Skip to main content

Japanese-Style Curry (Karei Raisu)

4.7

(9)

A bowl of Japanesestyle curry and white rice with cutlery and a green napkin.
Photo by Evan Sung

Japanese curry is like the final whisper in an international game of telephone. It began in India, moved to and morphed in England, and settled in my home country, where today curry shops abound. Of course, once we adopted curry, we tweaked it endlessly to our tastes and a new dish was born. Every prefecture and every family has its own version— in Kumamoto, the meat of choice is horse. In some households, leftovers are served not with rice but with slick, chubby udon noodles. But I still love the classic combination of beef, potato, and carrot cooked in a saucy, slightly sweet curry and ladled next to white rice. You can use whatever meat and vegetables you want, but for me, curry has two unbreakable rules: First, make sure that meat is nice and fatty. Second, embrace the premade blocks of Japanese curry roux. Curry is not health food, but neither are the deep-fried pork cutlets called tonkatsu, and I’m not planning to give those up either, no matter what my wife says!

Cooks' Note

For my curry, I recommend using a highly traditional boxed product called Vermont Curry. Yes, you read that right. You’ve probably seen boxes of Vermont Curry in Asian markets and wondered, “What the heck are these doing here?” Well, they’re there because the seasoning blocks make delicious curry! The ingredient list makes for intriguing reading— banana and apple paste, honey, fenugreek, cheese!— but pay no attention to the slightly scary photo on the box. Your curry will look much better.

Read More
This traditional dish of beef, sour cream, and mustard may have originated in Russia, but it’s about time for a version with ramen noodles, don’t you think?
Crispy tots topped with savory-sweet sauce, mayonnaise, furikake, scallion, and katsuobushi.
Leftover rotisserie chicken finds new purpose in this endlessly comforting dish.
An ex-boyfriend’s mom—who emigrated from Colombia—made the best meat sauce—she would fry sofrito for the base and simply add cooked ground beef, sazón, and jarred tomato sauce. My version is a bit more bougie—it calls for caramelized tomato paste and white wine—but the result is just as good.
This dish is not only a quick meal option but also a practical way to use leftover phở noodles when you’re out of broth.
This is what I call a fridge-eater recipe. The key here is getting a nice sear on the sausage and cooking the tomato down until it coats the sausage and vegetables well.
This is what I call a fridge-eater recipe. The key here is getting a nice sear on the sausage and cooking the tomato down until it coats the sausage and vegetables well.
Developed in the 1980s by a chef in Hong Kong, this sauce is all about umami.