Sous vide Tonkatsu

On May 23rd, 2023 in Food

One of my favorite dishes while living in Japan was Tonkatsu. That perfect cooked pork meat fried with panko and a dash of that sweet sour salt sauce was one of those dishes to be eaten at home on a not very regular day, or on weekends at tonkatsu restaurants.

If you’re looking for a good recipe, I recommend Namiko Hirasawa’s Just One Cookbook Tonkatsu Recipe. Her recipe is simple, in english and works very well. If you know japanese, you can always search for variations at Cookpad, but Namiko keeps her recipe classic.

By the way, when I mean “classic”, I’m talking about the most common recipe you find at restaurant chains in Tokyo where they cook the 豚ロース (pork roast) of the 豚ヒレ (pork fillet). Pork roast would be the pork loin in US or the “lombo” in Brazil. A quite lean and tender meat that, if not cooked properly, can become too dry.

The cut is also quite thick, something like almost 1 inch (like on the photo above). Others regions in Japan have their tonkatsu made different. I’m not exactly sure where, but I think it was in Hiroshima where I ate a tonkatsu that was thin and small.

That’s where the sous vide part begins. I always cooked tonkatsu using a recipe similar to Namiko’s, but sometimes my pork was too rare at the end needing the microwave to finish it. I was always worried to overcook and have an unappetising dry meat.

Cooking the meat using sous vide solves all those problems because you have a already cooked product that only needs to be deep fried and served. For safety, I cooked my pork at 62º C (about 145 F) for 1.5 hour for pasteurization.

For better texture and for a perfect salty meat, I also brine the meat. If you don’t know what is that and what are the advantages, I suggest taking a look at this video from ChefStep.

Instructions

  • Buy a pork loin. If needed, trim the excess fat.
  • Brine the pork loin for 12 hours in a solution of 2% of salt (weight the meat with the water and add 2% of it’s weight in salt). Keep it in the refrigerator.
  • Remove the pork loin from the brine solution, sprinkle black pepper and add it to the ziplock bag.
  • Cook it at 62/63ºC (145F) for 1 hour and 30 minutes.
  • Remove it from the heat and leave at room temperature (if you are planning to cook much later, maybe it’s better to put the cooked meat at the refrigerator).
  • When ready to cook, remove the meat from the bag, remove the excess liquid, cut the desired slices and use them as a regular loin for tonkatsu. DO NOT add salt to the meat because it’s already seasoned.

The difference from Namiko’s recipe for mine are:

  • You shall not season the meat with salt, because it’s already seasoned (but you can season with black pepper)
  • You may fry the pork at 180ºC (360ºF) instead of 170ºC (340ºF). You only need to fry the crust, the meat is already cooked.

And that’s all. You’ll have a perfectly seasoned cooked tonkatsu with a crispy exterior.

For the sauce, I also recommend Namiko’s recipe for Tonkatsu Sauce. I actually prefer her recipe instead of the Bulldog store bought.

Bonus: some tonkatsu restaurant’s recommendations

For those going to Tokyo, I do recommend those restaurants:

  • Tonkatsu Marugo (とんかつ 丸五(まるご)): it’s located near to Akihabara Station. It’s a Michelin Bib Gourmand. The restaurant is small, you MUST arrive before opening to avoid waiting for over an hour.
  • Yamabe Okachimachi (とんかつ 山家(やまべ)御徒町店): it’s located near to Ueno Station. The restaurant is small and delicious. I do recommend arriving before opening to avoid waiting too long.
  • Tonkatsu Maisen restaurants: there are a lot of Maisen’s restaurants in Tokyo. It’s very possible that you find one in your way. It’s delicious and rice, cabbage and miso soup are refill.
Tags: 2023 tonkatsu

2023 public goals

On February 14th, 2023 in Myself

A new year and some (not so) new goals.

Once more I couldn’t complete my goals in 2022 and even keep track of them. However, setting some objetives for me is an excellent practice of discipline.

I’ll be doing a quick review of last year goals before defining what I’ll be trying to accomplish this year.

Goals for 2022:

  1. Keep writing down my projects and researches in this blog;
    I wrote some posts, but not as much as I wanted. My writing skill in english is awful.
  2. Keep reading, listening and writing in English;
    This one is the easiest goal. I kept doing it almost everyday of the year.
  3. Have all my photos from Japan edited. Have some of them at Shutterstock;
    I didn’t even began to figure out how I’ll do it.
  4. Have Home Assistant fully functional at my new home;
    Home Assistant is working, but my server setup didn’t allow me to use the full potential of the system.
  5. Try again to learn to write in Arduino and make some DIY projects;
    I didn’t do it either.
  6. Study programming, data science and machine learning;
    I wish I could have studied more, but I didn’t. Nevertheless, I managed to make progress doing some scripts to be aplied at work.
  7. Do periodical physical exercises;
    It’s easier to say that my progress was 0 from 100.
  8. Meditate;
    It’s easier to say that my progress was 0 from 100.
  9. Keep reading books;
    I did it! I read 12 books during 2022.
  10. Avoid getting involved with Work;
    I did it, only for 4 months during the entire year, but it was a beginning.
  11. Do (small) courses/projects related to Work.
    I did some courses, not enought but it was better than nothing.
  12. Study for new jobs available
    I have failed miserably.

Now 2023.

Goals for 2023:

  1. Keep writing down my projects and researches in this blog;
  2. Keep reading, listening and writing in English;
  3. Have all my photos from Japan edited. Have some of them at Shutterstock;
  4. Have Home Assistant fully functional at my new home;
  5. Try again to learn to write in Arduino and make some DIY projects;
  6. Study programming, data science and machine learning;
  7. Do periodical physical exercises;
  8. Meditate;
  9. Keep reading books;
  10. Avoid getting involved with Work;
  11. Be preprared for the work of the future

I know I’m not being creative repeating almost all goals of 2022, but they are nice ones and many of them I didn’t accomplish.

1. Keep writing down my projects

Organizing my ideas and writing them down helps me learning new skills and writing in english. I’ll keep this goal and it’s numbers. I’ll try to write 2 posts per month (1 every 2 weeks)

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: once every 2 weeks, at least
How: writing this blog

2. Keep reading, listening and writing in English

I’ll just keep doing what I already to everyday. Listening and reading in english. I’ll try also to write more in english.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: at least 3 times a week listening and reading; at least once every 2 weeks writing
How: listening podcasts, reading news on the internet and writing this blog

3. Have all my photos (from Japan) edited 

Lets try again editing my photos.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: 1 hour per week
How: editing on Lightroom

4. Have Home Assistant fully functional at my new home

I already have plans this year to make a new server to run my Home Assistant fully functional.

Start and ending period: starting now until July
How often: as often as possible
How: studying, editing and implementing devices

5. (Try again to) learn how to write in Arduino

I’ll have to study everything again to try to implement some Arduino automations.

I plan to implement 2 devices until the end of the year.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: when possible.
How: creating projects for home automation

6. Study programming, data science and machine learning

Last year I progressed studying programming languages. This year I want to keep studying it and implementing even more on my daily life.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: 2 hour a week at least.
How: programming using Python and Javascript

7. Physical exercises

Yoga. 3 times a week. That’s all.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: 3 times a week for at least 45 minutes each
How: Ashtanga Yoga
and Lian Gong Shi Ba Fa

8. Meditate

Meditating will be a necessary activity this year.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: 3 times a week
How: try different sort of meditation styles until finding one that fits me better

9. Keep reading books

12 books for 2022 was a very doable goal. I’ll keep this number.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: daily
How: read 12 books this year or 1 book every month

10. Avoid getting involved with Work

The same goal, but with different aspects. I won’t be able to avoid getting involved with Work, but I hope that Work doesn’t interfere with my peace of mind.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: remember every week if I’m being able to keep my goal
How: not getting worried if things doesn’t work out

11. Be preprared for the work of the future

I’ve changed from “Do (small) courses/projects related to work” to “Be preprared for the work of the future” because it’s not about being better at work, but being able to keep working without being left behind.

This goal includes courses at the e-Gov platform but also some softskills, some networking and more. It’s quite difficult to be quantified, but I’ll try.

Start and ending period: starting now until the end of the year
How often: 1 course per month
How: subscribing on the available
courses

Tags: 2023 goals