Taho: Warm Filipino Silken Tofu with Arnibal and Sago
Filipino snack | Warm tofu | Brown sugar syrup
Taho is warm, silky, sweet, and comforting, with soft tofu, brown sugar syrup, and chewy sago pearls.
Why make it: This version uses store-bought silken tofu and small tapioca pearls for a home version of a street-food favorite.
Fresh From the Kitchen
These photos show the colors, textures, and serving style to look for when making Taho.
What Is Taho?
Taho is a Filipino snack made with warm silken tofu, arnibal syrup, and sago pearls.
Why You Will Love It
- Practical for U.S. kitchens: the recipe uses ingredients and substitutions a home cook can realistically shop for.
- Built for the table: the serving notes match how the dish usually lands in Filipino-American homes, from weeknights to merienda to parties.
- Flexible without erasing the dish: swaps are named clearly so the original idea stays visible.
- Easy to cook through: the shopping list, timings, and storage notes make the recipe straightforward to test and adjust.
Ingredient Notes
For tofu
Use soft silken tofu and warm it gently so it stays smooth.
For sago
Small tapioca pearls are easy to find and give a similar chewy contrast.
Taho Recipe
This version uses store-bought silken tofu and small tapioca pearls for a home version of a street-food favorite.
Shopping List
- silken tofu
- brown sugar
- water
- vanilla optional
- small tapioca pearls
- pandan optional
Ingredients
Sago
- 1/2 cup small tapioca pearls
- Water for boiling
Arnibal
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1 cup water
- 1 teaspoon vanilla or pandan leaf, optional
For Serving
- 2 blocks silken tofu
Instructions
- Cook tapioca pearls until translucent, then rinse.
- Simmer brown sugar and water until syrupy.
- Warm silken tofu gently in hot water or steam.
- Scoop tofu into cups.
- Spoon syrup over the tofu.
- Add sago pearls.
- Serve warm.
Tips For The Best Taho
- Warm gently: Silken tofu breaks easily.
- Rinse sago: This removes extra starch.
- Make syrup ahead: Arnibal keeps well in the fridge.
- Serve warm: Temperature is part of the comfort.
How To Serve And Store
Serve warm for breakfast or merienda. Store syrup and sago separately for up to 3 days.
Common Questions
Can I use firm tofu?
Silken tofu is much closer to taho texture.
Can I use boba pearls?
Small tapioca pearls are better, but boba works in a pinch.
Can I make arnibal less sweet?
Yes, reduce sugar or use less syrup per serving.
Can I serve it cold?
You can, but warm is classic.
Do you drink taho from the cup or eat it with a spoon? Share your family version or testing notes in the comments.
Recipe inspiration and technique reference: Filipino dessert and bakery source research from Panlasang Pinoy, Kawaling Pinoy, The Dusky Kitchen, and Filipino-American dessert sources in the site roadmap.

