Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts

Hawaiian-Style Lentil Soup with Seared Spam

This week we'll share a laughably cheap recipe with just a touch of Hawaii. And yep, you read the title of this post correctly: it's got Spam in it.

Interestingly, this recipe is laughably cheap to make everywhere BUT in Hawaii. But wherever you are, you'll find this recipe easy, hearty, filling, nutritious and delicious. Enjoy!

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Hawaiian-Style Lentil Soup with Seared Spam

Ingredients:
1 pound lentils
About 12-14 cups water
Olive oil
1 large onion, coarsely chopped
1 14.5 ounce can red beans or kidney beans, drained and rinsed, optional
1 can Spam, cut into smallish 1-2 inch pieces
A generous teaspoon paprika or smoked paprika
A generous teaspoon garlic powder (or 3 cloves garlic, minced)
Hot sauce, to taste
Salt/pepper to taste
3-4 small/medium carrots, peeled and sliced into nickels
1 15-ounce can diced tomatoes
Rice or brown rice

Directions:
1) In a large soup pot combine lentils and water. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer. Simmer for 60-90 minutes until lentils are done to your liking.

2) Meanwhile, in a separate large non-stick saucepan, heat a few Tablespoons of oil, then add the onions and cut-up Spam. Raise heat to high and saute until onions and Spam begin to brown and start to stick to the bottom of the pan (5-10 minutes, roughly). Reduce heat to medium, then add the garlic (or garlic powder), carrots, canned tomatoes, spices and hot sauce, and saute/simmer for another 7-10 minutes. Turn off heat and let stand until lentils are ready.

3) When lentils are done to your liking, add the veggies/Spam/spice mixture to the lentils, then deglaze the saucepan with an additional half cup of water. Add this deglazing liquid to the soup pot. Return lentils to a boil, remove from heat, and serve in bowls over rice or brown rice.

Serves 8-10.
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Recipe Notes:
1) Creeped out by Spam? We were admittedly flummoxed at first by Hawaii's partly ironic love affair with Spam too (not to mention it's an obvious example of a second order food, a category of food we tend to avoid). If you can't bring yourself to include this very Hawaiian touch to this recipe, feel free to substitute 12-16 ounces of any other kind of meat (sausage, dark meat poultry, chopped ham or bacon, etc. would all work well in this recipe), or simply leave the meat out for an entirely vegan version.

2) Not as laughably cheap as I'd like: Here in Honolulu, where a pound of lentils costs more than double (and a can of black beans costs more than quadruple) what we'd pay back in our home state of New Jersey, this hearty soup isn't quite as laughably cheap as I'd like it to be. However, you can still make this entire pot of soup for about $12-13 (about $1.30-1.50 per serving) even here in Hawaii. It’s not quite the 60-70c per serving a pot of lentil soup might cost us back home but, still, it's miraculously less expensive and a whole lot more healthy than even the least expensive restaurants in Waikiki.

Read Next: The 25 Best Laughably Cheap Recipes at Casual Kitchen



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Attack of the Cheaps! Eight Great (And Temporary) Ideas to Save $500-$700 a Month

Whenever Laura and I return from a trip away, especially when we've been to someplace expensive, we always, always get an attack of the cheaps. Always.

Well, we're experiencing an attack of the cheaps right now, because we recently wrapped up a trip to Honolulu, Hawaii. It's a wonderful city, but each time we visit we're stunned by the extremely high cost of living there. Food in grocery stores costs double what we pay in New Jersey. Rent, housing prices, gas and other costs are similarly off the charts. And the cost of restaurant meals bugged me so much that I wrote an entire post about how to find cheap eats in Waikiki, Honolulu's key tourist district.

But enough complaining. After all, there can be benefits to catching the cheaps too. Uh, like saving money. And sometimes you discover that you never even missed the things you cut back on. So why not catch this cheapness wave, ride it, and share my "attack of the cheaps" ideas with readers? And why ask readers to share their own "attack of the cheaps" ideas too? Pretty soon we'll all be putting away some extra dough.

By following the tips below, you could easily reap savings of $500-$700 per month. Each is easy to implement, and none represents any huge downsizing or embarrassingly overt reduction to your standard of living. Best of all, however, each of following tips is temporary and reversible. They're not one-way acts of permanent abnegation that make you feel like you're denying yourself forever. You can try them out for a while, see what you think, and reap the savings until you reverse the decision.

Finally, readers, be sure to share your favorite "attack of the cheaps" ideas in the comments!

1) Downgrade (or better yet, cancel) your cable or subscription TV service for 3-6 months. Added bonus: evade commercials and infotainment that's just going to make you want to buy more stuff. Savings: $35-$200 a month.

2) Put all book purchases and magazine/newspaper subscriptions on hiatus. Take advantage of your local library for the next couple of months, save a few trees and enjoy a brief respite from the media. Savings: perhaps $30-$100 a month.

3) Forgo juices, sodas and other beverages for one week or one month and substitute simple tap water at just pennies per gallon. Protip: Keep in mind how profitable these beverages are for the companies that make them. Savings: $20-50 a month.

4) Embrace partial vegetarianism and go meatless for 1/3 to 1/2 of your meals. I've found that you can reduce your food bill by a third or more this way. Savings: $100-200 a month--or more, depending on your food bills and the size of your family.

5) Experiment with meatless weekdays for a month. This might be the easiest way of all to cut excess calories and excess costs out of your diet. Savings: similar to #4, $100-200 a month, possibly more.

6) Pack your lunch for one month--or longer: If you're a habitual eater-outer at work, this tip will save you a ton of money. Try making and freezing a batch of my burritos and storing them in the office fridge. Or make a double batch of dinner on Sunday night and pack the leftovers for a week's worth of lunches. Savings: $120-200 a month, or a cool two grand a year.

7) Set aside your credit cards and go cash-only. There's something about using 100% cash that limits your spending. It makes spending more of a tangible and conscious act. Plus, if you put a certain amount of cash in your pocket and start to run low, you naturally cut back. Hey, when you're out of dough, you're out of dough. Savings: hard to quantify--perhaps $100 a month, but possibly far more.

8) Track your spending closely for one month. This tip, stolen from the exceptional book Your Money Or Your Life, will reveal surprising information about exactly where your money goes--and you'll see proof of the saying "what gets measured gets controlled." Savings: equally hard to quantify, perhaps $200 a month or more.

Add up the savings from these tips and you can get to $500 to $700 a month. Sustain this level of savings for just a few months and this will translate into an extra $1500 to $2000 sitting in your bank account. Sustain it for a full year and you'll be looking at an extra six or seven grand. Not too shabby for a few temporary spending measures!

Readers, this list is far from complete. What have I missed? What tips do you rely on to save money after a period of overspending?







How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Cheap Eats in Honolulu: Nine Inexpensive Restaurants You Should Check Out in Waikiki

Now that winter is coming on in the northern part of the USA, we can't help but dream about the extended stay we were lucky enough to have nearly a year ago in the Waikiki district of Honolulu.

Unfortunately, as any visitor to Hawaii quickly discovers, it can be difficult to find affordable restaurant meals in Waikiki. But if you're willing to wander off the beaten path just a bit, you can find really good food at surprisingly reasonable prices.

With that, here are nine of the best cheap eats in Waikiki. Hopefully this post will encourage you to visit one of our favorite places in the world!
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Fanny's Chinese
464 Ena Rd
Honolulu, HI 96815
(808) 941-8155


This hole-in-the-wall restaurant serves Chinese food at prices ranging from $5-$8, possibly the lowest dinner prices in all of Waikiki. But go early--by 6pm, Fanny gets flooded with takeout orders and she'll shoo you away.

Phuket Thai
1960 Kapiolani Blvd
Honolulu, HI 96826
(808) 922-7960‎


This casual restaurant serves excellent Thai food at reasonable prices. Located just a few blocks north of Waikiki on the corner of Kapiolani and McCulley Streets.

Ramen Nakamura
2141 Kalakaua Ave
Honolulu, HI 96815
(808) 922-7960


Many people consider Nakamura to be the best ramen in Honolulu. The food is excellent and the prices are quite reasonable.

Ezogiku Ramen
2146 Kalakaua Ave
Honolulu, HI 96815
(808) 926-8616


We affectionately call this restaurant "the other ramen place" and we actually prefer it to the more popular and slightly more expensive Ramen Nakamura. The service is friendlier, the dining area is a bit bigger, and the entire experience is more casual and relaxing.

Rainbow Drive-In
3308 Kanaina Ave
Honolulu, HI 96815
(808) 737-0177‎


Just a few blocks' walk from Waikiki. The clientele at Rainbows is predominantly locals getting their fix of delicious island-style comfort food. If you want to try a traditional favorite, try the artery-clogging loco moco. My personal choice: the combination platter.

Pho Old Saigon
2270 Kuhio Ave # 1
Honolulu, HI 96815
(808) 922-2668


Excellent Vietnamese food. This restaurant is almost always crowded. Don't expect to be impressed with the decor (or the adult video store next door), but do expect to be impressed with the prices.

Pho My Lien
1831 Ala Moana Blvd
Honolulu, HI‎ 96815
(808) 955-4009‎


Situated on the second floor of a run-down building, this mom and pop restaurant serves excellent home-cooked Vietnamese food at very reasonable prices.

Siam Square
408 Lewers St
Honolulu, HI‎ 96815
(808) 923-5320‎


Exceptional Thai Food, friendly service and reasonable prices. This place is hidden away a little bit on the second floor above street level--just look for the ABC Store on the corner of Kuhio and Lewers Street, walk a few feet north on Lewers, then look up and to the left. You can't miss it.

Due Divino Pastaria
432 Ena Rd
Honolulu, HI‎ 96815
(808) 955-4142‎


Hidden away on Ena Street, just past Hobron Street, is an excellent little family-style Italian restaurant. We were impressed with their simple yet delicious food, and we loved the comfortable and relaxed atmosphere.

Related Posts:
Hawaii and its Love Affair with SPAM
POG: The Official Drink of Hawaii
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
Our New Zealand Travel Blog
On the Road with Casual Kitchen: Asheville, NC and 12 Bones Barbecue

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Macadamia Nuts: Hawaii's Signature Food

Casual Kitchen had the good fortune to spend four months in Honolulu earlier this year, and this post is another installment in our series on the foods of Hawaii. You can find all of the other posts in this series under the label Hawaii.
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You can't help feeling a little depressed when an extended vacation comes to an end and you have to return to your regular life. That's how our return to New Jersey several weeks ago felt to us. The four months we spent in Honolulu were by far the fastest four months of our lives.

But we did bring home with us memories of great Hawaiian foods. And perhaps the key signature food of Hawaii is the glorious macadamia nut.


Any visitor to Hawaii can find both Mauna Loa and Hawaiian Host brand macadamia nuts in stores all over the islands. They're delicious and extremely popular as souvenirs, but be prepared to get separated from your money--a smallish 4.5 ounce canister of nuts can cost $3.00 to $4.00, which works out to about 20-25c a nut.

It sounds odd to say this, but that high cost is actually a blessing, because it means that macadamia nuts can still be grown competitively and profitably in Hawaii. Sadly, many of Hawaii's traditional agricultural crops (taro, sugar cane, pineapple, papaya, mangoes, etc.) have become disturbingly uncompetitive against lower-cost food imported from Asia and Central America.

Macadamias are extremely nutritious and contain high concentrations of protein and monounsaturated fats (that's the "healthy" kind of fat). And a recent study showed that consumption of macadamia nuts reduces both LDL and total cholesterol levels. Sounds a lot tastier and cheaper than a Lipitor tablet, doesn't it?

Also, macadamias nut trees are popular with environmental groups because the trees are extremely efficient at sequestering carbon (absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it in the tree itself).

And if you've ever enjoyed wasabi peas, you'll love the wasabi and teriyaki-flavored macadamia nuts (see the photo above). Once we tried them we were completely addicted. Fortunately, you can easily get them on Amazon.

But even wasabi can't hold a candle to the most dangerous food combination of all: dark chocolate and macadamia nuts:


Again, be prepared to pay up: the little bag you see here costs $4.00 and it contained a mere 11 individually wrapped chocolates. Not exactly laughably cheap.

Related Posts:
Calling All Coffee Addicts: 100% Kona Coffee
Spending to Save: Frugality and Expensive Food
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
Hawaii and its Love Affair with SPAM
The Chocolate Gene
Conclusions from the Chocolate Fast



How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

POG: The Official Drink of Hawaii

Here's another installment in our series on the foods of Hawaii:
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What is POG? It's a rich and sweet mixture of passion fruit juice, orange juice and guava juice. You could think of POG as Hawaii's official drink, and you can find it everywhere on the islands.


Unfortunately, like many other special foods here in Hawaii, it can be nearly impossible to find on the mainland.

Now keep in mind that most of the brands of POG aren't exactly healthy for you, since they're typically only 15-20% juice, with water and sugar (and/or high-fructose corn syrup) added. Technically you can't call this juice, hence the term "nectar" on the box. I usually never drink sweetened drinks like this, but when I'm here in Hawaii I make an exception. As the saying goes: what happens in Hawaii stays in Hawaii.

Plus, POG reminds me of my childhood, when I used to drink a big glass of Orange Hi-C every day when I got home from school (believe it or not, back in the 1970s and early 1980s, kids could eat and drink as much sugar as they wanted).

The other important--some might say critical--feature of POG: it goes perfectly with vodka to make a glorious drink called the POG-tini.

Finally, a brief warning: drinking too much POG at one time can put you into a glucosal, semi-euphoric state known as pogging. Seriously. You see hundreds of pasty-looking tourists everywhere here, all with huge smiles on their faces, pogging up and down the streets of Waikiki. Come here and you'll see what I mean.

POG Makers:
Meadow Gold
Hawaiian Sun

Related Posts:
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
Calling All Coffee Addicts: 100% Kona Coffee
A Brief Tutorial on How to Cut Up a Pineapple
Countdown: The Top Ten Alcoholic Drinks of Summer
Countdown: Top Ten Low Alcohol Drinks


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

How Do You Define Truly Great Restaurant Service?

When was the last time you went to a restaurant and had service that was so skilled that it made your dinner twice as good?

Every restaurant patron has his or her own unique preferences. Some want detailed food and wine suggestions from the server, others couldn't care less what their waiter or waitress thinks. Some people want dinner quickly, so they can get on to the next thing they have planned that night. Others want to linger.

So it's no wonder that the job of waiting tables can be difficult when customers often want arbitrary or contradictory things. But during our recent stay in Hawaii, we went out for a special dinner (it was for Laura's birthday) where our server really nailed things perfectly. I'd like to highlight a couple of seemingly minor things she did that, to me, defines truly great restaurant service.

Everybody knows the drill when the waiter runs through the evening's specials. And it's all too often that I've had the most expensive appetizer and entree pushed down my throat by an eager waiter looking for a bigger check. But when our waitress went over her specials, she added that she'd be happy to suggest a couple of specific things if we'd be interested. She gave us the option to take her suggestions--or not.

And when we did ask for her suggestions, she highlighted a cheese platter appetizer (of locally grown Maui goat cheeses) that was so good that we spent more than a half an hour slowly enjoying it.

And that's when our waitress came through again. She saw us enjoying our food so much (if I recall correctly, I was so excited that I broke out my adolescent manners and said "this is kick-ass!" to her with my mouth full), that she came back a minute later and told us something that I'll probably never hear in my life in a New York City restaurant:

"I thought you might want to take your time with the cheese platter, so I took the liberty of holding up your dinner order with the chef for a bit. Will that be all right with you?"

Once again, perfect. She gave us the option. It's a great idea if you're in lingering mode, but if you have somewhere to be, you can say, "No thanks! Please bring our entrees out right away."

It's infectious to be served by a waiter or waitress who takes obvious pleasure in his or her job, who is excited to share great food, and who offers flexible customer service like this.

This is how dining out should be. It's the kind of service that makes me recommend restaurants and makes me gladly tip more than 20%.

Readers, let me hear your thoughts! What defines great restaurant service to you?
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PS: This post wasn't meant to be a restaurant review, but I'd be remiss if I didn't give out the details of where we had this amazing dinner. If you happen to be in Hawaii, do not miss the chance to try out this restaurant. I recommend it highly. Also, our gifted server's name was Kimberly.

Indigo
Located in the Chinatown district of Honolulu:
1121 Nu'uanu Avenue
Honolulu, Hawaii 96817
808/521-2900
15 minutes by car or TheBus from Waikiki.
Reservations recommended.


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Hawaiian Food Porn

Food Porn: (noun) Gratuitous closeups of delicious-looking food.

Thanks to several trips over to Honolulu's Chinatown, we are floating in fresh fruits here during our stay in Hawaii.


Food is extremely expensive here on the islands. I'd say prices are roughly double what we pay in our grocery store in New Jersey, and certainly 50% more than prices in Manhattan grocery stores. This would be a difficult place to eat on thirty bucks a week.

But if you spend some time wandering the stalls and shops in Chinatown, you'll find produce at much more reasonable prices, and every so often you'll stumble onto some great deals, like the pineapples we saw the other day that were selling for just $2.00 each, or huge mangoes for only $1.25 a pound. These are some of the best prices you'll find on the entire island of Oahu.


If you ever happen to visit Hawaii and you find yourself in the key tourist area of Waikiki Beach, take a side trip over to Chinatown. It's just a short $2.00 bus ride, or if you're ambitious, about a 4-mile walk.



Related Posts:
A Simple Way to Beat Rising Food Prices
Fattoush! A Middle Eastern Salad Recipe
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
Invigorate Your Cooking with Fresh Herbs
Green Bean Salad: Another Ridiculously Easy Side Dish

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!


Hawaii and its Love Affair with SPAM

Here's another installment in our series on the foods of Hawaii:
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Hawaiians absolutely love SPAM. And mainlanders, when they learn this surprising fact, always react with confusion and funny looks. I mean, really now, who eats SPAM?


Well, Hawaiians do, with a vengeance:

1) Citizens of Hawaii consume more SPAM per capita than any other state in the US.

2) SPAM is a legacy of GI rations from World War II. The canned meat found its way into the diets of local Hawaiians during and after the war, thanks to SPAM's low cost and the fact that it can be shipped long distances without refrigeration.

3) SPAM also became popular throughout many countries and territories throughout the Pacific, including Guam, the Mariana Islands, the Philippines and even Korea.

4) SPAM is on the menus of both Burger King and McDonald's throughout Hawaii.

5) One of the more common ways to eat SPAM in Hawaii, Korea and the Philippines is SPAM musubi: a slab of spam over rice, held together with a seaweed wrap.


Not only do Hawaiians love SPAM, but each year, Honolulu's Waikiki district hosts an annual street fair dedicated to SPAM. It takes place at the end of April and it celebrates Hawaiian culture, music and food. It's one of Waikiki's most popular community events.


All of the restaurants in the area serve SPAM-inspired foods, which get gobbled up by hungry tourists and locals...


...and there were temporary stages set up on each end of the festival, featuring dozens of performers showing off traditional and modern Hawaiian music and dance.


Yes, that's right, this beautiful hula dancer is wearing a SPAM hat on her head.

If you're not from here, it can be difficult to understand the love affair Hawaii has with SPAM. The other day we were trying to explain SPAM Jam to some Italian friends, who had asked us, "why would anyone host a street festival about unwanted email?" And in a preposterous twist of fate, a vegetarian friend was visiting us during this year's SPAM Jam. "What exactly is SPAM?" she asked us.

It is a bit difficult to explain isn't it? It's meat, sort of. It's pork, I guess. And it comes in a can. It's really salty. And they write haikus and Monty Python skits about it. Naturally, our vegetarian friend wanted to see this festival for herself.

There's only one state in the Union that would have a festival dedicated to SPAM without a trace of self-consciousness or irony. And that, in a nutshell, is exactly why we love Hawaii.

Related Posts:
What's the Most Heavily Used Tool in Our Kitchen? Our Rice Cooker.
Make Your Diet Into a Flexible Tool
When High-Fat Food ... Can Actually Be Healthy For You
Collard Greens with Rice and Kielbasa



How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!

Li Hing Mui

You'd never guess that something that tastes so nasty the first time you try it could become such an addictive snack. But in the latest chapter in our pursuit of unusual foods here in Hawaii, that's exactly what happened.

We saw a bag of Li Hing Mui, or salty dried plums, hanging on a rack in one of the gazillion ABC convenience stores here in Waikiki. Why not? we thought, and bought it.


The next thing I know, Laura is sprinting around the apartment yelling, "What an awful, awful food!" It was only later, after a brief but enlightening conversation with our local friend Tammy, that she found out her mistake:

Laura: Have you ever tried, uh, Li Hing... something? My god they are disgusting. I popped one in my mouth and I couldn't believe how awful it was.
Tammy: You're supposed to nibble it.
Laura: Oh.

I'll give Laura credit, she is a tryer. The next day and for the next couple of days after that, she tried nibbling these little salty-sweet-sour buggers. Instead of eating them whole.

Wouldn't you know it, she's now totally addicted to them. And I kind of like 'em too. They are tangy, they have the perfect mix of salty sweetness, and they're covered in an electric red powder, called, not surprisingly, li hing powder.

But unlike more typical American snacks like potato chips or candy, one bite does not taste like another. In fact, it can take five or ten minutes to work your way through one of these dried plums. At that rate, our tiny three-ounce bag is going to last us until we get back to the mainland.

Related Posts:
Calling All Coffee Addicts: 100% Kona Coffee
How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit
The Ube




How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by subscribing to my RSS feed, or submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.

The Ube

Today's post is about yet another food that's easy to find here in Hawaii, but fairly uncommon in mainland USA. The ube, or the purple yam.


We indirectly discovered this root vegetable when Laura ordered ube ice cream in a shop in Waimanalo. Ube is also a key ingredient in a wide range of Asian desserts and pastries, thanks largely to the fact that it naturally colors almost any food with a shockingly rich purple hue.

So when we stumbled onto a big bin of ube for sale in Honolulu's Chinatown a few days later, we knew we had to buy a couple.

We brought them home, boiled them up and ate them completely unseasoned, just to see what they tasted like. We were not disappointed. It was really good--it had the texture and consistency of a regular potato with the sweetness of a sweet potato.


One unusual byproduct of boiling up these ube: the leftover cooking water had a bizarre green tint to it.


Imagine using this for your next batch of vegetable stock, or even better, in a batch of delicious risotto! Just for fun, we used this broth to cook up a batch of pasta, and it gave the pasta a noticeable, if unappetizing, greenish tinge.

Finally, I spent some time looking around the internet for some interesting recipes that include ube--let me share four that look really good:

Ube Gnocchi at Burnt Lumpia
Ube Cupcakes at Recipezaar
Ube Balls at Kumain.com
Ube Purple Yam Two-Tone Bread at Angies Recipes


Related Posts:
How to Make Fried Rice
How to Make Pickled Eggs
Thai Pasta Salad
Austrian Cuisine: Viennese Potato Soup (Wiener Kartoffelsuppe)

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by linking to me, subscribing to my RSS feed, or submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.

How to Prepare and Eat a Rambutan Fruit

One of the pleasures we are enjoying during our extended time in Hawaii is getting to know some of the exotic fruits that are relatively common here, but quite difficult to find on the mainland. And the rambutan is just such an exotic fruit.


Bright red and weirdly hairy-looking (the word "rambutan" actually means hairy in the Malay and Indonesian languages), and with a tangy and delicious center, this fruit is delectable!

We picked up a bag of these in Honolulu's Chinatown district, possibly the best place on the entire island of Oahu to get reasonably priced fruits and veggies of any kind.

And of course, never having even seen a rambutan before, we had to be taught how to eat it. And my lesson was given to me by the 13-year old daughter of a local friend here on Oahu.

First, cut around the middle of the fruit with a knife. Don't cut too deeply. You only want to run the knife through the hairy outer shell, which is just a few millimeters thick.


Then, peel back the husk....


...and gently pull out the inner fruit.

You'll want to have a paper towel handy--the inner fruit can be quite juicy and drippy. And bite into it a bit carefully, there's a hard seed in the very center!


This is a fruit your whole family will enjoy.


And after you're done eating a bunch of these fruits, your plate will look like it's littered with the bodies of alien life forms.


This post is gratefully dedicated to the Lem-Tafoya Family.

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by linking to me, subscribing to my RSS feed, or submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.


Calling All Coffee Addicts: 100% Kona Coffee

I've talked about coffee a few times on this blog, sharing our favorite coffee store and our favorite way to make coffee. But until now I've never shared with readers our absolute favorite type of coffee.

This post is for those of you who truly love coffee, particularly if you prefer it strong, dark and bitter. Let me introduce you to Hawaiian Kona coffee.

We discovered Kona coffee a number of years ago on a visit to Hawaii, but to be honest it took us a little while to acquire a taste for this earthy and particularly strong brew.

And we'll probably never acquire a taste for the cost of this coffee, which is a rather unseemly $25.95 per pound. You can't get any further from laughably cheap than that, so obviously we don't drink this stuff every day.

Instead, we drink it on special occasions. Perhaps we'll treat ourselves to a pot of Kona after hard week, or I'll surprise Laura with a cup of it on a Tuesday morning (it's her longest and most grueling day of the workweek) as an extra incentive for her to leap forth and bring home the bacon. Any time we need a so-called happiness booster, a caffeinated kick from a strong pot of Kona coffee always seems to do the trick.

Let me also share the brand we typically buy: Hawaii Mountain Gold Coffee, from the Ferrari Coffee Company. Our favorite is the 100% Kona Dark Roast (a note to readers: this is simply a recommendation and not an affiliate link--we've been very happy with the quality and service of this company after years of ordering and drinking their coffee).

Finally, there's also a more affordable Kona coffee option available: Kona blend, which is a striking and rich tasting blend of Kona and regular coffee. And at a more reasonable $14-15 a pound, it's a lot easier on the wallet.

What is your absolute favorite brand of coffee? And have you ever tried Kona coffee? What did you think of it?

Kona Coffee Resources:
Ferrari Coffee 1-800-288-1542 (We buy the 100% Kona Dark Roast, at $25.95 in the bean or ground.)
Royal Kona Coffee

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