Konichiwa! I've been cooking Chinese, Filipino, and other International cuisine. Just the other day, I've ventured to try out Japanese cuisine. I tried cooking Tonkatsu for the first time and my ultimate goal is to have this perfected so that I can cook Katsudon. Tonkatsu is simply a breaded, deep-fried pork cutlet then sliced into bite-sized portions. It is normally served with Miso Soup and shredded cabbage. A very simple recipe...
On a weekday, I challenged myself to cook this and make a home-made tonkatsu sauce. My food testers did like the end result. I was only happy on my tonkatsu sauce as the pork was a bit thick and a bit dry. I couldn't pound it any thinner because I didn't have a meat tenderizer/pounder.
It's a very simple recipe and you can opt not to deep-fry it.
Tonkatsu and Home-made Tonkatsu Sauce
Ingredients
For the Tonkatsu
- Pork Cutlet without bones
- Dried Panko Bread Crumbs
- Tempura Batter or flour
- Salt
- 1 egg
- Oil
For the Tonkatsu Sauce
- 1/4 cup Ketchup
- 2-3 tbsp. kikoman sauce
- 3 tbsp. worcest shire sauce
- a drop of sesame oil
- a dash of dried garlic powder
Procedure
- Wrap the pork cutlet in a transparent film and pound with a meat tenderizer until around 1/2 inch thich. Then rub some salt in the pork.
- Heat pan or deep fryer with oil. Dip the pork in flour, beaten egg, then dried pankobread crumbs. Do not mix-up the order. It should be in the order of flour, egg, and crumbs. Make sure that you coat the pork completely!
- Fry the pork around 3 mins at each side. The time would really depend on the thickness of the pork. Once cooked, place on top of some tissue to absorb excess oil and leave for 5 minutes before slicing.
- You can serve on top of shredded cabbage.
- For the tonkatsu sauce, just mix everything together and taste. You can add more kikkoman sauce or worcestshire depending on your liking.
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