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CHE DAU TRANG (coconut rice pudding)
The loco moco is the Hawaiian version of the mainland’s burger and fries. It’s Hawaiian fast food, meant to be fast and cheap, and it sure tasted that way. A loco moco consists of a scoop(s) of white rice, a hamburger patty, a fried egg, all topped with brown gravy, and served with a side scoop(s) of macaroni salad. And considering the large Asian population, there was a bottle of Sriracha hot sauce at this place, and we added liberal amounts to this local dish. HOLY SMOKES! Matt and I split this disgustingly satisfying concoction because having one serving each would have sent us into instant cardiac arrest.
I don’t know why it’s called “Shave” Ice and not “Shaved” Ice, but it beats Baltimore’s own snow cone hands down (Blasphemy, perchance? Perhaps this could be another topic for the Baltimore Food Examiner?). Hawaiian shave ice is soft and fluffy like powered snow, but unlike what we do here in Ballmore, the Hawaiians serve their shave ice on top of ice cream and sweetened red beans! Matsumoto’s Shave Ice on the North Shore of Oahu is world-renowned and we drove the hour from Waikiki specifically to experience it. My cone from bottom to top had the following:
We could have eaten every meal at a shrimp shack and would have been completely satisfied. Despite their low-key (translation: sketchy) appearance, these food buses had some high-quality ingredients and ridiculously tasty food. True to the name, shrimp is the specialty, and comes in “plate lunches” with other grilled meats, rice, and macaroni salad. The mac salad, as seen with the loco moco, is standard Hawaiian fare. I don’t know how this stuff became so popular with the natives, but it was everywhere, and was super-mayonnaisy. Maybe it has something to do with the strong Japanese influence (nearly 17% of the population in Hawaii is Japanese). While in Japan last year we noticed that mayonnaise was featured in a lot of the food, from fried pork sandwiches to sushi rolls.

