Tofu has a reputation problem. It can be dry and sad, or it can be wet and sad, which is a remarkable range for one ingredient. This sheet pan ginger tofu and broccoli is built to avoid both outcomes.
The tofu gets pressed, coated, and roasted first. The broccoli goes on the pan after the tofu has a head start. Then the sticky ginger glaze gets tossed on at the end so it clings instead of burning into a sugary crime scene.
One pan. Crisp edges. Dinner that doesn’t taste like you’re apologizing for eating tofu.
The tofu needs two small favors
First, press it. You don’t need a special tofu press unless you enjoy owning niche equipment. Wrap the block in a towel, set a heavy pan on top, and give it 10 minutes. Less water means better browning.
Second, use cornstarch. A thin coating gives the tofu a crisp shell in the oven. Not deep-fried crunch, but enough texture to make the glaze grab onto every cube.
If you skip the pressing, the tofu still cooks. It just stays softer. If you skip the cornstarch, same story. Edible, but not as satisfying. Tofu rewards the tiny bit of prep.
Roast before you glaze
This is the rule that keeps the whole pan from tasting burnt: glaze at the end.
The sticky sauce has honey or maple syrup in it. Sugar plus high heat plus 25 minutes equals trouble. Roast the tofu and broccoli until they have color, then toss everything with the glaze and put it back in the oven for 3 minutes.
That short final bake sets the sauce. It turns glossy and clings to the tofu instead of pooling in the corner of the pan like a bad decision.
Broccoli needs space too
Broccoli can either roast or steam. The difference is space. If the pan is crowded, the florets trap moisture and come out soft. If they have room, the tips get browned and crisp.
Use a large sheet pan. If your broccoli looks piled up, split the tofu and vegetables between two pans. I know. Two pans feels like betrayal. But soggy broccoli is worse.
Cut the florets into similar sizes so they cook evenly. Big chunky pieces stay tough while tiny bits char. Aim for pieces you can eat in one bite without negotiating with a tree-shaped vegetable.
Make the glaze bright, not heavy
The glaze is simple: soy sauce, rice vinegar, honey, sesame oil, ginger, garlic, and a little ketchup or tomato paste for body. Ketchup sounds unserious, but it works. It brings sweetness, tang, and thickness in one spoonful.
Fresh ginger is worth using here. Powdered ginger can help in a pinch, but fresh ginger gives the sauce that sharp warmth that makes tofu taste alive. Same with garlic. Grate it small so it melts into the sauce instead of leaving harsh little chunks.
If the glaze gets too thick, whisk in a splash of water. If it looks thin, simmer it another minute. Sauce is flexible. It just likes attention.
Easy swaps that still work
This sheet pan ginger tofu and broccoli is forgiving as long as you keep the method.
- Add sliced bell pepper for sweetness.
- Swap broccoli for cauliflower, green beans, or snap peas.
- Use tamari if you need a gluten-free soy sauce.
- Add red pepper flakes or chili crisp if you want heat.
- Whisk 1 tablespoon peanut butter into the glaze for a richer sauce.
For a brighter finish, squeeze lime over the pan right before serving. Not required, but it wakes everything up.
Meal prep without sad leftovers
Tofu loses some crispness in the fridge. That’s just the deal. The flavor still holds well, especially with the ginger glaze.
For best leftovers, store tofu and broccoli separately from rice or noodles. Reheat in an oven or air fryer if you want some crispness back. The microwave is fine when you’re hungry and patience has left the building, but it makes the tofu softer.
This is the kind of weeknight dinner that gives you the satisfaction of takeout without waiting for a driver or pretending the delivery fee is normal. Sheet pan, sticky glaze, done.