Tag Archives: Hawaii

A little Hawaii in NYC – Poke!

hawaii-2012-0891I first fell for Poke in – where else – Hawaii and haven’t had it since our trip there several years ago. So I was pleased to see a story this week in the NYTimes about the new Poke places popping up in Manhattan. Some of the Poke is a little too orange and creamy for my taste – k raw salmon slathered with orange midwestern salad dressing (but is actually chile aoili and quite good. spicy too.)

The kind I really fell for in Hawaii is red chunks of raw ahi tuna in a sesame oil/ salty soy sauce (the japanese version, Shoyu) with maybe some shredded carrots or seaweed or avocado.)

I first spotted it in the Big Island (see photo above!) when a hipster surfer guy staying at our bed & breakfast was eating some from a plastic takeaway carton. Had to try it – and it was delicious. Then I found it in odd places, including a little hole-in-the-wall natural foods place (Ruffage) restaurant off Waikiki Beach in Honululu; a very upscale version at the elegant Alan Wong’s (Obama’s favorite Honolulu restaurant)  and then on the side of a two-lane highway, being sold out of the back of a parked white pickup by a guy with two Styrofoam coolers full of the stuff. I lived to tell the tale (I was a little concerned about food poisoning but it was delicious.) Short of another trip to Hawaii (some day, I hope!), I’ll now look for it in NYC. – best spot according to the NYTimes is Sons of Thunder in Murray Hill.

Sons of Thunder

  • American
  • $$
  • 204 East 38th Street, Murray Hill
  • 646-863-2212

Pokéworks

  • American
  • $$
  • 63 West 37th Street, Midtown South
  • 212-575-8881

Wisefish Poké

  • American
  • $$
  • 263 West 19th Street, Chelsea
  • 212-367-7653

East Coast Poké

  • American
  • $$
  • 186 West 4th Street, West Village
  • 718-887-6902

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Iolani Palace – Elton John sighting at Alan Wong’s –

I knew when a very suave guy in a pink sport jacket with a folded handkerchief in his front pocket arrived with a group of about seven other equally interestingly-dressed people walked into Alan Wong’s – the famous foodie hotspot in Honolulu – that someone famous was part of this group. And there he was: Elton John. The entire restaurant played it cool – and no one made a fuss. But it was astonishing to sit at the table next to a singer I’ve listened to since I was a teenager – over 30 years.  The pink sport jacket guy turned out to be Elton’s husband (at last, my People Mag reading comes in handy.)

Beyond that, the food and service at Alan Wong’s was terrific – he does very creative takeoffs on traditional Hawaiian dishes, which we appreciated after almost 10 days of getting to know what those dishes are. We had a very unique take on poke (my favorite Hawaiian food) and a very clever “coconut” – coconut sorbet inside a chocolate brittle crust resembling a half coconut shell, served with a few native fruits and a yellow tangy sauce. Wow. We also had very good short ribs (we’ve eaten a lot of pork this trip) and red snapper in a miso sauce with corn and mushrooms, fantastic garlic mashed potatoes (one thing we never ate was poi. next time.) And I had the best mojito I’ve ever had (not that I’ve had many but this one had bits of watermelon in it and tons of mint.)

Earlier in the day, I toured the Iolani Palace and then wandered around Chinatown where I found a fantastic char siu place – a tiny hole-in-the-wall called, aptly, Char Siu House. The char siu pork was chopped behind the counter and served on a bed or rice with steamed greens. A Hawaiian food tour group prompted stopped by and the guide introduced the place as the best char siu in Hawaii.  Who knew? Around the block I stopped at Summer Frappes for a smoothie – mange, pineapple and kiwi. And thought of my friend Myra as I passed Myra’s Leis across the street.

Today, I toured Doris Duke’s phenomenal estate Shangra La, packed with Islamic art and artifacts on a glorious four-acre spit of land in a posh Honolulu neighborhood then D and I rented a car (dollar rental $48) and drove to the north shore to Hale’iwa, a fun funky surfer town, where we had a good burger and fries at Kua’aina sandwich shop and then made an obligatory stop at Matsumo’s grocery store for shaved ice. There was a surfer competition at sunset beach and watching the surfers try to make it through enormous waves and the famous Bonzai Pipeline (where the surfer rides inside a tunnel of water created by the wave as it arches up and over and then onto the water – was mesmirizing. The drive itself all the way around the island was gorgeous and next time I’d love to do some hiking around Waimea Valley, which is a gorgeous area of jagged mountains and valleys.  I was somewhat underwhelmed by Kailua but the beach did have the most perfectly soft sand I’ve ever walked upon – it turned to a soft paste when wet. After dirck left tonight (i leave tomorrow for san francisco, he had to go home) I found a perfect place to eat alone – the counter at a japanese noodle restaurant near our restaurant called Ramen Ezogiku.

 Tonight, before D left, we snuck in one last drink (I was back to maitais, dirck has stuck with Kona beer) at the Hosue without a Key – a lovely outdoor bar at the elegant Halekuia hotel next door. Three hula musicians and a beautiful woman dancing hula performed – a perfect way to say a reluctant goodbye to hawaii. Aloha.

 

 

I’ve loved this trip!

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Snorkeling in Hamauna Bay, Korean BBQ off the Waikiki strip

A few things I’ve learned from life here at a big convention hotel in Waikiki:

– Concierge! I want a concierge for life. Everytime I need something, I call or drop by their desk and get an answer. They’ve made me reservations and even got me $5 off my tour ticket to the Iolani Palace today. It occurred to me that I’ve been my kids’ concierge for years now (although that’s changing now that they’re in college.)

– Beware the tour package: The concierge did suggest a $20 tour to Hamauna Bay but when you read the fine print it’s more than that – and it’s easy enough to take the #22 bus, which I did, to the bay.  Both there and back, a van driver pulled up and offered us a ride for $5, claiming that the bus was long delayed. They got a few customers that way – and each time the bus pulled up about 10 minutes after they left. (the fare is $2.50 and I realized today that the transfers everyone seemed to get aren’t transfers but instead free return trips (if made within 2.5 hours I think. never seen that anywhere.)

– Everything is cheaper off the strip. And just as good although maybe not the view… We ate very good fast good Korean bbq, dumplings and bim bin bop (sp?) at Me BBQ, a popular place with, yes, locals on Uluniu Ave. Also found a good gift shop run by an Argentian couple nearby.

– Touristy places can be fun. Case in point: Having a drink at sunset at Duke’s Canoe Club, a shrine to the famous surfer Duke K. in the Outrigger hotel near ours. We also popped in at the Royal Hawaiian hotel next door – a pink Moorish palace. What a cool place. And today’s tour of the Iolani Palace was interesting, as was a stroll around Chinatown where I found Obama’s favorite restaurant there (according to my Obama-centric guidebook). We’re going to another Obama favorite tonight – the foodie-in-chief tends to like the same stuff we do. I stumbled upon a terrific little place called the Char Siu House on Maunakea Street – and had terrific Char siu pork served atop rice with steamed greens. Fresh and high quality meat. And a Hawaii Food tour dropped by – it’s a stop on the tour. So I guess I picked right. Around the block is a cute place for a smoothy – Sunshine Frappe.

Hanauma Bay was gorgeous and it was fun snorkeling, although a little unnerving at time since I found myself several times almost stuck atop a coral reef when the water suddenly got shallow. A nice Cambodian guy I met showed me a cut he got from just such an episode.

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Into the volcano – on Hawaii’s Big Island

Sometimes it looks like the top of a very crusty pan of brownies. Other times, like the dark rough folds of a rhinocerous or elephant. That’s what came to mind as we were walking across the other-worldly surface of the Kileau Iki crater. It was also easy to imagine a sci-fi film crew suddenly appearing to take in the scene.

The four-mile hike on a glorious sunny day did not disappoint. We made our way along a path zigzagging through dense tropical vegetation down into the black barren wasteland of the crater surface where we walked right straight across. The only guide were cairns (stacks of rocks) scattered at various points to let us know where to go, sort of.

The drive down to the sea – Chain of Craters Drive – was spectacular. It took us 19 miles first through forest, then through lava-flattened and blackened fields and then to an overlook where way down below the ocean crashed up against more cliffs. Winding down another level towards the ocean we looked back at the green mountains we’d just been standing on and could see stretches that were blackened by lava flowing to the sea. The last 11 miles of the drive are closed due to previous eruption damage and there was no active lava flow but we did have not one drop of rain, which I gather is somewhat unusual. In fact, it’s only rained for a few hours during our six days here.

We also stopped in at the art gallery next to the visitors center in the park which was full of terrific stuff – koa wood bowls, painted gourds, wood block prints, wooden furniture, paintings – but all too expensive fur us. At 4 p.m. we had lunch – sharing a tuna melt at the pleasantly funky lava rock cafe and waited for my laundry to dry at the nearby Volcano Wash and Dry. After a brief stop in the hot tub here, we’re off to see some hula dancing back at the park on the grounds of the military base there.

The Kileau Lodge, by the by, did a MUCH better job with breakfast this morning (than dinner last night). We enjoyed sitting by the old stone fireplace with plaques set into it from YMCAs all over the world. And the food was well prepared and served.

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Moving from the dry to the wet on the island of Hawaii

As promised, we drove through several distinct microclimates today as we moved from South Kona on the Big Island’s southwest side to the North and then northwest area, driving north on 190 to Waimea and especially during our drive north from there on 250 to Hawi. At one point, we seemed to be driving on the border between two very different lands. To our right was Ireland with a touch of Arizona – dazzlingly bright emerald green high rolling hills with the occasional grazing cow and prickly cactus. To our left was Wyoming with a touch of the moon – an arid flat valley stretching out to the ocean filled with sand-colored scrub and black volcanic rock. Wow!

We also moved from sun and heat to rain and fog and then, just in the knick of time, sun – as we set off on a hike down into the dramatic Polola’a Valley – a series of high cliffs jutting into the ocean and just beyond, former bits of the island now marooned as enormous jagged boulders in the ocean. The hike was a little terrifying – okay a lot terrifying – because it’s muddy at the best of times and REALLY muddy right after it’s rained – and it was all down hill winding down a cliff covered with tropical vegetation. I did my little old lady steps and leaned so heavily on a wooden walking stick that by the end I had a few splinters in my palm.  I only fell once and fortunately it was in slow mo into a muddy earthern surface rather than the other option – a muddy rock. By the time we got down to the pristine black sand beach at the bottom I was drenched with sweat – more from anxiety than the heat. But the views were worth the saturated shirt, muddy shorts, legs and sandals.

We marked our triumph with – what else – an ice cream cone in the funky western town of Hawi – at the local Tropical Dreams ice cream shop which produces a dazzling Tahitian Vanilla, among other flavors. We drove a bit south and then east to Honoka’a – on the north of the Hamakua Coast. And now I’m in a lovely room in an old plantation style house in the countryside – the Waipo’o Wayside B&B.  More refined than our last b&b and we’ve traded in the sound of roosters for the strange chirping of tree frogs.

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Greetings from Captain Cook, Hawaii – or thereabouts

I have my map beside me so I can properly spell several of the places we visited here on the glorious South Kona coast of the Island of Hawaii (also known as the “Big Island” but we’ve been told not to refer to it as that with locals.). We have had a hard time keeping the names of the places we’re going straight – let alone pronouncing them correctly. So many names that start with H or K or M – and have lots of syllables full of vowels.

But no complaints. What a glorious place. Amazing how quickly we’ve acclimated to being in such a lush and green tropical land but I’m no longer gushing at the sight of red, orange and purple bourganvilla lining the road, or gorgeous expanses of black lava rock beach with elegant palm trees and crashing waves. I’m just taking it all in calmly, happily.

We are staying at a funky B&B right off Highway 11 just south of Captain Cook. The turnoff from the winding mountainous two-lane highway is abrupt and then there’s a very very steep decline into a thicket of lush green vegetation and a ramshackle “farm house” where we are staying in a pleasant room for the low-low price of $100 per night. Pomaika’i “Luck” Farm B&B is a keeper – even though our room is a bit noisy when the occasional car zips by on the highway – and a rooster or two starts crowing at, what was it, 6 a.m.

The place is run by a woman who originally hails from East Texas – and her friend who does a lot of the farming/tourguiding. We had a pleasant breakfast full of local fruits and vegs – star fruit, passionfruit, papaya, oranges, super-creamy avocado – all grown on the small sliver of a farm. Then the “friend” took us and a few guests on a little walk around the farm – and we saw most of what we ate hanging from the trees, including the “cherries” used to produce the Kona coffee we drank. We didnt eat any macadamia nuts but those are here too. We are way up high on a mountain ridge that slopes down, way down, to the ocean.

After breakfast, we loaded up the car with left over fruit from breakfast, snorkeling gear and towels kindly provided by our hosts and drove a few miles south to the fabulous Pu’uhonua o Honaunau National Historic Park (see what I mean about the names?) that is the site of an ancient temple and refuge for outlaws where they could get back into society’s good graces by showing up there. It’s a spectacular spot – with a broad swath of black lava rock that stretches out into the ocean. Picking our way across the spiny hard porous surface felt at times like walking on the backs of a rhinoceros. We took pictures in front of the reconstructed temple with the reproduction Polynesian style wood sculptures. Also saw some amazing old canoes cut from gorgeous wood.

I’m glad we took a slight detour to see the nearby Painted Church – a lovely white frame Catholic Church high on a hill surrounded by spectacular flowers adorning a small cemetery. Inside, the tiny wood frame church is painted with fantastic folk-art style scenes done by a self-taught priest in the 19th century. Wow. Gorgeous view too from the front doors of the church. I could become a Catholic in a place like that! Almost.

We stopped for takeout lunch at Super J’s – which specializes in Hawaiian food. We had lula – chunks of salty pork and a green resembling spinach (casava?) steamed inside a huge leaf (also casava?) Whatever it was, it was delicious. We got three of them and sat on the rocks at another nearby beach and gingerly unwrapped the three lulas which were held together with rubber bands and oily – and happily devoured them. We were at Kealakekua Bay – where Captain Cook was killed.

Time for  a little snorkeling. We returned to the “Place of Refuge” (the anglo name for Pu’uhonua o Honaunau) and the two-step beach – another rocky expanse where people walked gingerly across the black lava rocks and figured out a way to get into the water to snorkel. We saw all kinds of gorgeous fish – bright yellow fish, flat black fish with yellow markings, another rainbow-colored fish. We didn’t see a sea turtle – but we got lucky with that earlier at the Place of Refuge when we saw one in shallow pool there. Snorkeling was fun – and the water was surprisingly warm. It’s the first time I’ve swum in the Pacific. It’s been too cold when we’ve been on the West Coast.

We took another smaller scenic highway 190 to the more upscale coffee town of Holualoa and just passed through since none of the galleries were open (today is a holiday – and it’s a monday). Unexpectedly, we ended up in Kailua – a large touristy town that we unexpectedly enjoyed. It has an old fashioned sea wall that runs along a street that reminds me of a boardwalk in a Cape Cod or Jersey Shore town – full of t-shirt shops and bars and hotels but also some beautiful old architecture including an elegant old royal residence and old church. We ended up trying our first shaved ice – at Scandanavian Shaved Ice – a scoop of vanilla ice cream buried in a huge snowball of ice and colored blue, orange and yellow – the liquid flavors we requested (passion fruit, pineapple and “blue hawaii” (whatever that is.) It was surprisingly good. Then again, an old shoe would have tasted good given where our circumstance – sitting on the sea wall watching teams of sprightly men paddling in long narrow canoes in the ocean.

For dinner, we picked the Kona Brewing Company – a brew pub that’s very popular with locals for good reason. The beer was good – so was the pizza and greek salad. We ate outside underneath enormous trees and umbrellas lit by burning torches.  Ahh Hawaii. Life is good.

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And away we go….Kona here we come

I’m going a bit nuts trying to squeeze clothes for 16 days – for two destinations with different weather – into a carry on bag. But there are worse problems in the world. I’ve got casual clothes primarily for warm weather in Hawaii – one quasi-nice outfit for Hawaii that will be completely wrinkled when I unearth it from the bottom of my bag. And very few colder weather clothes for San Francisco but hoping I can borrow some things from my friend there if need be. Someone from the Obama campaign just called: “Sorry won’t be here for the caucuses,” I replied.

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Hints for Hawaii

Time to start gathering string for our trip to Hawaii in January. YES!

A friend emailed from there the other day with these suggestions: this is my fifth time here. I love it. Oahu, Maui and the Big Island are my favorites. Lots to see on Oahu: Pearl Harbor, Diamond Head, North Shore where the waves are much bigger, Dole plantation. You will have a blast. Stay as long as you can because it’s a long flight. We are on Kauai, Maui and Oahu on this 10-day trip. Aloha!

Also read in AAA magazine that it’s possible to find low key interesting b&Bs on the Big Island for about $150 a night. I’d love to find something akin to Panama’s laid-back hippish Bocas Del Toro in Hawaii.

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Cheap airfare to Hawaii

If I buy a plane ticket now for our January trip to Hawaii, I probably will save a bundle since I just found tickets from Des Moines to Honolulu for about $550. But I can’t quite bring myself to buy them yet – since lots of things could change between now and then. So I’m posting this now – as a reminder in November when I’m searching for reasonable fares, of what might have been….Granted the $525 fare is a three-flight trip (DM to Minneapolis to Seattle to Hawaii). The $700 or so ticket is a two-flight trip.  And it’s important to look at where the flights connect. Some of the three flight trips take you all the way to Georgia and then back to Des Moines. Not good. The best options appear to be two-flight trips from DM to Denver to Hawaii….

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Hawaii – things to remember

D.  may have a biz trip to Hawaii in two years and I hope to tag along.    From a recent NYT article comes these suggestions (the more economical, interesting ones) when visiting the Big Island:

– Kaawa Loa Plantation guest house – kaawaloaplantation.com – doubles from $125.

– Shipman House B&B – with weekly hula lessons. (can’t miss that.)

Coffee trail stops: Bong Brothers Coffee; Hilo Coffee Mill, Kona Blue Sky Coffee, Mountain Thunder Kona Coffee

Beaches – Hapuna Beach (sunbathing); Kaunaoa Beach (hotel resort beach but all these are open to the public, surprisingly) Kealakekua Bay (snorkeling) Papkolea Beach (green sand? green sand.)

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