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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
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
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