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a croquette or cutlet-shaped patty made of ground meat; a kind of fish cut where the fish is sliced perpendicular to the spine, rather than parallel (as with fillets); often synonymous with steak; a prawn or shrimp with its head and outer shell removed, leaving only the flesh and tail; a mash of vegetables (usually potatoes) fried with bread
A fish steak, alternatively known as a fish cutlet, is a cut of food fish which is perpendicular to the spine and can either include the bones or as boneless meat. [1] Fish steaks can be contrasted with fish fillets, which are cut parallel to either side of the spine and do not include any large bones.
Cuts of fish performed perpendicular to the spine are known as steaks or cutlets, and often include bone. The remaining bones with the attached flesh is called the "frame", and is often used to make fish stock. As opposed to whole fish or fish steaks, fillets do not contain the fish's backbone; they yield less flesh, but are easier to eat.
There are several ways to cut a fish fillet: Cutlet: obtained by slicing from behind the head of the fish, round the belly and tapering towards the tail. The fish is then turned and the process repeated on the other side to produce a double fillet; Single: more complex than the cutlet, produces two separate fillets, one from each side of the fish.
The widespread minced cutlet (Russian: котлета рубленная, romanized: kotleta rublennaya) [42] is made of minced meat (beef or pork or a mixture of both; chicken, turkey, or fish), bread, eggs, white onions, salt and spices, shaped as a meat patty and pan-fried. Bread is added in amounts up to 25% of meat, adding softness to the ...
European katsuretsu (loanword/gairaigo for cutlet) was usually made with beef; the pork version was created in 1899 at a restaurant serving European-style foods named Rengatei in Tokyo, Japan. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] It is a type of yōshoku —Japanese versions of European cuisine invented in the late 19th and early 20th centuries—and was called ...
The first complete recipes of Pozharsky cutlets were published in a Russian cookbook in 1853; the cookbook included a recipe for chicken cutlets and one for fish cutlets. [2] [13] Pelageya Alexandrova-Ignatieva notes in The Practical Fundamentals of the Cookery Art (1899–1916) that the same cutlets can also be made from game (grouse ...
In Poland, fishcakes are commonly served in the form of kotlety rybne ("fish cutlets") and are typically made with the ground meat of white fish, combined with a stale milk-soaked wheat bread roll (such as the Kaiser roll) or breadcrumbs, raw egg, finely chopped onions, seasonings and optionally herbs, all of which are mixed into a uniform mass ...