日本料理
Nihon Ryōri! Let’s make Japanese food!
 
 
Curry Rice
Posted on May 26th, 2009 at 6:24 pm by keikokeiko and

Japanese curry belongs to the group, yōshoku. Curry is extremely popular in Japan – it’s on the menu at just about every “family” restaurant and department store restaurants, and there are curry-only restaurants as well as ones that specialize in high class yohshoku in general. Japanese curry, called curry rice (or kareh raisu) since it’s always served with rice, is not much like the curries from India, Thai or other places, better known for curry. Curry rice is a slow-cook meal and the longer you let it sit, the better it gets. This recipe for beef curry can be used with other kinds of meat and can be used for vegetable curry as well. Here’s recipes for a gourmet version and a quick ready-made curry base version.

Japanese style beef curry

Beef Curry

Makes about 6 to 8 servings.

Gourmet version

INGREDIENTS:

450-500g / about 1 lb stewing beef cubes (chuck works well; it should be a cut with a bit of fat in it and not too sinewy)

6 large onions, or about 6 cups sliced

3 cloves garlic

An adult thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger

2 cups of crushed tomatoes (1 small can, or 400g)

1 beef or vegetable stock cube (I prefer Knorr)

1 bay leaf

1 star anise

2-3 Tbs. garam masala (see notes)

3-4 large carrots

1 medium eating-type apple

3-4 medium potatoes

Oil or butter

Optional: 1 cup frozen green peas

Salt and pepper

For the curry roux:

3 Tbs. butter, ghee, clarified butter or oil, or a mixture

4 Tbs. white flour

1 1/2 to 2 Tbs. curry powder, or more to taste (see notes)

To serve with:

Plain white steamed Japanese rice, or plain brown rice

PREPARATION:

If the meat is in one big chunk, cut into cubes about 2 cm / 1 inch square. Pat dry with paper towels, and brown in a little oil on all sides in a frying pan. Set aside.

Slice the onions thinly. Grate the ginger and either grate or finely chop the garlic. (A microplane is great for this task, if you have one.) Peel and cut the carrots into chunks. Don’t peel the potatoes yet: this will come later.

Heat your heavy-bottomed pot over medium heat, and heat up some butter, ghee or oil. (Butter or ghee will add some richness but oil is fine – you will barely notice the subtle difference since the curry will overwhelm it.) Add the onions and a pinch of salt, and lower the heat to medium-low. Now comes a period of long, slow cooking of the onions that can take up to an hour or so (the salt helps it along as it extracts the moisture in the onions). At the end you want to end up with a much reduced mass of onion that is a light caramel brown in color, as in the photo.

Once the onions have reached this stage, add the ginger and garlic and cook a few more minutes. Add the canned tomato and 6 cups of water, the browned beef, the stock cube, the bay leaf and the star anise. (If you are particular you can put these in a bit of cheese cloth or a tea ball for easy extraction later.)

Peel and grate the apple and stir in. (This is optional, but adds to the depth of flavor.)

Bring up to a boil, then lower the heat and simmer for at least 1 hour, or more if your meat is a bit tough.

About 30 minutes into the cooking process, dry-roast about a tablespoon of garam masala powder in a small frying pan until it starts to get very fragant, and add to the stew pot. Add the carrots around then too.

In the meantime, make the curry roux. In a small frying pan, melt the butter or ghee or clarified butter (note that ghee is basically clarified butter) and heat until any foaming subsides.

Add the flour, and cook the mixture over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until it becomes a light brown in color. (See these very detailed instructions for roux if you aren’t sure.)

Take the pan off the heat, and add the curry powder (the more the hotter.) Stir until the whole kitchen and beyond smells like curry. Set aside.

When the meat is about as tender as you want, peel the potatoes, cut them into chunks and add to the curry. Continue simmering until the potatoes are tender.

Take the pot off the heat and fish out the bay leaf and star anise. Stir in the roux carefully until it’s completely melted into the stew and the liquid is thick and very brown. Return to the heat and simmer a few more minutes.

At this stage you can dry roast another tablespoonful or so of garam masala and add it to the curry.

At the last minute, add the optional frozen green peas, and stir – they should cook almost instantaneously. Serve immediately.

There are two ways of serving curry in the “yohshoku restaurant” way. One is to put the curry in a sauce boat, and serve the rice separately. The other is to put the rice on the plate, and cover just one half with curry, You can of course just pour the curry right on the mound of rice.

Instead of, or in addition to, the grated apple, you can add some chutney, a tablespoon or so of honey, Worcestershire sauce, ketchup, and even a bit of soy sauce or miso.

Quick Version using a ready-made curry base

If you are using a curry base instead of making your own curry roux, just add it in exactly the same way near the end of the cooking process, making sure to take the pot off the heat first. If you have the block that looks like a chocolate bar type, break it up into smaller chunks and stir in to the stew mix until all is melted. The bagged powder type melts in faster. The curry should not be stewed for a very lengthy time after adding the base or spices or the flavors will dissipate somewhat.

Using other meats

Pork curry is made in the same way as beef curry, but you may want to try making the curry a bit hotter (by adding more curry powder or chili pepper powder).

Chicken curry is best made with the dark meat parts (thigh works great). I also prefer to take the skin off first – curry-stewed chicken skin is not that nice. The stewing time for chicken curry is shorter since you don’t want the chicken to get dried out.

Quick and easy ground beef curry

If this all sounds like too much work, you can still make a quick and easy curry using ground beef or other ground meat, and a commercial curry base.

Making it vegetarian

You can omit the meat and use oil instead of butter, and have a vegetarian curry. If you want some protein, try a can of chickpeas. Cooked soy beans also fit very well. You can go for an all-vegetable curry and add more carrots, or some sliced eggplant (aubergine), cubed turnip, etc.

Freezing curry

Curry freezes and reheats very well, as long as you leave out the potatoes. Frozen potato turns into a mealy, watery, inedible mush. Just add some boiled potatoes to the reheated curry. Since it does take a long time to cook it does make sense to make a big batch at a time and freeze extra for quick meals in the future.

You can also make curry with Tonkatsu, which is called, Katsu Curry. Here’s a video on How to make Katsu Curry.

Sources:

Beef Curry recipe and photo, http://www.justhungry.com/japanese-beef-curry

Katsu Curry video, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6t0BpjwYKco&feature=channel