Kare Pan Deep Fried Curry Bread Yoshoku Bakery
Japan; New Nakamuraya bakery in Tokyo credited with 1927 original; nationwide pan-ya bakery staple
Kare pan (curry bread) is Japan's most beloved savory bread product—a soft, enriched dough encasing Japanese curry filling that is coated in panko breadcrumbs and deep-fried until golden, creating a crispy shell with a savory, spiced filling interior. The preparation represents a Japanese innovation that combined German-style enriched bread dough (introduced through Meiji-era German baking instruction), the Japanese curry tradition, and the tempura/tonkatsu frying tradition into something entirely new. The dough is slightly enriched with milk, egg, and butter for softness; the curry filling is a thick, concentrated Japanese curry with potato and ground meat; the panko coating is pressed firmly before frying at 170°C until deeply golden. Freshly fried kare pan from a neighborhood bakery (pan-ya) is one of Japan's most quintessential convenience foods—found in every bakery, convenience store, and train station kiosk. The quality ranges from mass-produced to artisanal with restaurant-quality curry fillings. Kare pan is typically eaten hot, standing in front of the bakery or on a train, and the crunch of the panko exterior against the fragrant curry interior is the defining sensory experience. Several bakeries compete for regional 'best kare pan' recognition as a legitimate culinary category.