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Koya Tofu in Elderly Nutrition

As Europe’s population ages, frailty prevention has moved to the top of the agenda for dietitians, care facility managers, and food service professionals alike. At the heart of that conversation is a deceptively simple question: how do we ensure older adults consume enough high-quality protein — consistently, palatably, and practically?

Koya tofu is a shelf-stable soy protein ingredient that has been used in Japan for centuries in environments where nutritional preservation, storage stability, and efficient preparation were essential.

The Frailty Challenge

Frailty is characterised by a gradual loss of muscle mass, strength, and physical resilience. Insufficient protein intake is widely recognised as a key contributing factor. Yet in institutional care settings, many of the default protein sources fall short:

Protein supplements can be difficult to consume consistently, while meat may become less comfortable for some older adults to eat. Conventional tofu, while nutritionally valuable, depends on cold chain logistics and has a short shelf life.

These aren’t minor inconveniences. In large-scale care environments, they translate directly into gaps in nutritional delivery.

What Makes Koya Tofu Different

Koya tofu is produced through a process involving concentration, freezing, and controlled low-temperature drying, creating a porous, shelf-stable protein ingredient with rapid rehydration properties.

High protein content

With protein comprising 51.7% of its composition by weight, koya tofu is a naturally high-protein food. Protein contributes to the maintenance of muscle mass, making consistent intake crucial in elderly nutrition. It can be easily incorporated into existing meal systems as a convenient protein ingredient.

Soft texture, mild flavour

The rehydrated texture is tender and easy to chew — an important factor for older adults with reduced chewing capacity or dental challenges.

Rapid rehydration

It rehydrates in approximately one minute. Whether in soups, stews, grain bowls, or gratin dishes, koya tofu integrates seamlessly into existing recipes without additional preparation time.

Long shelf life

Shelf-stable for approximately 13 months with no cold chain required. This supports efficient inventory management in institutional kitchens, helping reduce both waste and procurement complexity.

Multiple formats available

Diced, sliced, and powder formats allow flexible application across different meal types — from protein-enriched soups to baked goods.

Regulatory Clarity

Koya tofu is compatible with existing EU food regulations. As a traditional ingredient, it can be incorporated into existing European food systems without novel food authorisation requirements and is suitable for plant-based menu applications. This significantly reduces the administrative and procurement barriers often associated with introducing new ingredients into care menus.

Research Context

Collaborative research involving Wageningen University & Research has explored aspects of koya tofu’s nutritional properties, including cardiometabolic health markers. We are happy to share relevant study information upon request.

Working with Care Facilities and Food Professionals

We work directly with institutional kitchens, dietitians, and food service teams to pilot koya tofu within existing meal systems. Pilot support includes product sampling, recipe adaptation guidance, texture and hydration guides, and full product specification sheets.

If you are exploring protein-enrichment strategies for elderly care menus, we welcome inquiries regarding pilot projects, product specifications, and sampling requests.

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This article is intended for food professionals and institutional buyers. The nutritional attributes described reflect compositional data. No medical or therapeutic claims are made.