Kurokatsu-tei is located near the Kagoshima central station. Soon after I placed my order, rice, miso soup and shredded cabbage were brought to the table. These can be refilled for free, which is pretty typical at tonkatsu restaurants in Japan.
I ordered assorted fried items: pork roulade, fried meatloaf (menchi katsu), and tonkatsu (filet). The bread crumbs were very coarse, making the texture very airy and crispy. I guess this is a recent trend in Japan. I prefer the tonkatsu to be a bit more thinly breaded, though.
[Added in June, 2020 - Pork Sour Plum Roulade cooking video]
Before leaving Kagoshima for Hakata, I stopped by at an izakaya, called Sumiyaki Hazeru, for more shochu. There is a variety of shochu throughout Kyushu, but Kagoshima is especially famous for shochu. Since I knew I would be having a nice dinner when I was back in Hakata, I just ordered assorted yakitori (skewered chicken), which was pretty good.
But when I saw their shochu menu, I was so excited. There are 3 famous shochu brands in Kagoshima and these three are called 3M: Mori-izoh, Maoh, and Murai!! These shochu are difficult to get and quite expensive in the Tokyo metro area. Here, however, each shot was sold for $6-7. Unfortunately, one of the 3M was out of stock but I got to taste Maoh and Mori-izoh. They are both smooth and clean. I didn't taste the typical sweetness of potato shochu as much.
The dinner in Hakata is at Kawatarou. This restaurant specializes in live squid. It's not uncommon to have a water tank to keep live fish at seafood restaurants. But Kawatarou has a pond inside the restaurant to keep live squid. The squid is caught in front of the customer and prepared as super fresh squid sashimi in a few minutes.
I ordered a course meal and a few a la carte dishes.
First the squid sashimi is served. The flesh of the squid is transparent and the arms are still moving. It may be a bit grotesque for some people but it can not be any fresher than this. I was told to leave the legs so that they can cook it further. The arms can be eaten raw, but are a bit too tough to eat as is.
As soon as the server took the squid legs back to the kitchen, she brought three a la carte dishes.
Goma saba - Mackerel sashimi tossed in sesame and soy sauce
Shiokara - raw squid marinated in its own liver. Normally it's packed in a jar but this is freshly made at the restaurant.
Sazae - a shell fish whose scientific name is turbo cornutus. It's commonly grilled but the liver gives a distinctive bitterness. This is sashimi and the liver is removed. It was incredibly crunchy, so it was a bit difficult to bite into. I prefer it grilled despite the bitterness.
After a few more dishes in the course, the fried squid arms and accompanying veggies were brought. The squid legs were very crunchy with the crispy tempura batter.