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Japan (yoshoku Western-Japanese fusion tradition, Meiji-Taisho era butcher shop culture) Techniques

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Japan (yoshoku Western-Japanese fusion tradition, Meiji-Taisho era butcher shop culture)
Menchi Katsu Ground Meat Cutlet
Japan (yoshoku Western-Japanese fusion tradition, Meiji-Taisho era butcher shop culture)
Menchi katsu (メンチカツ) — or minchi katsu — is a Japanese-Western (yoshoku) deep-fried cutlet of seasoned ground meat (beef or pork-beef mix) encased in fine breadcrumbs (panko). The name derives from 'mince cutlet' — English 'mince' rendered through Japanese phonology into 'menchi'. The filling is typically a mixture of ground beef and pork seasoned with sautéed onion, salt, pepper, nutmeg, and Worcestershire sauce — distinctly Western seasoning in a Japanese technique frame. The cutlet is shaped into an oval or round patty, dusted with flour, dipped in egg wash, then coated in panko and deep-fried at 170–180°C until the exterior is deeply golden and the interior is just cooked through with some juiciness retained. The Worcestershire sauce in the filling and the separate tonkatsu sauce for dipping create a layered savoury sweetness. Menchi katsu is a staple of butcher shop prepared foods, supermarket deli sections, and shotengai (shopping street) butcher stalls — it is the working-class fried cutlet, associated with neighbourhood butchers rather than restaurants. At premium butchers, it is made with named wagyu breeds and commands high prices.
Yoshoku