
Our obsession with breaded cutlets goes back about 900 years when a monk in the Basilica di Sant’Ambrogio in Milan presented lombolos cum panitio in a banquet for the Benedictines. In the times since that crumbed loin was set before the robed monastics, cooks have formulated such instant classics as veal Milanese, wiener schnitzel and chicken-fried steak. East African beef cutless happen to be a personal fave of mine, but I, like many others in Orlando, have grown particularly fond of katsu. Recent indulgences at Chidon Katsu Palace inside H Mart and Cowboy Curry inside Mills Market have firmly placed the deep-fried, panko-coated wonders on my frequently ordered list. I also make it at home — quite often, in fact — but it never really turns out restaurant quality.
So it’s a good thing we have a restaurant devoted solely to katsu. It’s called Yumee Katsu, according to the marquee; though it’s also called Yumikatsu, according to their website. No matter how you spell it, yummy it is, as evidenced by the Korean chain’s 100-plus locations in the homeland, Australia, California, Arizona, Georgia and, now, Florida.
Naturally, it made sense to order the king don katsu ($19), the Korean variant of Japanese katsu one that bears similarity to traditional Viennese schnitzel. The pork is pounded really thin before being breaded and fried, resulting in a circumference as large as my face. Which is where it eventually ended up, though with great effort, seeing as the katsu is big enough for two and is served in the teishoku (or “set menu”) style with a demi-glace-ish dipping sauce, miso soup, cabbage, kimchi, pickled daikon, and rice sprinkled with sesame and salty seaweed. Most impressive, however, was how juicy this thin cutlet remained, and how copious the amount of fallen panko I managed to scatter all over myself.
On a return visit, I did the same but with the chicken curry katsu ($19), which came sliced on a plate along with a very balanced curry. My better half opted for the fish katsu ($17), featuring that oft-used whitefish, swai. Both encompassed the comforting qualities that make katsu such a universal draw. Well, near-universal — vegetarians don’t have any options here, though they can select from a number of other Korean dishes offered under the “Robot Lounge” sub-brand, like vegetable tofu soondubu ($16) and its liquid fire gurgling in a stone cauldron. It comes with an egg you break into the soup, and, like the katsus, is served with rice (not flecked with sesame and seaweed, for some reason) and assorted banchan. There’s also udon noodles ($13) served in a slightly soupy, slightly spicy broth with fried tofu, scallions, panko and shredded nori.
The “Robot” may refer to the kiosk near the entrance where all orders are placed before being picked up at the counter when your number is called. It’s efficient, though on one occasion, my order of Thai tea ($7) was completely forgotten. Won’t stop me from going back, that’s for sure. In fact, I’m hoping they expand their menu to offer the tomahawk cutlet they do at their Korean locations.
Speaking of location, Yumee Katsu sits next to the Woo Sung Oriental Food Mart in the Northgate Plaza on Edgewater Drive, just north of Lee Road. The parking lot has been mostly empty on all my visits, but I don’t expect that to last much longer now that the katsu’s out of the bag.
Yumee Katsu, 5075 Edgewater Drive, 407-776-2558, yumikatsu.com
Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.
Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed
This article appears in May 6-12, 2026.
