Japanese Kakiage Mixed Tempura Fritter Technique and Batter Architecture
Japan (national; a derivation of the tempura tradition developed in Edo period)
Kakiage (かき揚げ — 'stirred-fried') is the mixed vegetable and/or seafood tempura fritter where multiple small-cut ingredients are gathered together and fried as a unit rather than individually battered. The name derives from the stirring (kaki) action used to combine the ingredients in batter before dropping into oil. Unlike individual tempura pieces (where one ingredient is coated and fried alone), kakiage presents a complex of flavours and textures in a single crispy platform. Classic combinations: seasonal vegetables (gobo, carrot, mitsuba, onion) + small shrimp; corn and edamame; whitebait (shirauo or shirasu) with spring onion. The architecture challenge: maintaining structural integrity in the fryer while achieving even cooking through a mass of different-sized, different-density ingredients. The batter must be dry enough to hold the ingredients together without a heavy coating, and the oil temperature management more demanding than single-ingredient tempura. Kakiage is served over soba or udon (kakiage soba/udon) where the fritter floats in the broth and gradually absorbs it, softening from crispy to tender — the textural progression is the intended eating experience.