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Vegan & Plant-Based11 min readΒ·Updated 20 April 2026
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Tempeh vs Tofu: Nutrition, Protein Quality and How to Cook Each

Tempeh and tofu are both made from soy, but their processing is entirely different β€” and that matters enormously for protein quality, digestibility, gut health, and flavour. Here is a deep dive into the fermentation science behind tempeh and why it often outperforms tofu on key nutritional measures.

J
James Chen
Professional Chef & Culinary Educator
CPC Β· Le Cordon Bleu
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#tempeh#tofu#soy protein#fermented foods#vegan protein#PDCAAS#plant-based#protein bioavailability
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Medically Reviewed

Reviewed by James Chen, Professional Chef & Culinary Educator Β· CPC, Le Cordon Bleu

Last reviewed: 20 April 2026

Medical disclaimer: The information in this article is for educational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making significant dietary or lifestyle changes, especially if you have a medical condition.

Walk into any health food shop and you will find tempeh and tofu side by side, both marketed as plant-based protein staples. They share a common ingredient β€” soybeans β€” but beyond that, the two foods are almost opposites. Tofu is made by coagulating hot soy milk; tempeh is made by fermenting whole soybeans with a live mould culture for 24–48 hours. That difference in production is not merely culinary trivia. It fundamentally changes the protein quality, mineral availability, digestive tolerance, and nutritional density of the final product. This article explains the science, ranks each food on key nutritional measures, and gives you practical cooking guidance for both.

How Tempeh and Tofu Are Made

Tofu production mirrors cheese-making. Soybeans are soaked, ground with water, boiled to produce soy milk, and then a coagulant β€” typically calcium sulphate (gypsum), magnesium chloride (nigari), or glucono delta-lactone β€” is added to precipitate the proteins. The resulting curds are pressed into blocks of varying firmness. The process is efficient and scalable, but it discards the okara (pulp) and uses primarily the soluble protein fractions from the bean.

Tempeh production is a controlled fermentation. Dehulled, partially cooked soybeans are inoculated with spores of Rhizopus oligosporus (or R. oryzae) and incubated at approximately 30–32 Β°C for 24–48 hours. The mycelium (fungal threads) penetrates and binds the beans into a firm, sliceable cake. During this process, the fungus secretes proteases that partially hydrolyse the soy proteins into shorter peptides and free amino acids, secretes lipases that modify the fat profile, synthesises B vitamins including riboflavin and niacin, and critically β€” degrades antinutritional compounds including phytates and trypsin inhibitors.

The whole-bean nature of tempeh means it retains all the fibre, fat, and micronutrients of the original soybean. Tofu, pressed from soy milk, concentrates protein but loses most of the fibre.

Protein Content and PDCAAS: Who Wins?

On a per-100 g basis, firm tofu typically provides 8–12 g of protein while tempeh delivers 18–20 g β€” roughly twice as much. Both soy foods are considered complete proteins because they supply all nine essential amino acids in adequate ratios. The Protein Digestibility-Corrected Amino Acid Score (PDCAAS) for soy isolate is 1.0 β€” the maximum β€” making soy protein equivalent to animal protein by this metric.

However, raw PDCAAS data does not capture the full picture. The score is derived from digestibility in rats and does not account for antinutritional factors (ANFs) that reduce protein absorption in humans. Soybeans naturally contain trypsin inhibitors β€” compounds that block the protease enzymes needed to digest protein. Tempeh fermentation degrades up to 60 % of these inhibitors. Cooking also reduces them, but fermentation achieves both heat-sensitive and heat-stable inhibitor degradation simultaneously. Studies measuring true ileal digestibility in humans find tempeh protein is somewhat more digestible than tofu, despite both scoring near the top of PDCAAS tables.

For athletes and others tracking leucine threshold for muscle protein synthesis, both foods perform well. Tempeh provides approximately 1.5 g of leucine per 100 g versus roughly 0.8 g in firm tofu β€” a meaningful difference when you are targeting the 2.5–3 g leucine threshold per meal thought to maximally stimulate mTOR signalling.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip

If you are using tempeh specifically for muscle protein synthesis, a 150 g serving provides approximately 30 g protein and 2.2 g leucine β€” very close to the threshold often cited in sports nutrition research.

Phytate Reduction and Mineral Bioavailability

Phytic acid (phytate) is the primary storage form of phosphorus in seeds and legumes. It has a strong negative charge that chelates divalent minerals β€” zinc, iron, calcium, magnesium β€” forming insoluble complexes that pass through the gut largely unabsorbed. In populations relying heavily on legumes and whole grains, phytate is a significant contributor to mineral deficiency.

Fermentation with Rhizopus species is one of the most effective ways to degrade phytate. Studies show that tempeh fermentation reduces phytic acid content by 50–75 % compared to raw soybeans. By contrast, the processes used to make tofu (soaking, grinding, heating) reduce phytate by approximately 20–40 % β€” meaningful but substantially less. The practical result is that the zinc, iron, and calcium in tempeh are significantly more bioavailable than in tofu or unfermented soy products.

This matters considerably for plant-based eaters who are already at higher risk of zinc and iron insufficiency. Choosing tempeh over tofu as the primary soy food in a vegan diet is a straightforward way to improve mineral status without supplementation.

β€œFermentation reduces phytic acid in soybeans more effectively than any other common food processing method, substantially improving zinc and iron bioavailability.”

β€” Nout & Kiers, Journal of Applied Microbiology, 2005

Vitamin B12, Other Nutrients and the Fermentation Bonus

One of the most persistent claims about tempeh is that it contains vitamin B12 and can therefore help vegans meet their needs. This is largely a myth. While some traditional tempeh production environments contain B12-producing bacteria as contaminants, standardised commercial tempeh production using pure Rhizopus cultures produces negligible B12. Vegans should not rely on tempeh for B12 and must supplement.

What fermentation does reliably produce is an enhanced B vitamin profile β€” particularly riboflavin (B2) and niacin (B3), both synthesised by the fungal mycelium during incubation. Tempeh also contains more fibre per serving than tofu (approximately 5–7 g per 100 g versus less than 1 g in firm tofu), supporting gut microbiome diversity and satiety. The fat content of tempeh (approximately 11 g per 100 g) includes more polyunsaturated fatty acids relative to tofu due to lipase activity during fermentation.

Cooking Tempeh: Techniques and Flavour

Tempeh has a distinctly earthy, nutty, umami-rich flavour that intensifies with cooking. Its dense, firm texture makes it ideal for high-heat methods that tofu cannot tolerate as well. Before cooking, many recipes call for steaming tempeh for 10–15 minutes, which removes bitterness and opens the texture to absorb marinades more effectively. Key techniques include:

**Marinating:** Tempeh's porous structure absorbs liquid marinades readily after steaming. A soy sauce, rice vinegar, garlic and ginger marinade for 30 minutes creates an umami-rich base for stir-frying or baking. **Pan-frying:** Sliced or crumbled tempeh fried in a small amount of oil at medium-high heat develops a crispy exterior in 3–4 minutes per side. This is one of the most satisfying textures in plant-based cooking. **Baking:** Tempeh cubes tossed in a marinade and baked at 200 Β°C for 20–25 minutes create chewy, caramelised pieces ideal for grain bowls and wraps. **Crumbling:** Raw or steamed tempeh crumbled and cooked in a skillet mimics minced meat in texture, making it an excellent base for bolognese, tacos, or chilli.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip

Steaming tempeh before marinating is the single technique that most improves its palatability. It softens the texture, reduces bitterness, and makes the interior receptive to flavour penetration.

Cooking Tofu: Pressing, Silken to Extra-Firm, and Applications

Tofu's primary variable is water content, which determines both texture and cooking performance. Silken tofu (undrained, unpressed) has the highest water content and a creamy, almost custard-like texture β€” ideal for smoothies, desserts, dressings, and Japanese agedashi-dofu. Firm and extra-firm tofu have progressively less moisture and hold their shape better for pan-frying, grilling, and stir-frying. Pressing extra-firm tofu in a tofu press or between weighted plates for 30–60 minutes removes substantial additional water, creating a denser texture that browns more effectively.

For maximum browning (the Maillard reaction requires low surface moisture), tofu should be pressed, patted dry, and cooked in a well-heated, lightly oiled pan without being moved for at least 3–4 minutes per side. Coating cubed tofu in a thin layer of cornstarch before pan-frying creates an exceptionally crispy exterior. Tofu absorbs marinades less readily than tempeh β€” marinating after pressing, or using methods like freezing-and-thawing to create a spongier texture, improves absorption significantly.

Key Takeaways

Tempeh and tofu are both valuable, versatile soy foods β€” but tempeh holds a meaningful nutritional edge due to its higher protein density, superior mineral bioavailability from phytate reduction, greater fibre content, and richer flavour. Tofu excels in applications requiring a neutral flavour or silken texture. For plant-based eaters optimising nutrition, tempeh deserves more prominence in the weekly meal rotation. Use both strategically: tempeh where protein density and flavour intensity are priorities, tofu where texture versatility is needed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is tempeh better than tofu for building muscle?β–Ό
Tempeh has a higher protein content per 100 g (18–20 g versus 8–12 g for firm tofu) and a higher leucine content, making it arguably more efficient for muscle protein synthesis. Both are complete proteins. If protein per calorie is your priority, tempeh wins clearly.
Can I eat tempeh raw?β–Ό
Commercially pasteurised tempeh is technically safe to eat without further cooking, but the raw flavour is bitter and unappealing. Steaming, pan-frying, or baking dramatically improves palatability. Most recipes assume tempeh will be cooked.
Does tempeh contain B12?β–Ό
Reliably no β€” not in commercially produced tempeh made with pure Rhizopus cultures. Traditional village-produced tempeh in Indonesia may contain B12 from bacterial contamination, but this cannot be relied upon. Vegans must supplement B12 regardless of tempeh consumption.
Which is better for gut health β€” tempeh or tofu?β–Ό
Tempeh has a clear advantage for gut health. It contains significantly more fibre (5–7 g per 100 g versus less than 1 g in tofu), and the fermentation process produces short-chain fatty acids and partially degraded proteins that may support the gut microbiome. The live mycelium in fresh tempeh also contributes probiotic-adjacent benefits, though pasteurisation in most commercial products reduces this.

References

  1. [1]Messina M (2016). β€œSoy and Health Update: Evaluation of the Clinical and Epidemiologic Literature.” Nutrients. PMID: 27886135
  2. [2]Astuti M et al. (2000). β€œTempeh: A nutritious and healthy food from Indonesia.” Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition. PMID: 24393544
  3. [3]Shurtleff W, Aoyagi A (2001). β€œThe Book of Tempeh.” Ten Speed Press.
  4. [4]Nout MJR, Kiers JL (2005). β€œTempeh fermentation, innovation and functionality: update into the third millenium.” Journal of Applied Microbiology. PMID: 16045533

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About This Article

Written by James Chen, Professional Chef & Culinary Educator. Published 15 July 2025. Last reviewed 20 April 2026.

This article cites 4 peer-reviewed sources. See the full reference list below.

Editorial policy: All content is reviewed for accuracy and updated when new evidence emerges. Health articles include a medical disclaimer and are reviewed by qualified professionals.

About the Author

J
James Chen
Professional Chef & Culinary Educator

Professional chef with 18 years of kitchen experience across three Michelin-starred restaurants.

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