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Global soybean meal consumption for 2012–2013, from the United Soybean Board. Globally, about 2 percent of soybean meal is used for soy flour and other products for human consumption. [9] Soy flour is used to make some soy milks and textured vegetable protein products, and is marketed as full-fat, low-fat, defatted, and lecithinated types ...
Okara, soy pulp, or tofu dregs is a pulp consisting of insoluble parts of the soybean that remain after pureed soybeans are filtered in the production of soy milk and tofu. It is generally white or yellowish in color. It is part of the traditional cuisines of Japan, Korea, and China.
Full-fat soy flour has a lower protein concentration than defatted flour. Extruded full-fat soy flour, ground in an Alpine mill, can replace/extend eggs in baking and cooking. [168] [169] Full-fat soy flour is a component of the famous Cornell bread recipe. [170] [171] [172] Low-fat soy flour is made by adding some oil back into defatted soy flour.
A fermented soy product indigenous to the Khasi and Jaiñtia tribes in Meghalaya, India. Tương: Vietnam: A name applied to a variety of condiments, Tương is a fermented bean paste made from soybean and commonly used in Vietnamese cuisine. It may range in consistency from a thick paste to a thin liquid. Yellow soybean paste: China
During the processing of soybeans to make tempeh there are inevitable losses of material due to the removal of the hulls and the leaching of soluble compounds during the soaking, washing and cooking stages. Hulls constitute about 8% of the dry beans and losses due to the leaching of soluble compounds equate to 12 - 17% of the dry beans.
The snack brand, known for their rolled corn tortilla chips in an array of super spicy flavors, now has a new option for every type of taste bud, even those that can't handle the heat.
Tempeh – a traditional Indonesian soy product in a cake form, made from fermented soybeans; Tofu. Injo-gogi-bap – a Korean steamed rice wrapped in leftover soybean paste and dressed with a chili sauce. Oncom – one of the traditional staple foods of West Java cuisine of Indonesia, there are two types: red oncom and black oncom.
The Chinese Journal of Physiology described an experiment using mixed flour to make the hollow cone shaped wotou steamed bread, with it consisting of 2 parts millet, 2 parts red kaoliang, and 1 part soybean. [20] [21] It was known as wotou 窩頭, "maize-soybean flour bread." [22] It was also known as wowotou 窩窩頭, "bean-millet bread".