Japanese Kushikatsu and Kushiyaki: Skewered Foods, Osaka Tradition, and Breadcrumb Frying Culture
Japan — Osaka (Shinsekai district) primary kushikatsu culture; nationwide kushiyaki
Kushikatsu (串カツ — skewer cutlet) and kushiyaki (串焼き — skewer grill) represent two distinct Japanese skewered food traditions: kushikatsu is the Osaka tradition of panko-breaded, deep-fried skewers of vegetables and proteins unique to the working-class Shinsekai district; kushiyaki is the broader tradition of grilled skewers ranging from yakitori (chicken) to mixed vegetables, seafood, and meat over charcoal. Osaka kushikatsu has a specific social culture built around it: skewers are ordered individually, each in their own small portion; the communal dipping sauce (tonkatsu-style dark sauce) is poured into a shared container from which each diner dips their skewer — the sacred rule of kushikatsu culture is NO DOUBLE DIPPING (niduke kinshi), a hygienic norm so important that it appears on signs in every Shinsekai establishment. The bread coating: fine panko (Japanese breadcrumbs — dryer and coarser than Western breadcrumbs) is applied after egg and flour, producing a crust that is lighter and crispier than Western breading. The oil for kushikatsu frying must be clean and hot (180-190°C) — the rapid frying seals the crust before significant oil absorption. The variety of kushikatsu ingredients is broad: pork belly, beef, chicken, shrimp, lotus root, asparagus, shiitake, naganegi, quail egg, cheese, mochi — almost any ingredient that can be threaded on a bamboo skewer and fried. Kushikatsu in Shinsekai is eaten standing at narrow bars (tachigui — standing eating), with beer and the communal dipping sauce as the essential accompaniments.