Here's a recipe for baked tofu strips I found on the internet a while back, then tweaked a bit because I didn't like it the way the original recipe called for. (You can do the same with this version if needed, of course)
I usually do 2 lbs. and take them to church potlucks, and they've gone over well. I most always have an empty container to bring back home --
Baked Tofu Strips(1) Take a pound block of
firm (
not extra firm; it doesn't absorb marinade well) tofu, and press for 1 hour. You have to press it to get the extra water out. What I do is put a folded paper towel in a good sized pan, put the tofu block on top of the paper towel, then put another folded paper towel on top of the tofu. Then set a smaller pan with a 5-lb. dumbbell weight in it on top of the tofu; with another paper towel in the small pan under the dumbbell weight to keep it from scratching the nonstick finish in the pan. After it's pressed long enough, drain off the water.
Sometimes the top weighted pan isn't exactly dead center, so it eventually tilts over to one side, and the tofu block ends up lopsided. Putting the top weighted pan over toward the high side for 10-15 minutes will straighten things out.
(2) Cut the pressed tofu block into 12 or 14 1/4-inch or 3/8-inch thick strips, with a hand-held cheese slicer. The kind with a roller and a wire, where you can adjust the thickness it cuts. The first time I tried this I used a knife, but it's hard to get uniformly-cut strips that way, unless you have a really steady hand. I found a hand-held cheese slicer at WalMart for $2.00 - $3.00.
(3) Make your marinade with 1/2-cup vegetable broth (from vegan vegetable bouillon cube), 1/2-cup soy sauce (preferably Kikkoman's). That makes a full cup of marinade, which might be a bit much, depending; if you scale back the total amount just use the same proportions. I can normally get by with 3/4 cup total. I also stir up about 1/2 tablespoon of garlic powder into the marinade, just because I like garlic.
(4) Marinate the tofu strips for 30 minutes; flip them over and marinate for 30 more minutes. Or 45 minutes a side; see what works best for you. Some brands of tofu will absorb the marinade quicker than others.
(5) Place the tofu strips in an aluminum-foil-covered baking pan. Make sure and use some sort of baking pan with a lip, not a flat baking sheet; there will be some marinade sauce running/pooling. Sprinkle Minced Onion Medley flavor Mrs. Dash, and McCormick Classic Herbs Italian Seasoning on the strips, then use a spoon and dribble enough marinade onto each tofu strip to moisten the dried seasonings, and 'glue' them onto each strip. Oven bake the tofu strips at 400° F. (205° C.); 30 minutes one side, flip, season and marinade-drip again, then bake the other side for 30 more minutes.
(6) Let cool for 15-20 minutes or so, then they can go into a container and into the fridge. Joggle them around a bit on the aluminum foil, so they don't stick as they cool. Or transfer them to a plate.
The result is a dozen or so browned/seared flavorful tofu strips that you can eat as is for a snack, cold or heated in the microwave; or put two between bread with some fixin's for a hot sandwich cut down the middle; or chop up for use in scrambled eggs, omelets, soups, salads, casseroles; whatever else you can think of. A great meat substitute, and *way* better for you. Cheap and easy. Not much work either; most of the time you're just waiting for it to press, marinate, or bake. Total time for pressing/marinating/baking 1 pound block: about 3 hours, of which maybe 15-20 minutes is actual work time.
I used to bake them for 35 minutes a side at 350° F. (177° C.), but was running behind one time, in a hurry so I cranked the oven up to 400° & lowered the cooking times; and decided I liked it that way better. A nice accident. The higher temp. sears the tofu a bit, seals in flavor better it seems.
If you do two blocks, you can start pressing the 2nd block right after slicing up the 1st one, so the 2nd one is pressing while the 1st one is marinating. So one block gets done right behind the other, as the steps proceed, in staggered fashion. Total time for baking 2 blocks doing it that way is about 4 hours, with actual work time being maybe 30-35 minutes.