Sunday, February 17, 2013

Replica Recipe: Coco Ichibanya Chicken Curry

When Adam was in the military he was stationed in Okinawa, Japan for a year. He talks about it constantly. How amazing the people are, how beautiful the beaches look, how fun the nightlife is, but mainly how delicious all of the food is. I have never been, but it is definitely on our bucket list of places to visit together. 

Now you have to remember that while hubby was stationed in Oki he was a mere 19 year old Marine. He was in a foreign country, working ridiculous hours, and was a teenaged male so he wasn't exactly eating at Michelin star quality joints if you get my drift. So when I say he talks about how delicious the food is I mainly mean he babbles on about how great their curry houses were. One in particular comes up a lot in conversation and that is Coco Iichibanya (heads up that link is in Japanese). 

From what I can gather from him and a few of his Marine Corps buddies many late nights after work or after a few rounds they would head over to the curry house and order up huge plates of cheesy chicken cutlet curry. We are talking plates covered in sauce and ooey gooey melted cheese over crispy fried chicken. What's not to love? Anyway, I have been hearing about this place for the past eight years and have been trying to replicate it to his memory ever since.

We found a few recipes in our searches and (according to hubby since I have never been) this is the closest replica we can find. The sauce doubles or even triples really well you just need to adjust your times for sweating the veggies accordingly.





For the Curry Sauce you Will Need:

 


1 TB vegetable oil
1 onion chopped
5 cloves whole garlic, peeled
1 carrot peeled and chopped
2 TB all purpose flour
1 TB HOT curry powder (you can use mild if you prefer)
2 1/2 cups chicken broth
1 TB soy sauce
2 tsp honey
1/2 tsp Garam Masala

First, peel and chop all of your veggies. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium. Add the chopped onion and whole garlic. 

Saute until slightly transparent (about three or four minutes) before adding in the carrots. 



Cover and cook for ten minutes on medium heat, stirring occasionally. Next, add your flour and curry powder.

Cook for about a minute, stirring constantly, your sauce should be almost a paste at this point.

Add in your chicken stock, soy sauce, and honey then bring to a boil.

Reduce the heat to medium low and simmer for twenty minutes uncovered. If your kitchen does not smell amazing at this point you are doing something wrong.

After the twenty minutes are up, remove the pot from heat and add the Garam Masala. Give it a big stir then pass the ingredients through a mesh strainer or seive.

The goal is to get as much of the liquid out as we can from the veggies. They should look close to this when you are done:

You can go ahead and toss the veggies because we have literally gotten all of the flavor possible out of these. When all is said and done you should have a slightly thick smooth curry sauce that looks something like this:

Now it is time to move on to the chicken!

For the Chicken you Will Need:


  • 1 Cup Rice
  • 1 Cup Flour 
  • 2 Large Eggs, beaten
  • 4 Chicken Breasts
  • 1 1/2 cups panko style breadcrumbs
  • 1/8tsp cayanne pepper
  • salt and pepper to taste 
  • Shredded Cheddar for topping
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil for frying

First start by making your rice. I make mine in a rice cooker and just let it go while I am making everything else but it is up to you. Next, using a kitchen mallet, slightly pound the chicken down. We don't want it as flat as you would for Chicken Cordon Bleu but just slightly flattened so it is a consistent thickness throughout (see the left flattened vs. the right we started with).

Next, add the cayenne to the flour then salt and pepper to taste and give it a stir. Lay the ingredients out on separate plates (or in my case paper plates and plastic containers because that's the kind of classy lassie I am) in this order: Flour mixture, beaten eggs, and Panko.
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Dredge the flattened chicken breast through the flour mixture, then coat in the egg, then dredge it through the Panko. You want a pretty generous amount of coating on each breast.

Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium to medium high heat. Place two chicken breasts in the oil and cook until golden brown (about five minutes on each side). Flip and repeat. Remove the chicken and place on paper towels to drain while you cook the other two pieces.

 Now it is time to plate! Place a scoop of rice on one side of the plate (think like a half moon shape.) Then cut your breasts into thin slices likes so:


Place the chicken slices on top of the rice and cover in a generous helping of sauce. I mean generous, the saucier the better.

Then cover the chicken with a handful of shredded cheese. There you have it: Coco Ichibanya Style Curry for us Stateside fans.


For reference here is a side by side comparrison of their's and of ours:



Not too shabby if I do say so myself and pretty darn tasty too. Be careful if you decide to try this out, as you may find yourself serious contemplating a sudden trip to Japan. I am not kidding, it is stinkin' delicious!

Coco Ichibanya Style Curry

 Sauce:

1 TB vegetable oil
1 onion chopped
5 cloves whole garlic, peeled
1 carrot peeled and chopped
2 TB all purpose flour
1 TB HOT curry powder (you can use mild if you prefer)
2 1/2 cups chicken broth
1 TB soy sauce
2 tsp honey
1/2 tsp Garam Masala

Heat the oil in a pan. Then add the onion and garlic. Cook for three to four minutes until slightly transparent then add in the carotts. Cover and cook for ten minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the flour and curry powder. Stir and cook for about one minute. Add the broth, soy sauce, and honey then cook uncovered for twenty minutes. Remove the pan from heat then stire in the garam masala. Pass through a mesh strainer or sieve. Throw away the veggies.

Chicken

1 Cup Rice
1 Cup Flour 
2 Large Eggs, beaten
4 Chicken Breasts
1 1/2 cups panko style breadcrumbs
1/8tsp cayanne pepper
salt and pepper to taste 
Shredded Chedder for topping
1/2 cup vegetable oil for frying
  
Cook the rice.  Pound the chicken slightly with a malette so that it is an even width. Add the cayenne, salt, and pepper to the flour and mix. Seperate the flour, eggs, and bread crumbs onto seperate plates.  Dredge the chicken through the flour, then the eggs, and finally the panko. Heat the oil in a deep skillet. Add two pieces of chicken to the pan and cook until golden brown (about five minutes on each side). Drain on paper towels. Place rice on one side of a plate. Cut chicken into thin slices. Lay chicken on top of the rice then cover witha generous serving of the curry sauce. Top with cheese and enjoy. 



-Bee









21 comments:

  1. We were stationed in okinawa twice and cocos was one of the places we were going to miss. Your recipe is spot on. I have shared it with many friends who have also been stationed there and we all agree your recipe is amazing. Thanks michelle

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    Replies
    1. I'm so glad you liked it Michelle! It is hard for me to have a frame of reference because I've never had the original Coco's and have only had Hubby how close it is. It's good to hear someone else agree. Thanks for sharing and thanks for stopping by!

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  2. We just returned from our honeymoon in Japan and have been craving CoCo curry (we might have indulged a few times more than we should have given the number of other amazing spots to dine..but what can I say, when something is that good, why deny it to yourself!)

    Thanks for putting this together! I cannot wait to make your recipe this weekend and relive our trip :)

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  3. I just tried the recipe tonight and it came out great. The curry was still a little watery after I ran it through the strainer so I returned it to the pan, in a separate bowl I mixed 2 tbls cornstarch and 6 tbls cold water, then added the mixture to the curry. After 5 minutes on low heat it thickened nicely to what I remember the real curry to be like. Thanks for the recipe! I'll definitely be making it again.

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  4. Replies
    1. This makes 4 chicken cutlets. So four servings.

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  5. Hi, i was wondering about how much would make a pot to feed a family size?

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  6. Cocos is in Cali now, they have a few locations but my favorite is the one in Torrence. I was in Okinawa for a few years as well and this place is the real deal!

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  7. Your close. Get rid of the honey. Use a sweet apple instead. Honey is not used in CoCo's recipe, it's always apple.

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  8. Here is the recipe I use. Hope you enjoy.

    1 package of S&B Golden Curry (mild, medium, hot or very hot)
    2 slices of bacon chopped
    1/2 carrot chopped fine
    1/2 onion chopped fine
    1 tablespoon of minced garlic
    1/2 stick of butter
    1 container of Chicken broth

    salute the bacon, carrots, onion and garlic in the butter.

    stir in the chicken broth

    add curry block.

    stir and add water if it gets to thick or more broth.

    add worcestershire sauce to taste

    pour over rice and meat

    pork cutlets are good.

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  9. Coco's is life.

    I modified your recipe slightly and it was a huge hit at dinner tonight!

    what I changed:

    Coconut milk (unsweetened) and 1 Tbs of Better than Bouillon chicken or beef in place of stock (Coco's uses beef)

    Add 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce and 1 Tbs Curry Roux with the liquids.

    Don't discard the veggies!! Keep them in til the end and puree it all smooth. Gets everyone to eat their veggies without even knowing it ;)

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  10. I've been out the corps for over a decade and I've been raving about co cos every since, so i can't wait to try it! thanks in advance

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  11. Hello! I was stationed in yokosuka along with my bf. We are now back in the States and i love many Japanese foods i find here but for my bf they are just never as good as he remembers x.x it terrible how many times he says things aren't good enough when trying to find his favorites here in America. BUT! I made Coco's your way, but used Japanese boxed curry cubes as a premade curry instead of mixing the spices myself, and he loves it!! Thank you SOOO much! You've brought a Japanese favorite back to life for him!

    Also if once finished you mix in shaved beef at the end, the heat will cook it in a minute or 2 and it tastes close to the shredded meat in some of their options =)

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  12. My career field goes tdy to Oki all the time and of course, everyone loves and misses CoCos when we're at home. I've made this and brought it in to the office a few times. It's always a big hit and I constantly get asked when I'm bringing Faux-Cos (as I call it) in again. Thanks for the amazing recipe!

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  13. This almost made me cry I miss this so much

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  15. I love your recipe. I keep coming back year after year. CoCo's curry has such a special place in my heart. Thank you so much.

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  17. Tried to leave this as my Google Account, but being a pain. Just got done eating my first plate and definitely brings back the good memories of 13 months in MCAS Iwakuni. Have spent years going to different restaurants across the Midwest without a similarity, but this recipe is spot on. I think I get what Cocos did with their curry. It is still a traditional Japanese curry just a little more liquid and drain all the veggies. I wonder what it would taste like with potatoes added like trad jap curry…hmm!

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  18. I just order ala carte sauces and freeze them off. I buy the fukujinzuke(sp?) too. It's good with butter croissants too to mop up the remaining sauce.
    I saw they sell the sauce mix on Amazon also(different flavors) but have not tried it yet since buying the sauce from Curry House is cheaper.

    Doubt these taste identical but if you need something :
    Saw this post here
    https://www.okonomikitchen.com/coco-Saw this ichibanya-style-japanese-curry-vegan/
    BUT(!!!!) did not try this yet.
    I saw a YouTube recipe on YouTube channel No Recipes.
    https://youtu.be/8JPdXA7_RZ8?si=5zkZQ15jFx0xGSb9

    S&B curry powder have seen it Don quijote and it has been at my Walmart but not sure it will be locations by you

    Good luck !

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