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NIPPONIA No.36 March 15, 2006
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Special Feature*
Japanese Meals with International Roots
Many fine meals now served in Japanese restaurants and in the home actually have their origin in other countries.
The cooking methods are basically the same, although many of the dishes have been changed somewhat to make them go well with rice. Here are some of the most common of those international dishes.
Written by Tsuchiya Komei
Photos by Kono Toshihiko
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Ramen
A Chinese noodle dish that evolved to suit the Japanese palate. A very common meal in Japan today. The most basic recipe calls for boiled ramen noodles made from wheat flour to be served in a broth seasoned with soy sauce and topped with a few thin slices of roast pork and a green vegetable.
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Niku-jaga
A beef stew. The recipe was first developed by the former Japanese Navy for its sailors. Beef, potatoes and onions are simmered in a broth seasoned with soy sauce. Often seen on family dinner tables.
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Sukiyaki
Beef and vegetables sautéed and simmered with soy sauce, sugar and other seasonings. Cooked at the table in a metal pan, which becomes the serving dish for everyone there. A common meal after the Meiji Restoration (1868), due partly to the government's encouragement of meat consumption. (Before then, eating the meat of four-legged animals had generally been frowned upon.)
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Tempura
Vegetables and seafood are coated in batter, then deep-fried. The recipe came from Portugal sometime around the 17th century, but today tempura is known throughout the world as a typical Japanese food.
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Omu-raisu
A chicken pilaf is wrapped in a very thin omelet and topped with ketchup. The recipe is said to have been developed in 1902. Now considered a typical Western dish that evolved to suit Japanese tastes.
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Kare-raisu
An Indian dish introduced to Japan via Britain. A curry sauce thickened with flour complements boiled rice. Garnished with pickled vegetables.
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Korokke
Mashed potato with ground meat and minced onion added. The mixture is patted into easy-to-handle oval shapes, coated with breadcrumbs then deep-fried. The Japanese word korokke comes from the French, croquette.
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Hayashi-raisu and ton-katsu
Hayashi-raisu (the front) is beef and vegetables in a thick glossy brown sauce, served with boiled rice. Ton-katsu (back) is pork cutlet coated with breadcrumbs and deep-fried.
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Ebi-furai
Prawns and shrimp are a favorite in Japan, and are used in a wide variety of dishes. Ebi-furai are prawns coated with breadcrumbs and deep-fried (above). Prawns served as tempura are coated with a batter of flour and deep-fried (see far above, tempura).
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