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The Secret to Perfect Tokyo Style Tonkatsu 

Brian Lagerstrom
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BULL DOG TONKATSU SAUCE: amzn.to/476fzw1
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EIGTH SHEET PAN: amzn.to/3tSc0eM
2QT SAUCE PAN: amzn.to/498sFdU
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TONKATSU (makes 6 pork chops)
▪6 6oz/170g pork chops
▪Salt
▪Corn starch
▪Egg wash (3 eggs whisked with 1T neutral oil)
▪350g (3c) Japanese panko breadcrumbs (sifted to remove small dusty pieces)
▪Water (in spray bottle)
Place each chop in a plastic bag and pound until they’re about ¾” to 1” thick (2cm). Use a jaccarding tool or poke with a fork a few times to tenderize the meat.
Salt on both sides and allow to brine in the fridge for 10-15 minutes while you make the tonkatsu sauce (recipe below)
To set up the breading station, place corn starch on 1 plate or tray, place eggs in another plate/tray, and place japanese panko on a third. Spritz the breadcrumbs with water to moisten and just take the dry edge off.
To bread, coat each pork chop in corn starch, then egg wash, then the panko. Carefully press to be sure as much panko sticks as possible. Spritz the panko’d chops with water then drop into the panko again to adhere more crumbs.
To fry, heat oil over medium heat in a large somewhat shallow pan to 325F/162C. The oil should be no more than ½-⅔ of the way up the sides of the pan. Carefully drop chops away from your body (1-2 at a time depending on size of your pan). Flip after 90 seconds of cooking. Cook for 90 more seconds or until internal temp reaches 135F/58C and chop is golden brown.
Place on wire rack to drain. I go so far as to drain my chops vertically to ensure max crispiness.
TONKATSU SAUCE
▪30g (1 3/4T) worcestershire
▪10g (1 2/3t) soy sauce
▪10g (2t) sesame oil
▪50g (3T) oyster sauce
▪50g (2 1/3T) molasses
▪25g (1 2/3T) dijon
▪1g (1/2t) onion powder
▪1g (1/2t) garlic powder
▪10g (2t) ginger, grated/minced
▪125g (1/2c) ketchup
Mix with immersion blender until smooth.
TO PLATE:
▪Finely shred some green cabbage (with a knife or mandolin)
Slice each chop and plate on top of shredded cabbage with a dizzle of tonkatsu sauce on top.
CHAPTERS:
0:00 Intro and brining the pork
1:52 Tonkatsu sauce
3:48 My go-to cookware (ad)
4:49 Breading and cooking
9:07 Plate up
#tonkatsu #japanesefood #porkchop

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24 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 507   
@WiscoKnight0806
@WiscoKnight0806 8 месяцев назад
I always appreciate that you explain why we do certain techniques, the effects of doing it differently, and viable substitutions. Really makes me feel like I understand the process and can adapt those techniques to other dishes. Another banger, looks great. Can't wait to try it. Thanks Bri!
@sevancan3294
@sevancan3294 8 месяцев назад
As a Japanese living in Canada who has been missing Japanese raw panko all these years, spraying water is such a brilliant genius idea! I’ll definitely try it. Thank you so much!
7 месяцев назад
I buy panko from a manufacturer calles "Lobo" it's from Thailand they have coarse japanese stype panko (red) and fine panko (blue). They explicitly state that you should spray water on the panko to soften it up, I'm doing this ever since. But I bake a lot of shokupan also, so I might just try to make real fresh panko from leftovers.
@liamtahaney713
@liamtahaney713 8 месяцев назад
Sweet potato starch is even better than corn starch in this application. It's a real secret weapon for great crispy fried stuff at home.
@MrJruhl1
@MrJruhl1 8 месяцев назад
Woah woah woah, I have potato starch on hand but sweet potato starch?
@canaldecasta
@canaldecasta 8 месяцев назад
Where the hell can I buy that🤒
@annchovy6
@annchovy6 8 месяцев назад
@@canaldecastait’s sold in any Asian market.
@adammoore7447
@adammoore7447 8 месяцев назад
Agreed. Corn starch isn't native to Japan, but potato starch is.
@liamtahaney713
@liamtahaney713 8 месяцев назад
​@@canaldecastaany Asian store and it's super duper cheap.
@CuteLittleHen
@CuteLittleHen 8 месяцев назад
The amount of information you fit into these videos is astounding. Absolutely love all those details I wouldn't think about myself, such as sifting the panko and spraying it lightly with water. That makes so much sense! Thank you, Bri!
@ohiko9594
@ohiko9594 8 месяцев назад
I really like Tonkatsu and I come from a country where pork cutlets in breading is one of the main staples of the national cuisine. I thought I knew everything about crunchy cutlets, I used Japanese panko and starch, and made my own Tonkatsu sause, and yet you still manage to bring this easy but amazing recipe to a new level with wet panko shards. Bri-dog you are a freakin' genius
@user-cb8dd3rc9z
@user-cb8dd3rc9z 8 месяцев назад
I fry most of my meats in a similar way, but spraying the cutlet with water to get more breading to stick is something I need to try. And you used basically my favorite cut of pork for the purpose! I typically use potato starch versus cornstarch, but both are great. Also, that cover photo was freaking excellent work. What a great shot.
@AnimatedStoriesWorldwide
@AnimatedStoriesWorldwide 8 месяцев назад
I spray with broth for a bit of added MSG on the crust, but only when I cook for guests. If you eat alone, plainer can be better.
@jordonbay7778
@jordonbay7778 8 месяцев назад
Incredible attention to detail, as usual. This is why you're my favorite cooking channel, period.
@dreamingtreefarmstead
@dreamingtreefarmstead 8 месяцев назад
This is spot on. My best friend's family owned an amazing katsu restaurant while we were in HS. I have missed this dearly. We used to go to Mitsuwa and pick up box loads of milk bread panko from the bakery. Now make a katsu curry! 😍
@brennoneudis7498
@brennoneudis7498 8 месяцев назад
Brian I wanted to thank you again for your videos which are as close to perfect as I think one can get. Every recipe is delicious and fool proof. Thank you for what you do.
@SinisterMD
@SinisterMD 8 месяцев назад
Fantastic recipe. Tonkatsu is underrated in my opinion but when done well is absolutely excellent.
@BearMom75
@BearMom75 8 месяцев назад
This is so crazy! My husband and I were just talking about making tonkatsu last night! I’ll definitely be trying Bri’s recipe in the next couple weeks!
@flos705
@flos705 8 месяцев назад
You have so many great tips in this recipe! I’m Japanese living in the U.S. I can tell this will be better than my mom’s I will definitely try this one!
@OptimusN1701
@OptimusN1701 8 месяцев назад
This looks amazing, and opens the door for home cooks to make katsu curry and katsudon. I'd love to see your take on either (or both) of those!
@thierry_martin
@thierry_martin 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for the spraying tip! I cook tonkatsu pork quite often, but never tried to spray the breading with water. It works great. My pork was crispier than ever.
@nilabakery
@nilabakery 8 месяцев назад
The way you incorporate different techniques and flavors really sets this recipe apart. You've definitely elevated my cooking game! 👌👌🤩
@Pants69
@Pants69 8 месяцев назад
As a European... Molasses
@karenfox1671
@karenfox1671 8 месяцев назад
My goodness this has got to be one sweet tasting chop, you put a ton of thought into recreating this experience. I can't wait to try the sauce too! Made In has got to love you. That is some special footage of sauteing that cutlet and the colour on the cauliflower is great!
@Joweyification
@Joweyification 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for making this video Brian. I tried making this in the past and it just never ended up being the same as what I’ve had in restaurants. I appreciate the research you did on the panko crumbs! Thanks for the recipe!
@hw7504
@hw7504 7 месяцев назад
Rehydrating sifted-out panko is an absolutely genius hack I'm looking forward to try! Certainly looks like the closest approximation short of actually taking stale de-crusted shokupan to a specialized food processor. The chefs I watched in Tokyo really give a good spanking after the starch to make sure the bulk of the excess is off and they let the egg wash drip until there's only a slow trickle. If you ever revisit this recipe, consider a two-stage fry; one to bring the pork to temp, and the other to really give the exterior that final crisp. The only other thing left is to try to source pork with berkshire pedigree for that kurobuta experience. Great video as always.
@prccap
@prccap 8 месяцев назад
Best video this year!!!! Thank you, Brian
@NoNameOrLife
@NoNameOrLife 8 месяцев назад
i always love how approchable his recipes look many other cooking youtubers make it very fancy and so complicated i cant even imagine doing them he offers so many alternatives and simplicty . thank you
@dimasakbar7668
@dimasakbar7668 7 месяцев назад
Joshua Weissman? lol
@NoNameOrLife
@NoNameOrLife 7 месяцев назад
@@dimasakbar7668 exactly
@jimmyxshin
@jimmyxshin 8 месяцев назад
spraying the panko to make it more like the soft breading they use in Japan is brilliant. this is what sets this recipe apart
@Cartho8236
@Cartho8236 8 месяцев назад
Oh hell yeah! I've been craving some Japanese Tonkatsu for over a week and I've been watching videos about it almost everyday. Your video is definitely the tipping point, so I'm doing some this weekend. Lets gooo! 🐖🤤👍
@padders1068
@padders1068 8 месяцев назад
Hey Bri! Great video and recipe, thanks for sharing and inspiring! ❤
@corlissmedia2.0
@corlissmedia2.0 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for making this video! I remember asking, and now you've delivered!
@robertcrawford1791
@robertcrawford1791 7 месяцев назад
Made this tonight. For my tastes, next time I’d cut the sesame oil to 5 grams, and I would go a lot easier on the salt on the pork than Brian did. Still delicious! Soooo crispy, all the tips totally work!
@steisdre
@steisdre 8 месяцев назад
Man that breading technique looks next level! Can't wait to try it 🤠
@alphabravoh
@alphabravoh 8 месяцев назад
THANK YOU! I don't know if you saw my suggestion for this, but I'm SO happy to see it! Thank you, Thank you!!
@greglongphee2034
@greglongphee2034 7 месяцев назад
Looks awesome, Can't wait to try it.
@JeremySry
@JeremySry 7 месяцев назад
whewwww this looks so fire!
@taelandi
@taelandi Месяц назад
This is greatest dish ever made thank you for this knowledge!
@moxlyo
@moxlyo 7 месяцев назад
made this on the weekend with nice Spanish iberico chops, worked out perfectly!
@ChuckWestfield
@ChuckWestfield 8 месяцев назад
I love katsu! I love how bulletproof your recipes are. Can we get a ramen recipe someday
@BrianLagerstrom
@BrianLagerstrom 8 месяцев назад
Ramen is on the list for November!
@mattbrickey
@mattbrickey 8 месяцев назад
Hey Bri, Since you’re in St Louis, you can go to Nudo house for your ramen inspiration. Best ramen I’ve had since I left Okinawa.
@SwagimirPutin
@SwagimirPutin 8 месяцев назад
@@BrianLagerstrom Your ramen video will get flooded with Narutards!
@jacobteeples220
@jacobteeples220 8 месяцев назад
Brian! I can't wait to try this! I would love to see you take this and make Katsudon in another video because it is my favorite and I feel like its something that not a lot of the Japanese restaurants I have been to in the States serve and so many people are missing out!
@dashp0t
@dashp0t 8 месяцев назад
Awesome and much appreciated details on the "not your typical panko" !!
@BRZZ-xw4hd
@BRZZ-xw4hd 8 месяцев назад
i was in japan this year myself. great experience. loved the country and the people...peace out
@jamescasebere33
@jamescasebere33 8 месяцев назад
Namapanko is definitely next level. I’m looking forward to trying your method.
@scottwu431
@scottwu431 8 месяцев назад
Tonkatsu is so tasty, and your recipe looks so good and makes it look do-able and tons of key tips I never knew about! Are there other Japanese foods you plan to do for the channel? Would be sick if you did something based on RamenLord's stuff and he's just up the road a bit in Chicago!
@davidj7516
@davidj7516 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for your time and posting.
@cid386
@cid386 4 месяца назад
So glad you went to Katsukura! I've been in Tokyo for a while now and that's a spot I ALWAYS try to take people to.
@michaelmiller1109
@michaelmiller1109 8 месяцев назад
Brian, your cooking is awesome as always.
@TheWorldsOkayestUSMarine
@TheWorldsOkayestUSMarine 7 месяцев назад
I love cooking this. One of the best culinary treasures ever invented. It's cheap, too!
@dimasakbar7668
@dimasakbar7668 7 месяцев назад
Seeing that nama panko sub and vertical draining, someone clearly doing their homework, or perusing the Japanese side of cooking channel. Awesome work as always
@oddeye889
@oddeye889 8 месяцев назад
So happy to see this one! I lived in Tokyo for 5 years. Now back in the US, I've been trying to recreate the perfect Tonkatsu for years. The namapanko is a must!! Great tips. I've even tried freezing and blending white bread to get those perfect shards. Can't wait to try this!
@jamiek2288
@jamiek2288 8 месяцев назад
Whoa whoa whoa whoa! Spritzing water over panko? Is brilliant!!!! Can’t wait to make this. Thank you for the tip Bri!
@cpruns4501
@cpruns4501 8 месяцев назад
This is my favorite dish when I got our local Japanese place and I also enjoy it with Chicken. I can't wait to try this. Thank you!! Great tricks too by the way and you are correct it's that crispiness that makes all the difference.
@dashiya1570
@dashiya1570 6 месяцев назад
This is like Polish "schabowy" but with panko instead of normal breadcrumbs and with a gravy Can't wait to try it out after xmas!
@GK-ee7mw
@GK-ee7mw 7 месяцев назад
This turned out incredibly good! Love the sauce and the pork does come out sooo juicy 😋. Thanks for the killer recipe 👏
@robgetlan1651
@robgetlan1651 8 месяцев назад
On a random Monday, could we get a short video of bloopers from your videos?
@BrianLagerstrom
@BrianLagerstrom 8 месяцев назад
That's a fun idea. haha I dont have any good way of sorting them out from the tens of thousands of clips I have though.
@Werewolf.exe77
@Werewolf.exe77 5 месяцев назад
just found your channel banger video man absolutely subscribed
@jpgabriele9596
@jpgabriele9596 7 месяцев назад
delicious ! I have to buy my ingredients now, so inspired to cook .
@Hoakaloa
@Hoakaloa 8 месяцев назад
Thanks, first time I've heard these tips! Will try soon.
@knojah
@knojah 3 месяца назад
Brian holy cow dude you just elevated my katsu game beyond my hopes and dreams. Idk how you figured out how to make a katsu sauce that tastes exactly like pickled fukujinzuke, but you did it. And mind blown with the spritzing the panko to be able to cling more panko onto the cutlet. You are a savant... 🙏🏾🤘🏾🤙🏽🔥
@QuickNutritiousBites
@QuickNutritiousBites 7 месяцев назад
Delicious ! Cooking is my best hobby
@driftspecs13
@driftspecs13 8 месяцев назад
If you have access to an Asian bakery that sells shokupan, or Japanese milk bread, you can make your own legit nama panko at home. Slice the loaf and let the slices sit out and stale a bit. Then just run them through a food processor and pulse until you get that nama panko consistency. It's what I do at home, although it's really tough not to actually just eat the shokupan. 🤤 Quick edit: potato starch is the go-to here. Corn starch can be used in a pinch, but the Japanese definitely use potato starch. It's easy to find online or in Asian supers.
@darrenzinck7686
@darrenzinck7686 8 месяцев назад
One of the simplest, most satisfying things to eat.
@edwardb4730
@edwardb4730 7 месяцев назад
I just made the sauce and wow does that taste amazing.
@vicki4422
@vicki4422 6 месяцев назад
Wow, I have made schnitzel many many times but this Japanese version is amazing, so crispy and tender. This technique makes all the difference. I did get the "flake" panko from our local Asian grocery store. Thanks for another great recipe.
@henry3435
@henry3435 8 месяцев назад
One thing we did in the restaurant for nama panko was we just ground up shokupan in the food processor! This is a great solution too. For some dishes (wagyu katsu) we brunoised the shokupan so the coating was cubes... it was a huge pain but amazing and looked sweet
@HircusHircus
@HircusHircus 7 месяцев назад
here I was going into this video thinking I've heard it all. completely changed how I'm gonna approach katsu!
@CopiumEnjoyer
@CopiumEnjoyer 8 месяцев назад
Wow this recipe is probably the most authentic one done by a western content creator. I had to go to Japan to buy bags of their panko (trust me this is the most important ingredient) but now I’m going to try this water spritz thing. Thanks Brian!
@languagechefcorey
@languagechefcorey 8 месяцев назад
That spray method is genius!!!
@uncledave8857
@uncledave8857 8 месяцев назад
I had a Japanese restaurant by where I lived in Seoul, South Korea. I got this every time. It's soooooo good!
@boscobear123
@boscobear123 8 месяцев назад
1.14 million subs!!! Damn Brian thats fruckin awesome dude. Holla at your 10k OGs🤙🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻congrats
@ezraclark7904
@ezraclark7904 8 месяцев назад
I discovered an incredible ingredient for dredging, BUTTER POWDER, in with the starch it adds great flavor.
@NectereYT
@NectereYT 8 месяцев назад
I ate this and rice/mac salad for like 6 mos in Hawaii, its so so good and I dont like pork chops normally. Thank you for this version with a recipe.
@ExterminatorElite
@ExterminatorElite 8 месяцев назад
1:52 I am SO glad to see someone using molasses in the tonkatsu sauce! Every at-home recipe I've seen misses this ingredient, but there's a deep fruity vibe to tonkatsu sauce, like prunes, that works so well with the katsu, and you simply don't get without it. This is the way.
@annchovy6
@annchovy6 8 месяцев назад
I will probably use my date molasses instead since I’m always looking to use it.
@ExterminatorElite
@ExterminatorElite 8 месяцев назад
@@annchovy6 Excellent choice, should make for a great sauce.
@annalundstrom1371
@annalundstrom1371 8 месяцев назад
Greetings from Sweden. I've been to Japan too and I ate Tonkatsu many times. I've tried to make it at home too, and around Christmas I use Christmas ham, since it's cooked and I just need to use the bread station and I just need to fry it. Thank you! I will try your Tonkatsu sauce. Have a good day.
@Metoobie
@Metoobie 7 месяцев назад
Excellent and insightful tips! Itadakimasu!
@emac059
@emac059 8 месяцев назад
I've never heard these tips before and I love making chicken Katsu! Thanks for sharing!
@thomaskendall452
@thomaskendall452 8 месяцев назад
Aha! Straining the dust out of the panko and just barely moistening the shards was the last piece of the puzzle for me, Brian. My family and I went to the Azuma House on Broadway in Chicago for decades, and one of my favorite offerings of theirs was tonkatsu pork chops. I've tried to duplicate it forever, but without success. I look forward to trying your recipe. Thanks!
@enriquep.-cz2xx
@enriquep.-cz2xx 8 месяцев назад
Looks delicious!. Thanks
@pylchott9864
@pylchott9864 8 месяцев назад
I've been seeing these on those travel-style long-format ASMRish videos. I've never tried to recreate them because I just knew those breadcrumbs weren't anything I'm familiar with, but now I know where to start.
@adelecruzmorris7358
@adelecruzmorris7358 8 месяцев назад
Tonkatsu is one of my favorite things to order on my trips to Japan. Yum
@SleeplessKnight122
@SleeplessKnight122 8 месяцев назад
I make this dish at least twice a month. Thanks for the tips; I'll have to keep an eye out for those imported breadcrumbs.
@wannabelikegzus
@wannabelikegzus 7 месяцев назад
Corn starch also helps prevent the breading from browning too early.
@hippykid93
@hippykid93 8 месяцев назад
I live in STL and was literally asking myself if jay's would have that panko, then boom jay's on my screen. love seeing my city!
@Donaldopato
@Donaldopato 8 месяцев назад
Great recipe. I had fab tonkatcu in Kobe. No one here can make it right. Love the scenes from Jay's. Lived at Connecticut and Grandfr several years,.
@rushnerd
@rushnerd 7 месяцев назад
I'm completely floored how much I have learned during this vid I haven't seen anywhere else. CORN STARCH besides flour? That's the key here. Potato starch might be better, but we all have corn starch. The water spritz is something I've never ever seen brought up before either. I absolutely need to try this with my Bulldog sauce soon.
@nicksprung436
@nicksprung436 7 месяцев назад
i made these last night, OMG they turned out soo good. i had everything in fridge for them and the sauce except japanese panko, i made a special trip for the panko and you are right they are key to this recipe seems like a small thing and regular panko would be ok but no. My brother is a line cook at a high end steak house and i had him over for dinnner and he was toughly impressed.
@joannecava2418
@joannecava2418 8 месяцев назад
Again a super recipe that I will certainly try`
@jasons5726
@jasons5726 8 месяцев назад
I’m going to make this one for sure!
@patrickwaclaw
@patrickwaclaw 8 месяцев назад
BIG tip on spraying the panko with water. It makes sense!! Going to try it out next time I make tonkatsu.
@faithsrvtrip8768
@faithsrvtrip8768 8 месяцев назад
Oh I want that pokey thing it's amazing!
@PL-du8gq
@PL-du8gq 7 месяцев назад
Interesting move, Brian! Spraying the panko and then spraying the panko'd pork chop... I'll have to try that out!
@bingusman69
@bingusman69 8 месяцев назад
The stale milk bread/wet panko tip is why Brian is the GOAT
@chrisb8783
@chrisb8783 7 месяцев назад
Made it and it was great! Added some honey to the sauce
@joshsmith4998
@joshsmith4998 8 месяцев назад
Trying this asap. Oh my god that looks good.
@lilly_koii
@lilly_koii 8 месяцев назад
ive made tonkatsu at home before and i can't believe i never thought of the nama panko thing, amazing insight! also the feet pics caught me off guard 😂 love you guys
@NotMyNameGrandma-wz9yx
@NotMyNameGrandma-wz9yx 8 месяцев назад
Hey, Bri! When are you going to publish a cookbook?? We really need one from you. I've made a few of your recipes, but not enough because I don't like to write out your recipes and try to decipher them later. I'm sure many other fans feel the same way I do. Your jumbo muffins are probably the most popular recipes I have prepared. My family really enjoys them.
@BrianLagerstrom
@BrianLagerstrom 8 месяцев назад
No plan for book right now. Recipes are in description usually if that helps.
@johnclaxton4745
@johnclaxton4745 8 месяцев назад
Brian, try again by swapping out the corn starch with potato starch. This is a Korean fry trick. I switched to potato for my Katsu recipes. Good stuff. Keep it coming. JC
@jrkorman
@jrkorman 8 месяцев назад
I had this fairly often when I was in Okinawa but I remember it being much thinner, possibly 1/2 as thick as what you made. Granted that was nearly 40 years ago, things change. Still, a very excellent winter dish.
@brendan1516
@brendan1516 7 месяцев назад
Love this video
@MingZai
@MingZai 8 месяцев назад
Tonkatsu is awesome, Gyukatsu is nxt level 😋😋😋
@zoulogist9171
@zoulogist9171 7 месяцев назад
I would 100% buy a cooking book from you
@chronic_daydreamer
@chronic_daydreamer 8 месяцев назад
Hey Brian! A top tip I got from a British chef: don’t bother with flour/starch and egg. Mix them into a batter! Saves the extra work and the breadcrumbs adhere MUCH better. I won’t go back to the old way now. It’s just so much better.
@DirtyWizard2021
@DirtyWizard2021 8 месяцев назад
Sounds like a cool technique to apply when i have my semi-annual deep fry cooking session.
@jasonsteigerwald2321
@jasonsteigerwald2321 8 месяцев назад
That’s freaking genius!!
@chronic_daydreamer
@chronic_daydreamer 8 месяцев назад
@@jasonsteigerwald2321 It saved me the headache of the gross sensation of dipping each schnitzel in flour and egg too. I know you can use a wet hand/dry hand method, but this just saves so much trouble with time and washing up and the result is so much better too.
@p.s.shnabel3409
@p.s.shnabel3409 7 месяцев назад
I do both ... I use whole wheat flour to coat the pork. It gives it a subtle, slightly nutty taste which I love. Then I dump the rest of that flour (normally no more than about two tablespoons per two eggs) into my eggs and mix it well. Does this eliminate any work? No. Does it result in tasty breaded pork chops? Yes. Also, I use a meat tenderizer hammer (looks like a hammer with little spikes on one side) to flatten and perforate the chops at the same time. Some butchers also have a machine for this, so when you buy pork chops and you know you want to make Schnitzel/tonkatsu, they'll just run your chops through it and save you a bit of work.
@dawsonlewis2619
@dawsonlewis2619 7 месяцев назад
This works for chicken but not with tonkatsu. I've tried. It alters the texture. You get something closer to tempura.
@jason_ityk
@jason_ityk 8 месяцев назад
I was recently in Japan -- this looks legit delicious.
@selfservicenossolarbraz8679
@selfservicenossolarbraz8679 6 месяцев назад
Ótima receita
@wcollins91
@wcollins91 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for being the first person to use a mandolin without screeching at people to be careful when using a mandolin
@DoctorMcHerp
@DoctorMcHerp 8 месяцев назад
Spritzing the panko to get it close to fresh panko is a genius move
@moussay6235
@moussay6235 8 месяцев назад
Spray water to Panko that’s definitely something new to learn. I assume it helps crumb stay on pork. Neve thought about spray water to crumb
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