Yakisoba sauce is usually a mixture of soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, ketchup, oyster sauce and sugar. My guess is that was either a premixed soy-Worcestershire-oyster sauce combo they added ketchup to, or they omitted multiple ingredients. At the end, it looks like pickled ginger and aonori.
Tonkatsu sauce. It's a mix of ketchup, japanese soy sauce, japanese worcestershire sauce (less sour), oyster sauce and sugar. However, I think it tastes just fine with western worcestershire sauce, and I replace soy sauce with tamari (gluten-free soy sauce).
I'm not sure if it's contextual and people are answering what kind of sauce the cook is using, but I think the seasoning may be white pepper. I'm not 100% sure, though
pork is safe to be eaten raw nowadays, it stems back to the 50s when cattle were not treated as well that the norm became to overcook pork, despite this that pork is not undercooked they are such thing pieces it is done in a few seconds it just isnt as crispy as you're used to
A charred surface doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s dirty. The teppan is also tempered differently from other metals, it’s just like how traditional woks look ‘dirty’ sometimes because of discolouration but really it’s just about the metal. I’m sure that these professional clean their equipment well at the end of the day to ensure proper hygiene and safety standards 🙂
@@cassatruopia Thanks for that detail but no wok have i see like that/the charred surface that u speak of is actually dirty and needs a good scrub. i say unhygenic when i know it is unhygenic. cleaning can be a tough job but when it comes to cooking the utensils the tools need to be super clean
@@praveensailor I'm a prof cook. Those onions are carmelizing... the sugars are being released and that charring causes the discolorization on the flat top. This IS NOT dirt. You need to relax. It's clear you don't know your way around a working kitchen nor of basic cooking chemistry. Out of the kitchen with you.
He can probably skip the salt. The bacon and soya sauce should be enough for that small quality. And maybe cook the bacon a bit longer. I know i would.