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  2. Chicken katsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_katsu

    Chicken katsu. Chicken katsu (chicken cutlet (Japanese: チキンカツ, Hepburn: chikinkatsu)), also known as panko chicken or tori katsu (torikatsu (鶏カツ)) is a Japanese dish of fried chicken made with panko bread crumbs. It is related to tonkatsu, fried pork cutlets. The dish has spread internationally and has become a common dish ...

  3. Katsu-sando - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katsu-sando

    a katsu-sando combining koppe-pan and chicken katsu (new katsu-sando) There are many types of katsu-sandos, including those which use bread other than Japanese milk bread, those which use cutlet other than tonkatsu such as gyū-katsu or chicken katsu , those which use different seasonings, and those which use vegetables , and there are also ...

  4. Japanese curry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_curry

    Along with the sauce, a wide variety of vegetables and meats are used to make Japanese curry. The basic vegetables are onions, carrots, and potatoes. Beef, pork, and chicken are the most popular meat choices. Katsu curry is a breaded deep-fried cutlet (tonkatsu; usually pork or chicken) with Japanese curry sauce. [2]

  5. Breaded cutlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaded_cutlet

    Katsu of other meats cooked in a similar manner include chicken katsu, [7] gyū katsu [8] or bifukatsu (beef) and menchi-katsu (ground meat patty). [9] Katsukarē is a Japanese curry dish topped with tonkatsu. [9] In Hawaii, chicken katsu is a part of local cuisine. In Korea, pork cutlet is called donkasu, derived from the Japanese tonkatsu.

  6. Tonkatsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonkatsu

    Gyū katsu (牛カツ beef katsu), also known as bīfu katsu, is popular in the Kansai region around Osaka and Kobe. In general, breaded and deep-fried foods are called furai ("fry"), [15] such as ebi-furai (fried prawn) [15] and aji-furai (fried horse mackerel), but fried meat such as pork, beef and chicken is referred to as katsu (cutlet). [2]

  7. Yōshoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yōshoku

    An example of the latter is katsu, which is eaten with chopsticks and a bowl of white rice (ご飯, gohan), and may even be served with traditional Japanese sauces such as ponzu or grated daikon, rather than katsu sauce. Reflecting this, katsu is often written in hiragana as かつ, as a native Japanese word, rather than as カツ (from ...

  8. Croquette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croquette

    It is often served with tonkatsu (とんかつ) sauce. Cylindrical korokke are also served; they more closely resemble the French version, where seafood (prawns or crab meat) or chicken in white sauce is cooled to make it harden before the croquette is breaded and deep-fried. When it is served hot, the inside melts.

  9. Kushikatsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kushikatsu

    Eating style is unique at kushikatsu restaurants and food bars as kushikatsu is dipped into a pot of thinner sauce before eating. As a sauce pot is shared among customers, reinserting food after a bite is seen as bad manners and unsanitary. Instead, a slice of cabbage is used to scoop up sauce from the pot and pour it onto the kushikatsu.