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by djur
2472 days ago
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It's derived from French "cĂ´telette", literally "little rib". It's etymologically related to "coast", actually. It being spelled "cutlet" is probably the result of a phonetic spelling of "cĂ´telette" in English being reanalyzed as "cut-let", though, since "a cut of meat" is itself a thing. It originally referred to the same thing "chop" does today, a slice of meat perpendicular to the spine, containing a single rib. Then it started referring specifically to a boneless chop. Then it started being used to refer to any thin slice of meat. And in a lot of the world it was introduced specifically as a breaded and fried thin slice of meat. And that's how we got katsu, the Japanese version of schnitzel. Language is weird, isn't it? |
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