Tempeh or Tempe (: Rhizopus Oligosporus
Tempeh or Tempe (: Rhizopus Oligosporus
Tempeh or Tempe (: Rhizopus Oligosporus
Contents
1Etymology
2History
3Production
o 3.1Determining quality
o 3.2Packaging
4Nutrition
5Preparation
6Types
o 6.1Tempeh kedelai
o 6.2Tempeh gembus
o 6.3Oncom
o 6.4Tempeh menjes kacang
o 6.5Tempe bongkrèk
o 6.6Oat tempeh
7Process
o 7.1Common tempeh
o 7.2Tempeh semangit
o 7.3Tempeh gódhóng
o 7.4Tempeh murni
8Cooking methods and recipes
o 8.1Tempeh goreng
o 8.2Tempeh bacem
o 8.3Tempeh mendoan
o 8.4Tempeh kering
o 8.5Tempeh orek or orak-arik tempeh
o 8.6Tumis tempeh or oseng tempeh
o 8.7Tempeh penyet
o 8.8Tempeh satay
o 8.9Kripik tempeh
o 8.10Grilled tempeh
o 8.11Tempeh sandwich or tempeh burger
9Preservation
o 9.1Antimicrobial agents
o 9.2Non-refrigerated fresh tempeh
o 9.3Refrigeration
o 9.4Freezing
o 9.5Blanching
o 9.6Dehydration
9.6.1Air tray drying
9.6.2Sun drying
9.6.3Freeze drying
9.6.4Spray drying
9.6.5Deep frying
10See also
11References
Etymology[edit]
The etymology of the term tempe itself is suggested to be derived from Old Javanese tumpi, a
whitish food made from fried batter made from sago or rice flour which resembles rempeyek.
[5]
Historian Denys Lombard suggests however that it is linked to the local
term tape or tapai which means "fermentation".[6]
History[edit]
Tempe being sold on Java, early 20th century
Tempeh originated in Indonesia, almost certainly in Java, more precisely central or east Java,
[1]
with an estimated discovery between a few centuries ago to a thousand years or more.
[7]:145
Around the 12th to 13th century, a type of food was mentioned as kadêlê in an old Javanese
manuscript, Serat Sri Tanjung.[6] However, it is not clear whether kadêlê refers to processed
fermented soy or not, since the term in Javanese today refers to "soybeans". The earliest known
reference to it as têmpê appeared in 1815 in the Serat Centhini.[6]
The invention of tempeh is connected to tofu production in Java. The tofu-making industry was
introduced to Java by Chinese immigrants circa the 17th century. Chinese Indonesian
historian Ong Hok Ham suggests that tempeh was accidentally produced as the by-product of
the tofu industry in Java; as discarded soybeans caught the spores of a whitish fungus that was
found to be edible.[6] Three detailed, fully documented histories of tempeh, worldwide, have been
written, all by Shurtleff and Aoyagi (1985, 1989, and 2001).
Production[edit]
Determining quality[edit]
Once tempeh is produced, it is divided into three categories based on its quality: good,
unfinished, and inedible. Good tempeh includes beans that are bound into a firm, compact cake
by a dense, uniform, white mycelium, which should permeate the entire cake; the beans should
be barely visible. The odor of good tempeh should be pleasant, clean, subtly sweet or resemble
the aroma of mushrooms. The entire tempeh should lift as a single, cohesive cake without
crumbling when shaken gently. Unfinished tempeh has beans that are bound together loosely by
a sparse white mycelium, hence it crumbles easily. Unfinished tempeh should be incubated
longer unless it has been incubated more than 8 hours past the recommended time. If it has
been incubated for enough time and still remains unfinished, it should be discarded. Inedible
tempeh has beans with foul odor, resembling strong ammonia or alcohol, indicating the
development of undesirable bacteria due to excess moisture or overheating. Inedible tempeh
cake is wet, slimy, and mushy with a collapsed structure. Its color is tan to brown
and mold develops in sparse patches.[12]
Packaging[edit]
Nutrition[edit]
Tempeh
Carbohydrates 7.64 g
Fat 10.80 g
Protein 20.29 g
Vitamins Quantity%DV†
Thiamine (B1) 7%
0.078 mg
0.358 mg
2.640 mg
Vitamin B6 17%
0.215 mg
Folate (B9) 6%
24 μg
Vitamin B12 3%
0.08 μg
Minerals Quantity%DV†
Calcium 11%
111 mg
Iron 21%
2.7 mg
Magnesium 23%
81 mg
Manganese 62%
1.3 mg
Phosphorus 38%
266 mg
Potassium 9%
412 mg
Sodium 1%
9 mg
Zinc 12%
1.14 mg
Water 59.65 g
Units
μg = micrograms • mg = milligrams
IU = International units
†
Percentages are roughly approximated
using US recommendations for adults.
The soy carbohydrates in tempeh become more digestible as a result of the fermentation
process. In particular, the oligosaccharides associated with gas and indigestion are greatly
reduced by the Rhizopus culture. In traditional tempeh-making shops, the starter culture often
contains beneficial bacteria that produce vitamins such as B12[17][18] (though it is uncertain whether
this B12 is always present and bioavailable).[19] In western countries, it is more common to use a
pure culture containing only Rhizopus oligosporus, which makes very little B12 and could be
missing Citrobacter freundii and Klebsiella pneumoniae, which have been shown to produce
significant levels of B12 analogs in tempeh when present.[20] Whether these analogs are true,
bioavailable B12 has not been thoroughly studied yet.[21] The fermentation process also reduces
the phytic acid in soy,[22] which in turn allows the body to absorb the minerals that soy provides.