Meiji era introduction of Western cooking (洋食, yōshoku) to Japan; Rengatei restaurant (Ginza, 1895) credited with early tonkatsu development; now Japan's largest yōshoku category
Tonkatsu (豚カツ, pork cutlet) is Japan's most beloved Western-derived fried preparation — a thick, panko-coated pork loin or fillet deep-fried to the specific texture that Japanese culture has elevated to a distinct art form. Unlike the European schnitzel (thin, immediate contact-fry in butter or oil), tonkatsu features: thick-cut pork (2–2.5cm), triple-coating (flour → egg wash → panko), and deep-oil immersion at 160–170°C. The result is a dramatically different texture — thick, juicy interior against a shatteringly crispy panko exterior that separates cleanly from the pork beneath. Tonkatsu-ya (specialist tonkatsu restaurants) is a distinct restaurant genre with some establishments using only specific pig breeds and varieties: Kurobuta (Berkshire pork) for its marbling and flavour; Kagoshima black pork (Satsuma kurobuta); and domestic Japanese breeds producing richer, more complex pork character. Panko (パン粉) — dry Japanese breadcrumbs with a coarser, more open structure than European breadcrumbs — is the defining technical element: it creates larger air pockets during frying, producing a lighter, crispier, less oil-dense crust. Service: tonkatsu is sliced into strips for easy chopstick eating, served with finely shredded cabbage (a digestive philosophy — raw cabbage enzyme content is said to aid fat digestion), karashi (Japanese mustard), and tonkatsu sauce (a fruit-and-vegetable-based Worcestershire-adjacent sauce). Katsu sando (katsu sandwich) in Japanese convenience stores represents the democratised format.
Juicy, thick pork with shatteringly crispy, light panko crust; karashi provides sharp heat contrast; tonkatsu sauce adds sweet-acid-fruity depth; cabbage provides fresh, raw enzyme contrast
{"Thick-cut pork (2–2.5cm) + triple coating (flour-egg-panko) + deep immersion at 160–170°C","Panko: coarser, more open structure than Western breadcrumbs — larger air pockets = lighter crust","Kurobuta (Berkshire) and Satsuma black pork: specialist breed selection defines high-end tonkatsu","Sliced into strips for chopstick service — not cut as steak","Shredded cabbage accompaniment has digestive philosophy — raw enzymes said to aid fat digestion","Tonkatsu sauce (Worcestershire-adjacent, fruit-vegetable base) is the canonical condiment"}
{"Score the fat-meat boundary line on pork cutlets before coating — prevents the fat-layer from contracting and curling during frying","Double-fry technique for restaurant service: fry at 160°C to cook through, rest, then 190°C briefly for final crisp — better time management","For katsu sando: Japanese milk bread (shokupan) with the crust removed, light Kewpie mayo on the inside, and a very thin layer of tonkatsu sauce — the bread-mayo-sauce ratios are critical"}
{"Frying at too high temperature (180°C+) — exterior burns before thick interior cooks through","Using European breadcrumbs instead of panko — the dense crust absorbs more oil and lacks the shatter quality","Not resting tonkatsu before slicing — cutting immediately releases steam and collapses the interior moisture"}
Kushner, Barak. Slurp! A Social and Culinary History of Ramen. Brill, 2012.