancake technique, and the batter-rest method (rest 10+ minutes before cooking) addresses the single most common pancake failure point. But it's a breakfast recipe in June. A weekend project, not a weeknight dinner. For the reader making a single grocery decision on a Sunday, Mapo Tofu is a more complete meal answer.
BA's Miso Curry Beef With Green Beans (Bon Appétit, published June 15) is the source-diversity argument this week. 3 Bon Appétit published only two new standalone recipes during the window — this and a green goddess dressing — so this was BA's strongest shot. The recipe is genuinely good: ground beef in a miso-curry sauce with Japanese curry powder, ketchup, maple syrup, and white miso, served over rice with a fried egg. Thirty minutes, pantry-leaning, tagged for meal prep. But it has no public ratings (BA doesn't display star counts), which makes the engagement comparison direct: 64 verified five-star ratings beats zero-visibility. Mapo Tofu wins on confirmable community signal.
Harissa Chickpeas With Turmeric Rice (Yossy Arefi, NYT Cooking, published June 16) showed genuine early traction — 15 ratings at 4★ within a week. 4 Readers praised it, one noting it reheated better than it cooked fresh and another calling it a keeper. At 45 minutes and 6–8 servings, it's a strong batch-cook candidate. It loses here primarily because Mapo Tofu's engagement pace is significantly faster (64 ratings in ~6 days vs. 15 ratings in ~5 days) and because the celebrity story angle makes it this week's most memorable recipe.


Cook notes
Reader comments on the recipe surfaced a few practical details worth knowing before you shop:
On the Sichuan chiles: The recipe calls for 1 tablespoon Sichuan peppercorns (toasted and ground) plus 1 teaspoon Sichuan coarse chile powder — two separate items, not a combined measurement. This tripped up at least one reader. 1 One reader asked whether Korean gochugaru is a substitute for the Sichuan chile powder; it works in a pinch, though it lacks the woody depth.
On the tofu technique: The recipe parboils the tofu in salted, gently simmering water before adding it to the pork mixture. A rapid boil will crumble it. Use a slotted spoon when transferring. 1
Vegetarian path: Readers suggest jackfruit or TVP (textured vegetable protein, brands like Morningstar or Gardein) as pork substitutes, or finely chopped shiitake mushrooms with mushroom stock standing in for the chicken stock. 1
To stretch it: One reader adds green beans or bok choy directly to the sauce, which adds volume and a vegetable component without changing the prep time. Water chestnuts also appear in the comments as a texture addition. 1
The field this week
| Recipe | Source | Time | Engagement signal | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bowen Yang's Mapo Tofu | NYT Cooking 1 | 35 min | 64 ratings, 5★ | This week's pick |
| Best Buttermilk Pancakes (Melissa Clark) | NYT Cooking 2 | 25 min | 65 ratings, 5★ | Runner-up — breakfast, not a dinner pick |
| Miso Curry Beef With Green Beans | Bon Appétit 3 | 30 min | No public ratings | Runner-up — no engagement data |
| Harissa Chickpeas With Turmeric Rice (Yossy Arefi) | NYT Cooking 4 | 45 min | 15 ratings, 4★ | Runner-up — strong batch-cook option |
| Silken Tofu With Peanut Chile Crisp (Nisha Vora) | NYT Cooking 5 | 30 min | 0 ratings, 2 comments | Skip this week — no engagement yet |
| Watermelon With Whipped Feta (Ali Slagle) | NYT Cooking 6 | 10 min | 0 ratings | Skip this week — side/starter only |
| Reddit top post: 5 dishes, 4 days of meals | r/MealPrepSunday 7 | ~2.5 hrs (full batch) | 718 upvotes | Community benchmark — batch cooking, not a single recipe pick |
| Shrimp and Potatoes Pil Pil (Nargisse Benkabbou) | NYT Cooking 8 | 35 min | 6 ratings, 5★ | Keep watching — perfect score, too small a sample yet |
Serious Eats had no new standalone recipes this week.
The full recipe is on NYT Cooking: Bowen Yang's Mapo Tofu. 1




このコンテンツについて、さらに観点や背景を補足しましょう。