Best 4 Iron Chef Winners Japanese Pan Fried Chicken Recipes

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# **Japanese Pan-Fried Chicken: A Crispy, Flavorful Delight**

Japanese pan-fried chicken, also known as karaage, is a beloved dish that has gained popularity worldwide for its crispy exterior, tender interior, and explosion of flavors. This delectable dish is a staple in Japanese cuisine and has become a favorite among food enthusiasts seeking a satisfying and flavorful meal.

In this article, we present you with two exceptional karaage recipes:

1. **Classic Japanese Pan-Fried Chicken:** This recipe takes you on a culinary journey to Japan, where you'll learn the traditional method of preparing karaage using simple ingredients and techniques. With a few basic steps, you can recreate this iconic dish in your kitchen, capturing the authentic flavors and textures that have made it a timeless favorite.

2. **Chicken Karaage with Spicy Mayo:** If you're looking for a twist on the classic karaage, this recipe will tantalize your taste buds with its spicy and creamy dipping sauce. The combination of crispy chicken coated in a flavorful marinade and the tangy, spicy mayo creates a harmonious balance of flavors that will leave you craving more.

Whether you prefer the classic approach or are seeking a more adventurous flavor profile, these recipes offer something for every palate. So, gather your ingredients, prepare your taste buds, and embark on a culinary adventure that will transport you to the heart of Japanese cuisine.

Let's cook with our recipes!

IRON CHEF WINNER'S JAPANESE PAN-FRIED CHICKEN



Iron Chef Winner's Japanese Pan-Fried Chicken image

A recipe from Katsuyo Kobayashi, and her book "Quick and Easy Japanese Cookbook". She was one of two female chefs to defeat Iron Chef Chen Kenichi, and is also considered to be Japan's favorite TV cooking show host.

Provided by PalatablePastime

Categories     Chicken

Time 30m

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 7

2 -3 boneless chicken thighs
8 fresh shiitake mushrooms
8 shishito green peppers or 3 small bell peppers
2 -3 tablespoons mirin (or 2-3 tbsp. sake + 2 tsp. sugar)
2 -3 tablespoons soy sauce
japanese sansho pepper (optional)
shichimi togarashi pepper or red chili pepper flakes (optional)

Steps:

  • Remove excess fat from chicken.
  • Remove hard end tips of mushrooms, and cut into halves or fourths depending on size.
  • Destem and remove seeds from peppers; cut into 4-6 pieces if bell peppers are used.
  • Heat a non-stick fry pan over medium-high heat until hot; add chicken skin side down, and cook until skin crisps and turns golden.
  • Turn chicken and cook other side until brown.
  • Add mushrooms and peppers to pan.
  • When meat is cooked done, add the mirin and the soy sauce; turn chicken and vegetables frequently.
  • Remove chicken when sauce thickens; cut into bite-size pieces.
  • Arrange all on a platter.
  • Serve sansho pepper and shichimi togarashi as table condiments.

IRON CHEF CHINESE - CHEF CHEN'S MAPO TOFU



Iron Chef Chinese - Chef Chen's Mapo Tofu image

I really respect Iron Chef Chen as a chef. He seems to be a wonderful mentor to many young chefs working under him. He caught my attention as a Iron Chef Chinese on Iron Chef TV program and really enjoyed watching him improvise many recipes. I learned a lot just by watching and copied many of his ideas from the show that I now incorporate into my cooking repertoire. Since then, I've looked for his cookbooks and found 4 in Japanese language. I love all his recipes, especially his famous Mapo Tofu or Mapo Doufu. His dad was a pioneer in introducing Szechuwan cooking to Japanese and he is known as a father of Mapo Doufu in Japan because he was apparently the first Chinese man to cook something so spicy as this dish in Japan. It is now very famous in Japan and Iron Chef Chen Kenichi continues with that tradition at his restaurants in Japan. I wish Chinese and Japanese sauces and other culinary ingredients are known in the West for their proper Chinese and Japanese names like most Indonesian or Malasian sauces ie sambal olek etc instead of using generic names such as bean sauce, etc because it can get very confusing using those generic names. For this dish, you need two Chinese sauces/pastes http://www.foodsubs.com/CondimntAsia.html#bean%20sauce. The first one is Chinese brown bean sauce/paste aka tenmienjan, tenmenjan, or tenmenjiang - it's made from soy beans and sometimes is called Chinese miso type sauce or sweet noodle sauce. It is dark brown in color and has a wonderful dark miso type flavor. The next sauce is Chinese chili bean sauce aka toubanjan or doubanjiang - it has soy beans along with hot chilies and is red color. Don't use regular hot red chili sauce since it lacks the complexity of soy beans found in hot bean red chili sauce. The other two Chinese ingredients you will need for this recipe are fermented black beans (you can usually find these bagged and are ready to use or in bottles) and Szechuwan peppercorn. Szechuwan pepeprcorn is optional though Chef Chen does use it. Chef Chen uses regular tofu (not firm or silken) for his recipe. If you cannot find green garlic chives also known as nira in Japanese, I would use combination green onion and garlic. You want the taste of garlic as well as color of green onion for this dish. Another item that he uses is Japanese chili pepper known as ichimi tougarashi ie crushed or minced red pepper and if you cannot buy this item easily, I would substitute by mincing Chinese, Japanese, Thai, or Korean dry red pepper. This is a very, very spicy version of Mapo Tofu and if you like, cut down on chili pepper and chili oil if you like this recipe milder. However, this dish goes so well with plain steamed white rice that you can eat and eat while your nose is running. I plan to post another of Chef Chen's milder Mapo Tofu recipe using Hoisin sauce in the future.

Provided by Rinshinomori

Categories     < 30 Mins

Time 25m

Yield 6 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 18

15 -16 ounces tofu, regular
1/2 teaspoon salt
water, for parboiling tofu
3 ounces ground pork
1/2 cup green garlic chives, chopped in 1/2 inches (nira)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoon chinese chili bean sauce (toubanjan or doubanjiang)
1 tablespoon chinese brown bean sauce (tenmienjan, tenmenjan, or tenmenjiang)
2 teaspoons fermented black beans, chopped finely
1/4-1/2 teaspoon ichimi togarashi pepper or 1/4-1/2 teaspoon japanese dried red chili pepper, minced
1 teaspoon chili oil
3/4 cup chicken stock
1 tablespoon sake or 1 tablespoon dry sherry
1 teaspoon soy sauce
1 teaspoon sesame oil
1 tablespoon szechuan peppercorn (optional)
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon water

Steps:

  • Cut tofu into 1 inch cubes. Heat enough water in a large saucepan, add 1/2 teaspoon salt and tofu pieces. Bring to boil and cook tofu on medium high heat for 8 to 10 minutes and remove from heat. Precooking tofu in water prevents tofu from breaking apart easily later. Set aside.
  • While tofu is cooking, make cornstarch paste by mixing 1 T cornstarch and 1 T water. Set aside.
  • Set wok on high heat for 1 minute until hot. Add 2 T vegetable oil and swirl the pan, then add ground pork, stirring to separate.
  • When ground pork is browned, add Chinese brown bean sauce ie tenmenjan, tenmienjan, or tenmenjiang, Chinese chili bean sauce ie toubanjan or doubanjiang, fermented black beans, and ichimi tougarashi or minced dried red chili pepper. Continue to cook for 1 minute.
  • Add chili oil, drained tofu pieces, chicken stock, garlic chives, soy sauce, and sake. Stir fry gently for 1-2 minutes.
  • Add cornstarch paste to thicken and add sesame oil. Swirl gently and cook for another 3-4 minutes on medium high heat. Sprinkle Szechuan peppercorn on top.
  • Serve with steamed white rice.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 147, Fat 11.3, SaturatedFat 2.3, Cholesterol 11.1, Sodium 306.4, Carbohydrate 3.7, Fiber 0.2, Sugar 1, Protein 7.9

IRON CHEF WINNER'S JAPANESE-STYLE HAMBURGERS



Iron Chef Winner's Japanese-Style Hamburgers image

A recipe from Katsuyo Kobayashi and her book "Quick and Easy Japanese Cookbook". She defeated Iron Chef Chen Kenichi on the popular Food Network t.v. show "Iron Chef". Kobayashi-san claims she can make anyone into an Iron Chef! :)

Provided by PalatablePastime

Categories     Meat

Time 40m

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 14

14 ounces ground beef
1/2 teaspoon salt, to taste
ground black pepper
1/2 onion, chopped fine
vegetable oil (for frying)
1 egg
1/4 cup milk
1 cup breadcrumbs
2/3 cup water
3 tablespoons ketchup
1 tablespoon sake
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon butter

Steps:

  • In a mixing bowl, season ground beef to taste with salt and pepper.
  • Heat a small amount of oil in saute pan and cook onion until tender.
  • In a small bowl, beat egg lightly; add milk, mixing well.
  • Stir in breadcrumbs and allow to rest.
  • Add onions and breadcrumbs to ground beef, working ingredients together with your hands.
  • Divide meat into fourths, and make a patty; toss back and forth to force air out.
  • Shape into burger shape.
  • Heat small amount of oil in skillet and cook burgers; cover pan, and simmer on medium-high heat until burgers cook done; then remove lid, reduce heat to medium, and cook till water disappears.
  • Remove from pan.
  • Add 2/3 cup water, ketchup, sake, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, and butter to pan; bring to boil.
  • Simmer till thickened.
  • Spoon sauce over burgers on plate.

JAPANESE CHICKEN KARAAGE (FRIED CHICKEN)



Japanese Chicken Karaage (Fried Chicken) image

Make and share this Japanese Chicken Karaage (Fried Chicken) recipe from Food.com.

Provided by Vnut-Beyond Redempt

Categories     Chicken Thigh & Leg

Time 1h20m

Yield 3-4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 9

300 -400 g chicken leg meat
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon Japanese sake
3 -4 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon curry powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
paprika
other seasoning

Steps:

  • Cut chicken meat into a bite sized pieces.
  • Sprinkle a teaspoon of salt and a tablespoon of Japanese Sake on the meats, knead them, and leave it about 30 minutes.
  • Sop up the Sake with paper towels and put the meats, all spices, and flour into a plastic bag.
  • Knead the plastic bag until all spices and flour cover all meats.
  • Fill a pan with vegetable oil for deep frying and heat it up with middle flame. When the pan is heated up enough, put the meats into the pan.
  • If your pan is big enough(about 30 cm diameter), you can put them all at once (Don't put only a few pieces; it will make only the surface of meat char).
  • Notes: If you see bubbles as soon as you put a wooden chop stick into the oil, this is too hot. If you see them after 2 seconds, it's just the right temperature. After deep-frying the meat about 7~8 minutes, make the flame stronger.
  • When the chicken fried beautifully brown, take them out of the pan onto paper towels.
  • In addition If you sprinkle lemon juice on the chicken, it tastes better.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 139.3, Fat 3.4, SaturatedFat 0.8, Cholesterol 62.4, Sodium 844, Carbohydrate 8.3, Fiber 1.1, Sugar 0.3, Protein 17

Tips:

  • Use a heavy-bottomed pan or skillet for even cooking.
  • Make sure the chicken is dry before frying to prevent splattering.
  • Use a meat thermometer to ensure the chicken is cooked through to an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C).
  • Serve the chicken immediately with your favorite dipping sauce.

Conclusion:

Japanese pan-fried chicken is an easy-to-make and delicious dish that's perfect for a weeknight meal or a party appetizer. With its crispy exterior and tender, juicy interior, this dish is sure to be a hit with everyone who tries it. So next time you're looking for a quick and easy chicken recipe, give this one a try.

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