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Croquette© Jonathan Pincas from Leon, Spain · CC BY 2.0

🍱 Croquette

· 📍 Tokyo
🍱 Local Cuisines

A croquette is a dish made by mashing boiled potatoes, adding saut ed onions and ground meat, shaping the mixture, coating it with breadcrumbs, and frying it until golden brown. In the Taisho era, croquettes were considered one of the three major Western dishes along with tonkatsu (breaded and deep-fried pork cutlet) and curry rice. The Western cuisine in Japan was influenced by French and British food cultures due to modernization. While the French croquette is often cited as its origin, it actually referred to a croquette with b chamel sauce. During the Taisho era, cream croquettes were the main type served in Western-style restaurants. Additionally, the spread of British dishes using potatoes, as seen in stews and fish & chips, played a role in the creation of the original Japanese potato croquette. In Tokyo, Western cuisine was introduced as early as 1870 (Meiji 3) at "Tsukiji Seiyo Ken Hotel," and around Meiji 30, there were about 40 Western-style restaurants. While Western dishes were initially considered special occasion food for certain classes during the early Meiji period, they gradually became a part of everyday meals for the general population by the mid-Meiji period. The late Taisho to early Showa period saw population concentration in Tokyo due to economic prosperity from World War I. This period established the style of serving Western-style dishes with rice, and croquette was one of the staple menu items in this urban culinary scene, marking the beginning of "Western cuisine" in Japan.

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Croquette · Sansaku