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Hayashi rice (ハヤシライス, hayashi raisu) is a dish popular in Japan as a Western-style dish, or yōshoku. It usually contains beef , onions , and button mushrooms in a thick demi-glace sauce, which often contains red wine and tomato sauce .
Turkish rice (torukorice): Pilaf flavored with curry, naporitan spaghetti and tonkatsu with demi-glace sauce; Omurice; Steak [15] Hamburg; Mikkusu sando (ミックスサンド) – assorted sandwiches, especially egg salad, ham, and cutlet [16] Gratin [17] Doria: Roasted pilaf with béchamel sauce and cheese; Pilaf
Hayashi rice. Hayashi rice (ハヤシライス) - beef and onions stewed in a red-wine sauce and served on rice; Nikujaga - soy sauce-flavored meat and potato stew that has been made in Japan to the extent that it is now considered washoku, but again originates from 19th century Japanese Navy chefs adapting beef stews of the Royal Navy.
Ponzu is a citrus-based sauce commonly used in Japanese cuisine. It is very tart in flavor, with a thin, watery consistency and a light brown color. Ponzu shōyu or ponzu jōyu is ponzu sauce with soy sauce (shōyu) added, and the mixed product is widely referred to as simply ponzu.
Or rice with curry sauce and hayashi sauce. (fried beef and onion, cooked with red wine and demi-glace). yaki karē (焼きカレー): Curry rice, topped with a raw egg and baked in an oven. Originally from Kitakyushu. ishiyaki karē (石焼きカレー): Curry sauce with rice served in a heated stone bowl, in a similar way to dolsot bibimbap.
Pad Thai: Stir-fried rice noodle with egg, bean sprout, scallion, ground peanut with special pad Thai sauce; served with vegetables, tofu, chicken, beef, pork, shrimp, duck or seafood ($16-$28)
Often, the rice is fried with various meats (but typically chicken) or vegetables, and can be flavored with beef stock, ketchup, demi-glace, white sauce or simply salt and pepper. Sometimes, rice is replaced with fried noodles to make omusoba. A variant in Okinawa is omutako, consisting of an omelet over taco rice.
Korokke (Japanese: コロッケ; [koꜜɾokke]) is a Japanese deep-fried yōshoku dish originally related to a French dish, the croquette.Korokke is made by mixing cooked chopped meat, seafood, or vegetables with mashed potato or white sauce, usually shaped like a flat patty, rolling it in wheat flour, eggs, and Japanese-style breadcrumbs, then deep-frying this until brown on the outside.