Translations:Japanese curry/21/en
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Other varieties




- Curry udon (カレーうどん, Karē udon): Katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) are soaked in boiling water to dissolve the umami ingredients into a broth, which is then thickened with curry and potato starch and poured over udon noodles.
- Curry soba (カレーそば, Karē soba): Katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) are soaked in boiling water to dissolve the umami ingredients into a broth, which is then thickened with curry and potato starch and poured over soba noodles.
- Curry bread (カレーパン, Karē pan): Curry wrapped in bread dough, breaded and deep fried or baked.
- Katsu curry (カツカレー, katsu karē): Curry rice served with a breaded pork cutlet on top.
- Dry curry (ドライカレー, dorai karē): Curry-flavored fried rice, or curry rice with a drier, mince meat curry sauce.
- maze karē (混ぜカレー): Curry rice, served with the sauce and rice already mixed. Popularized by the Jiyūken curry restaurants in Osaka.
- karē don (カレー丼): Curry sauce, thickened and flavored with mentsuyu or hondashi and served on top of a bowl of rice, to give the curry a Japanese flavor.
- aigake (合がけ): Curry rice with several curry sauces. 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.
- Soup curry (スープカレー, sūpu karē): Soup curry, a watery, broth-like curry sauce served with chunky ingredients such as a chicken leg and coarsely-cut vegetables. Popular in Hokkaido.