Japanese Katsudon and Oyakodon: Egg-Finished Rice Bowl Science
Japan — Waseda, Tokyo (katsudon, c.1913), nationwide (oyakodon)
The donburi format — a rice bowl with a cooked topping — has been covered taxonomically elsewhere. Here the focus is the specific technique of the egg-finished don: the method of producing the silken, semi-set egg blanket that crowns katsudon (pork cutlet) and oyakodon (chicken and egg) through a brief, controlled partial-cook. The technique is called 'tojiru' (綴じる, to bind or close) — the egg is beaten loosely (not homogeneous), poured in a circular motion over the already-simmering ingredients in a small individual-portion pan, the lid is closed immediately, and the heat is turned off. The residual heat from the simmering liquid cooks the egg from below while the lid traps steam that sets the top surface — but only slightly. The target is a specific texture between raw and set: the white is fully set but the yolk is warm and flowing, the overall texture resembling a very loose, wet scramble clinging to the protein and onion underneath. The cooking time after the lid goes on is typically 30–45 seconds — any longer and the egg over-sets into a firm, dry layer. The timing window is narrow and requires both speed in the final action and accuracy in judging when to stop. The finished unit is slid directly onto the rice without cutting or rearranging.