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Kal-bi. Even on a styrofoam plate--still ono!
Last week, I was lucky enough to attend the Taste Hawaii Tour in San Jose. It featured a book signing/lecture with Arnold Hiura, author of Kau Kau and Chef Alan Wong, whose newest book The Blue Tomato was written in collaboration with Arnold Hiura. 

These books nicely dovetail the high concept "Hawaii Regional Cuisine" and down home feel of family style eating in Hawaii. Both 'get' the soul of what Hawaii food means. Kau Kau  historically outlines how home-style Hawaii plate lunch/potluck food evolved. 

The Blue Tomato is the flip side. Alan Wong gives us "Hawaii Regional Cuisine" taking a familiar local favorite like Kal-bi, and re-inventing it in a completely different, yet still recognizable way. And making it taste better than you think it could. Chef Alan Wong just plain kicks some serious cooking butt.  Hawaii Regional Cuisine should be on everyone's bucket list, and there are a few options to doing this.


Taste Hawaii Tour, when they start up again.
The ultimate takeout was the food in San Jose. The book/lecture included lunch with two Alan Wong dishes as well as food from Hukilau San Jose. We ate on paper 'school lunch' trays and the appetizers came on small styrofoam plates. Even in the ambiance of a community center on a cold day in San Jose, the taste and spirit of the food just sang.

Alan Wong's Restaurant on King Street in Honolulu, HI
This is "the" Alan Wong's restaurant and definitely a "no-slippers allowed" place. Some of the best food I've ever eaten. I also like that it hasn't expanded into a mega-brand or even a larger space because you definitely feel like something special is being done just for you.

The Pineapple Room on the 3rd floor of Macy's Ala Moana, Honolulu, HI
While it's more casual here, the service and food are still top-notch. it's not as expensive and easier to get a reservation. Even a friend of mine who's not from Hawaii, but travels extensively through Europe and Asia told me that his favorite restaurant is the Pineapple Room. The food is a little down-home local than the dinner restaurant, and they also serve breakfast.

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The one pet peeve I have, being an online junkie, is their website is always *very slow.* For a faster view of Kau Kau and The Blue Tomato, go the the Greenhouse and click on the Amazon links. 

Next week, I'm trying to make the Avocado Poke Stacks using my Spam Musubi maker. If that works out, it might make it to the Thanksgiving table.

Eat Well. Be Well.

 
 
Someone asked me for a very quick rundown on where we go for 'sit-down' dinners on O'ahu. In 15 seconds, just what comes to mind immediately. They range from way beyond plate lunch at Alan Wong's to the-only-difference-between-this-place-and-a-plate-lunch is a door and the food doesn't come in a box. Click here to check out my favorites. I simply divided them into "No Slippers" (i.e., a little upscale) and "OK with Slippers" (more casual). 

There are many more that deserve honorable mentions listed below:

1) Sam Choy's on Nimitz--the original
2) Maki-no-chaya--great cheap bentos and an amazingly broad buffet.
3) Kim Chee 2-5(?)--Korean food
4) Pineapple Cafe at Macy's Ala Moana (Alan Wong's casual and much less expensive restaurant)

What are your favorites?