Korean Archives - Honolulu Magazine https://www.honolulumagazine.com/category/korean/ HONOLULU Magazine writes stories that matter—and stories that celebrate the unique culture, heritage and lifestyle of Hawai‘i. Thu, 27 Mar 2025 05:23:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wpcdn.us-midwest-1.vip.tn-cloud.net/www.honolulumagazine.com/content/uploads/2020/08/favicon.ico Korean Archives - Honolulu Magazine https://www.honolulumagazine.com/category/korean/ 32 32 8 Places to Get Really Good Jook https://www.honolulumagazine.com/places-get-jook/ Mon, 24 Mar 2025 18:30:21 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=795127

 

Your don’t need to be under the weather—or chilled by the weather—to savor a good bowl of jook, especially with the countless options in Honolulu. From simmering Chinese congee with pork and century-old egg to a Vietnamese version brimming with beef, herbs and a fried egg, rice porridge sheds its bland reputation with bold options. Here are eight of our faves.

 


 

Aloha Manapua

This is our hidden gem of jook. Tucked in Mānoa Marketplace, Island Manapua may be more well known for its dim sum, roast pork and of course, manapua. But they also make a delicious turkey jook ($9.95), which tastes like what your mom makes the day after Thanksgiving, with chunks of roasted turkey.

 

2752 Woodlawn Drive, (808) 988-5441, alohamanapua.com, @alohamanapua

 


 

Golden Duck

Frolic contributor Melissa Chang describes this congee—the pork and preserved egg ($13,99) is her favorite—as “simple, and relatively cheap. And they have the 100-year-old egg (pidan), which I always want in my jook. Whenever I get sick, and if I’m mobile, I go there.”

 

1221 S. King St., (808) 597-8088, goldenduckchinese.com, @goldenduckchinese

 


 

Pork egg jook

Photo: Diane Seo

 

Golden Eagle

HONOLULU’s Andrea Lee says the jook here—she gets the pork and century egg too ($14.99)—is savory and smooth, not too thick or watery and with generous portions of meat and egg.

 

2334 S. King St., (808) 955-5080, goldeneaglehawaii.com, @goldeneaglehonolulu

 


 

Ireh

This is our go-to for Korean-style jook ($16.95–$20.95) with lots varieties, including abalone, beef, seafood, chicken, vegetables and more. Ireh has mastered the clean congee category, with mild seasonings that are comforting to the belly. Plus, it comes with kimchee and pickled onions to add both spice and tang.

 

629 Ke‘eaumoku St., (808) 943-6000, @irehkoreanrestaurant

 


 

Kapiolani Seafood Restaurant jook

Photo: Andrea Lee

 

Kapi‘olani Seafood Restaurant

Mr. Lee—HONOLULU’s Andrea Lee’s father and our resident Chinese food expert—singles out the jook here as “exceptional.” One spoonful of the sliced pork with preserved egg rice porridge ($14.50), and we understand the reason for the rave. It’s the perfect consistency, not too thick or soupy, and the pork and century egg deliver just the right amount of flavor, with no need for extra salt or pepper or soy sauce.

 

1538 Kapi‘olani Blvd. #107, (808) 946-8688, @kapiolaniseafoodrestaurant

 


SEE ALSO: Good-Time Dim Sum at Kapi‘olani Seafood Restaurant


 

Koko Head Café

The breakfast congee here ($19) takes your classic rice porridge and kicks it up much more than a notch with Portuguese sausage, ham, a poached egg, cheddar, scallions and (hello!) cinnamon bacon fat croutons. While that may seem like a meaty mess, the unexpected combination of savory ingredients melds into a breakfast entree worthy of being your repeat order.

 

1120 12th Ave., (808) 732-8920, kokoheadcafe.com, @kokoheadcafe

 


 

Jook Lams Kitchen Credit Thomas Obungen

Photo: Thomas Obungen

 

Lam’s Kitchen

We love Lam’s for its beef noodle soup, but it also turns out eight varieties of congee ($8.25–$11.50) that are gingery and thick, made with a hearty beef broth. These include otherwise hard-to-find options like pork liver jook. Always add a youtiao (Chinese donut stick) and chile oil.

 

1152 Maunakea St., (808) 536-6222, lamskitchenhawaii.com

 


SEE ALSO: Restaurants We Love: Resonant Stories From the Best Restaurants in Honolulu


 

Photo: Thomas Obungen

 

The Pig & the Lady

At the KCC farmers market on Saturday mornings, The Pig & the Lady offers chao, a Vietnamese jook with bits of beef, a mountain of herbs and a fried egg. “It lasts multiple meals or can be shared. They always have broths that are dialed in, and the chao is no exception,” says Frolic’s Thomas Obungen.

 

KCC Farmers Market, 4303 Diamond Head Road, thepigandthelady.com, @pigandthelady

 

 

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Go to Kimbap Plus for Elevated, Lovingly Crafted Rolls https://www.honolulumagazine.com/kimbap-plus/ Wed, 19 Mar 2025 18:30:57 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=794080

 

Kimbap Plus Outside

Photo: Eric Baranda

 

When you step inside Kimbap Plus, you’re greeted by two things—freshly made kimbap and the vibrant energy of Sunny Sunhee Chang, owner and sole worker at the newly opened Korean eatery. The shop is cozy and intimate, comfortable for one customer at a time, which adds to its charm. And as far as Sunny, she lives up to her name.

 

Her journey to opening Kimbap Plus is heartfelt like the food she serves. She worked as a financial advisor for years and fed the homeless in her spare time, saying she would have needed a permit to continue feeding the homeless at the scale she envisioned. Her passion for preparing food for others led her to open Kimbap Plus.

 

Located at the corner of Young and Ke‘eaumoku streets, Kimbap Plus’ modest size makes it easy to miss, and parking can be a challenge. The front stalls, shared by the building’s other tenants, were full when we arrived. Fortunately, my wife waited in the car while I dashed inside to place our order.

 

We had heard buzz about Kimbap Plus, how its kimbap rolls, with 10 pieces, are stuffed to the brim, which is true. We were also impressed with the quality rice, the bright colors of the ingredients and the overall presentation. Along with kimbap, the shop serves smoothies and acai bowls, but we stayed true to our mission to just have kimbap.

 


SEE ALSO: Where Time Stands Still: Kim Chee II


 

Here’s what we tried:

 

Tuna mayo kimbap

Photo: Eric Baranda

 

Tuna mayo kimbap, $8

Light, flavorful and packed with filling. The combination of textures were well synched, from the soft rice to the tender tuna. We tasted a subtle sweetness, a touch of salt, however the cheese slightly muted the flavor of the tuna. My wife suggested that more mayo and less cheese would have allowed the tuna to have more prominence.

 

smoky ham kimbap

Photo: Eric Baranda

 

Smoky ham kimbap, $8

The ham provided a gentle, smoky accent, adding depth without being overwhelming. We compared it to a milder, more refined version of Spam. The balance of savory meat and fresh vegetables made each bite feel hearty yet light. It was comforting and satisfying.

 

Tempura shrimp kimbap

Photo: Eric Baranda

 

Shrimp kimbap, $8

The tempura shrimp offered a soft, delicate flavor, while the fresh vegetables brought a satisfying crunch. Light, yet satisfying, we found the contrast between the crispy tempura and fresh vegetables fun and refreshing.

 

Spam musubi

Photo: Eric Baranda

 

Spam musubi, $2.99

We hadn’t planned to order musubi, but our son couldn’t resist. This wasn’t a typical Spam musubi. It was larger and felt lovingly crafted. The rice had a sesame oil flavor, like bibimbap. I enjoyed it so much; I could see myself just getting the rice. An interesting take on a local favorite.

 

At Kimbap Plus, you get premium offerings for a premium price. While there are cheaper offerings at Korean markets and other eateries, the options at Kimbap Plus are more refined. It’s the difference between instant noodles and a ramen shop. Both are satisfying, but the latter offers more depth and quality. So yes, we would return, and it’s worth trying.

 

Pro tip: Call ahead. The shop is small, and if there are already a few customers, you have to wait outside.

 

Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., closed on Sunday, 1020 Ke‘eaumoku St. #100, (808) 392-2363

 

 

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Where Time Stands Still: Kim Chee II https://www.honolulumagazine.com/kim-chee-ii/ Thu, 06 Mar 2025 18:00:43 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=791526

 

Kimchee2

Photo: Diane Seo

 

Step inside Kim Chee II, and it’s 1977 again. Walk down the aisle, and you’ll see the same diner-style vinyl booths, scenic oil paintings and Korean dolls in a glass case. The menu hasn’t changed either. This is where you come for heaping plates of meat jun, big-bone kalbi, fried mandoo and BBQ chicken, served with kim chee, radish, namul, mac salad, rice and a bowl of seaweed soup.

 

Kimcheesign

Photo: Diane Seo

 

Choon He Chun (also known as Rose) and her husband, Henry, opened Kim Chee II on Wai‘alae Avenue 48 years ago. Her son, Jimmy, started working there as a kid and was a legendary fixture behind the cash register for decades until he passed away in 2021.

 

Now, his children, Nick and Faith, are at the helm, carrying on the family legacy. Faith says there was no doubt she and her brother would step up. They’ve got tons of loyal customers, people they’ve served at the restaurant since they were kids, pleading with them to keep things going. Some live in Kaimukī, but a lot drive from across the island for Korean food, done the way those of us who were around a long time ago remember it.

 

While Kim Chee 2 may not have the most authentic Korean food, I love how the Chun family stands firm, not trying to chase trends. It’s an old-school place that knows what it does well and isn’t going to change. They don’t need to.

 

Kim Chee II takes me back to simpler times. I miss the old days of Hawai‘i, the ‘80s and even the ‘70s. I know that sounds like what an old person would say, but trust me, we had it good. So just like lots of other locals, I’m rooting for Kim Chee II to keep going. Resist the fads. Stay with the same recipes. Make time stand still.

 

3569 Wai‘alae Ave., (808) 737-7733, @kimchee2kaimuki

 


Read more from this series:

Where Time Stands Still: Bravo Italian Restaurant
Where Time Stands Still: Maguro-Ya


 

 

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Say It Ain’t So-rabol: Mahalo to a Longtime Eatery That’s Closing After March 7 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/sorabol-closing/ Mon, 24 Feb 2025 18:30:39 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=790283

 

Editor’s Note: After 32 years, Ke‘eaumoku Street’s most famous Korean eatery announced that its last day will be March 7. Sorabol thrived through decades of 24/7 service, famed for signature dishes like kalbi chim, steamed butterfish and soondae blood sausages and frequented by late-night clubbers, families, local clubs and seemingly everyone else. With a new condo development coming to Ke‘eaumoku, the restaurant moved from its prominent corner into the Pagoda Hotel two years ago, just down the block. Now, owner Lisa Lee is retiring. Here’s a tribute from a longtime customer.

 

bowl of steamed butterfish at sorabol

Steamed butterfish. Photo: Olivier Koning

 

Sorabol was always in my late-night rotation. In its 24-hour heyday, the Korean restaurant was a spot that everyone I knew, drunk or sober, found solace in at least once. For me, it was much more than that. Along with late-night diners and fast-food drive-thrus, Sorabol was an essential part of my life after weekend car cruises, clubbing or long nights when I finished work at 2 a.m. Life moves on, the pandemic came, and the new Sorabol inside the Pagoda Hotel now closes at 10 p.m. The place holds all kinds of memories—most good, some questionable—but there has never been a question about the food.

 

Although atypical, I have always found comfort in the kongbiji jjigae (콩비지 찌개), or ground soybean stew. The overly textured stew can be intimidating, but it is the most simple, non-spicy and underrated heartiness. It never needs rice and pairs well with every banchan.

 


SEE ALSO: Koreamoku Was Home to Life’s Dreams For These 3 Small Businesses


 

Don’t get me wrong, soondubu jjigae (순두부찌개), soft tofu stew, or kim chee jjigae (김치찌개) are always lifesavers. Spicy and still boiling at the table, the steam was like smoke signals that a cure for my hangover was on its way. Kalbi jjim (갈비찜), the braised short ribs, are always a fan favorite with flavorful, tender marinated meat waiting to be demolished—with rice, of course!

 

dukkuk soup at Sorabol

Tteokguk. Photo: Diane Seo

 

As years went by, we started going for early morning breakfasts, especially on New Year’s morning. The parking lot would fill by 7:30, and by 8 a.m., the restaurant was jam-packed with a line forming out the door. Even this year, Sorabol was one of the few Korean restaurants in Honolulu offering New Year’s tteokguk (떡국), Korean rice cake soup, which traditionally should be your first meal of the year. It’s always complimentary with a purchase of at least one dish.

 

I always opt for ahn chang (안창), or outside skirt beef, or a kim chee pancake. The soup has slivers of beef in a milky white beef broth with rice cakes, scrambled egg and seaweed. The servings are pretty generous, and it’s always great to run into friends sharing a meal with their families for luck in the new year.

 


SEE ALSO: Here’s Where to Get Free Korean Rice Cake Soup on Jan. 1


 

Side note to self: Is my bad luck lately because I didn’t go this year?

 

Sorabol, thank you for always being there to uplift me. Thank you for providing timeless food and memories I will never forget.

 

Open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., 1525 Rycroft St., (808) 947-3113, sorabolkoreanrestaurant.com, @sorabolhawaii

 

 

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$45 Pau Hana for 2: Beef 3 Ways at Han no Daidokoro https://www.honolulumagazine.com/45-pau-hana-for-2-han-no-daidokoro/ Wed, 19 Feb 2025 18:30:20 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=775054

 

With prices on the rise, we’re on the hunt for the best happy hour deals where two people can fill up without breaking the bank. Frolic’s $45 Pau Hana series (yes, we’ve upped it from our earlier $40 price point) scopes out crave-worthy spots that deliver value.

 

Food At Han No Daidokoro

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

Han no Daidokoro, famous for its premium wagyu from Japan, opened its second location in Waikīkī in December. Unlike its Ward counterpart, this spot offers happy hour every day from 3:30 to 6 p.m., with the last seating at 5 p.m.

 

I’ve passed by the Ward location countless times, always telling myself that one day, I’ll go. When I heard about happy hour at the new spot, I finally had my excuse—and let me tell you, it was so worth it. The happy hour menu offers six drinks, 16 dishes and 11 yakiniku-style premium beef samplers. We tried five things and not a single one disappointed.

 

Here’s what my mom and I ate for $45.

 


SEE ALSO: $40 Pau Hana for 2: Fresh, Filling Flavor Bombs at Merriman’s Honolulu


 

HANBurger Sliders, $14

 

pau hana HANBurger Sliders

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

Two soft buns sandwich a juicy beef patty with tomato, lettuce, cheese, wasabi aioli and sauce. Each bite is packed with flavor. The wasabi aioli comes through at the end without overpowering the burger, and the sauce adds a touch of sweetness and ties it all together.

 

But what really sets these sliders apart? They’re made from sirloin and rib cuts. The result? A ridiculously tender slider that melts in your mouth.

 

Assorted Kimchi, $6

 

Kimchi At Han No Daidokoro

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

Comes with four types: cucumber, radish, mountain potato and traditional Napa cabbage. I had never tried mountain potato kim chee before—it’s surprisingly crunchy and a little slimy. It reminds me of a lighter version of radish kim chee. The cucumber kim chee has the seeds removed for a crunchier bite. The assortment is refreshing, the perfect side dish in between meatier bites.

 

Washu Beef Bowl, $11

 

pau hana Washu Beef Bowl At Han No Daidokoro

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

A bed of rice topped with thin slices of beef, caramelized onions and a mildly sweet sauce, all finished with a sprinkling of fresh green onions. What sets this apart is the quality of the beef. You know how some beef bowls can be too fatty, or you hit that one tough piece? Not here. Every bite is tender, juicy and balanced with just the right amount of fat. Compared to every other beef bowl I’ve had, this one is the best, hands down.

 

And if you’re wondering what makes washu beef so special, I did, too. Turns out it’s a crossbreed with half of its DNA from Japanese wagyu cows and the other half from American Angus cows. Who knew!

 

Bibimbap, $9

 

pau hana Bibimbap At Han No Daidokoro

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

A colorful mix of rice, bean sprouts, carrots, radish, kim chee, bok choy and minced beef, topped with a sunny-side up egg and nori. A small container of gochujang comes on the side, so you can spice it up to your liking—I add a lot because I like mine extra spicy. The textures are perfect, with the veggies adding just the right amount of crunch.

 

But here’s the crazy part: The minced beef is actually ground beef tongue. I’ve always been too scared to try beef tongue, but I swear if they hadn’t told me, I never would have known. Here, it’s boiled for two hours to remove the smell, chewiness and any gaminess.

 

Crème Brûlée, $5

 

Creme Brulee At Han No Daidokoro

Photo: Katelyn Pabila

 

For a sweet treat to finish off our pau hana, we have to go for the creme brulée. Creamy custard topped with a torched, golden-brown layer. There’s something so satisfying about breaking into that crispness with your spoon. It is slightly thicker and creamier than most creme brulée I’ve had, but still extra indulgent.

 

My mom (average eater) and I (a lighter eater) are completely satisfied. If you want to switch things up for a more filling meal while staying within the $45 budget, you can swap out the kim chee side and crème brûlée for a larger dish like the Beef Bowl, Stone Bowl Garlic Rice or Beef Summer Rolls (each $11).

 

I’m already planning my next visit—I’m eyeing the Washu Beef Jerky, Beef Summer Rolls and whatever the soup of the day may be.

 

Han no Daidokoro validates parking at the Hyatt Centric Waikīkī Beach, which is about three blocks away. Your validation will get you four hours of free parking.

 

Happy hour daily from 3:30 to 6 p.m., restaurant open 3 to 10 p.m., 2380 Kūhiō Ave. #104, (808) 200-2729, hannodaidokoro.com, @hannodaidokoro.waikiki

 

 

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Best Restaurants in Honolulu https://www.honolulumagazine.com/gtx_link/best-restaurants-honolulu/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 20:00:53 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?post_type=gtx_link&p=598623 2022 Best Restaurants in Honolulu https://www.honolulumagazine.com/2022-best-restaurants-in-honolulu/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 20:00:35 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?page_id=749214

Best Restaurants in Honolulu

* * *

Here are former HONOLULU Dining Editor Martha Cheng’s picks for the top eateries on O‘ahu.

 

I don’t take these sorts of lists lightly—especially when it’s the first time writing one for and about the city that I call home. Often, best restaurant lists highlight creative and unique places, ones that tell a story, but not ones that nourish us daily and are a part of our own stories. So this is my answer to that: my favorite restaurants that include places I’m excited about, but also places that I eat at regularly (in some cases, for more than a decade), and that slim intersection of the Venn diagram where they overlap. Here they are, in no particular order:


Fête | Tane Vegan Izakaya | Mud Hen Water | Nami Kaze | The Pig & The Lady | Bar Maze | MW Restaurant | Over Easy | Ethel’s Grill | Sushi Sho | Izakaya Naru | Bozu Japanese Restaurant | Pho to Chau | I-naba | Helena’s Hawaiian Food | Olay’s Thai-Lao Cuisine | Koko Head Café | Olive Tree Café | Sushi Izakaya Gaku | Tonkatsu Tamafuji | Shige’s Saimin Stand | SXY Szechuan | Yakiniku Korea House | Sushi ii | Pizza Mamo | Asian Mix


 

Editor’s Note: This list is from 2022; here is our current Best Restaurants list.

Dingbat
Eclectic

Fête

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Fete Crispy Shrimp Credit Sean Marrs
Robynne Maii
Photos: Sean Marrs
Fete Interior1 Credit Sean Marrs

Few chefs are as devoted to local ingredients as James Beard Award-winner Robynne Maii and Emily Iguchi, but you’d hardly know it. And that’s Fête: understated while delivering the rare Honolulu experience of great food and drinks in a casually stylish setting. The menu is slim, consisting of favorites like a spaghetti carbonara with a local touch of Portuguese sausage and veal schnitzel sauced with liliko‘i. But listen carefully to the long list of daily specials, which have included whole fried shrimp on a tomato compote and grilled lemon, and ‘ōpakapaka in a nishime broth and yaki onigiri. Fête’s strength in simplicity and relentless attention to detail shows in its rocky road ice cream, house-made down to the chewy marshmallows. I always end a meal here with at least one scoop.

 

$$$ | 2 N. Hotel St., Chinatown, (808) 369-1390, fetehawaii.com, @fetehawaii

Dingbat
Japanese Vegan

Tane Vegan Izakaya

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Hn2206 Ay Tane Vegan Izakaya 1228
Photos: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2206 Ay Tane Vegan Izakaya 1273

Tane writes poetry in vegetables, from the tomato nigiri, ruby red and translucent, to the Manila dune, with delicate lotus root chips perched atop a pumpkin tempura and spiced gobo roll. You’ll find preparations pickled, fried, grilled, simmered and raw, just as in a traditional izakaya, but with vegetables as the highlight. One notable exception: the ramen, which in addition to garnishes of bamboo shoots and a meaty tempura shiitake features a faux char siu that’s wondrously smoky and tender. The shio broth, practically naked without miso, garlic or chile to hide behind, still manages to coax a flavorful richness from “mushrooms, seaweed and flowers,” which is all chef/owner Kin Wai Lui will say about the recipe. The McKinley High dropout had opened a similar plant-based izakaya in San Francisco, but didn’t know if Tane in Honolulu would catch on. It’s clear such worries were unfounded—reservations are a must.

 

$$ | 2065 S. Beretania St., Mōʻiliʻili, tanevegan.com, @tanevegan

Dingbat
Dingbat
Dingbat
Eclectic

 Mud Hen Water

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Mudhen Water Akule
Photo: Steve Czerniak

In an increasingly globalized world, it’s harder to find unique experiences, which is why Mud Hen Water is such a delight. Where else can you get buttered ‘ulu, tossed with fermented black bean, or preserved akule alongside limu butter and soda crackers, or porchetta stuffed with lū‘au? Chefs Ed Kenney and Dave Caldiero blend native Hawaiian, local culture and global influences in a way that feels surprisingly natural, like a culinary form of Pidgin, resulting in dishes like biscuits and mapo tofu gravy for brunch and a fully loaded baked banana, using one of our starchier varieties of banana and burying it under curry butter, bacon, chives and chopped egg. Cocktails, too, draw on locally grown ingredients, like Vishnu’s Vice, vibrantly orange with fresh juiced ‘ōlena and dosed with gin, honey, lime and pepper. And with its outdoor patio, brunch or dinner at Mud Hen Water is one of Honolulu’s great pleasures.

 

$$$ |  3452 Wai‘alae Ave., Kaimukī, (808) 737-6000, mudhenwater.com, @mudhenwater

Star White
Eclectic White

Nami Kaze

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Nami Kaze L1410129
Photo: Laura La Monaca
Nami Kaze L1410165

* * *

After spending more than a decade opening restaurants for others as well as herding hundreds of chefs for the Hawai‘i Food & Wine Festival and teaching culinary students, Jason Peel has a place of his own. Which is probably why the menu feels so freewheeling—all those influences can barely be contained in the brunch and dinner menus. The honey walnut shrimp and waffle is an inspired mashup, and other brunch staples like eggs Benedict and omelets are turned on their heads: The Benedicts forgo listless English muffins for shrimp toast, and the omelets are chawanmushi topped with mentaiko or mushroom and Mornay sauce. Peel, known for his sushi rolls when he worked for Roy Yamaguchi, brings them here, alongside crudo, nigiri and chirashi. Overwhelmed yet? For dinner, the small plates include ‘ulu tots in barbecue sauce and Kona baby abalone done oysters Rockefeller style. If there’s an emphasis, it’s on seafood and vegetables. This is one of the most original and fun menus in Honolulu right now.

 

$$ | 1135 N. Nimitz Highway, Iwilei, (808) 888-6264, @namikazehawaii

Dingbat
Eclectic

The Pig & The Lady

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Pig And The Last Short Rib
Pig And The Lady Interior 3 Copy
Photos: Lianne Rozzelle
Chicken Liver Pate

While The Pig & The Lady began as a modern Vietnamese restaurant, making a name for itself with its pho French dip and Mama Le’s regional noodle soups, chef Andrew Le’s creativity could never be confined. So there are marinated beets with pickled blueberries, further sharpened with a chile crisp vinaigrette, and then tamed just slightly with a yuzu tofu cream and shaved caramelized white chocolate. No boring avocado toast here—instead, it’s fried bread topped with avocado, aged garlic in shoyu and lightly vinegared shime saba. Flavors here are bold and sharp—in that sense, Le could never escape those Vietnamese underpinnings. The clam and rau ram sausage linguine is spiked with the funk of shrimp paste and lemon. And even the ever-changing soft serve sundae recently featured a coconut sticky rice custard swirled with mango sorbet and drizzled with fish sauce caramel.

 

$$$ |  83 N. King St., Chinatown, (808) 585-8255, thepigandthelady.com, @pigandthelady

Dingbat
Eclectic

Bar Maze

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Barmaze L9a1144 Copy 2
Photo: Olivier Koning

With Bar Leather Apron, Justin and Tom Park proved they could imbue a tiny, unassuming space with sophistication while serving Hawai‘i’s best cocktails. With Bar Maze, equally compact, they raised the bar even higher by enlisting chef Ki Chung, formerly the chef de cuisine of Michelin-starred Aubergine in Carmel, California, to collaborate with Justin Park on a cocktail-paired menu. The ever-evolving omakase has evoked the ocean, with coins of raw, thinly sliced Hokkaido scallops, made tart with calamansi and green apple and paired with a light cocktail of shochu, mango, elderflower and a citrusy froth reminiscent of sea foam. At Bar Maze, every detail is obsessed over, down to the salt that Chung uses in his all-local banchan that accompany the meat course—the flaky grains made by evaporating seawater collected via a surfboard off the east side of O‘ahu.

 

$$$$ | The Collection, 600 Ala Moana Blvd., Kaka‘ako, barmaze.com, @bar.maze

Dingbat
Eclectic

MW Restaurant

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Mochiko Fish Photo Courtesy Of Mw
Photo: Courtesy of MW Restaurant

On a recent evening at MW, a woman sat solo at the bar with a cocktail and truffle fries. Not the usual kind of truffle fries doused in synthetic truffle oil or even truffle salt—no, these were fries blanketed with full slices of black truffles. This is MW: the restaurant that elevates our humblest comfort foods, whether it’s fried rice fortified with lobster, shrimp and scallops, or mochi grated for a crisp crust on tofu or kampachi. After all, chef Wade Ueoka originally came from Zippy’s. That thread carries through to dessert, where Michelle Karr-Ueoka’s taste for textures results in a seasonal fruit-infused shave ice layered with sorbet, panna cotta and tapioca. Yes, the new location is above a luxury car dealership, but the space is actually more elegant and intimate than its previous location.

 

$$$ | 888 Kapi‘olani Blvd., Suite 201, Kaka‘ako, (808) 955-6505, mwrestaurant.com, @mwrestaurant

Dingbat
Brunch

Over Easy

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Hn1807 Ay Eggs Over Easy 1285
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Remember when we used to drive to Kailua just for breakfast? When it seemed all the best pancakes were over the Pali? Scores of brunch places have opened in town in the past decade (some outposts of Kailua originals), and yet, one of O‘ahu’s best is still in Kailua. Nik and Jennifer Lobendahn create seemingly simple dishes with just a touch of something extra, like a potato puree poured over eggs and bread stuffed with tomato jam, or bacon cabbage broth flooding eggs, Portuguese sausage and rice, like an American style chazuke. You’ll find glitzier pancakes elsewhere, but Over Easy’s are pure, crispy-edged perfection.

 

$ | 418 Ku‘ulei Road, #103, Kailua, (808) 260-1732, easyquehi.com/over-easy, @overeasyhi

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Local Japanese

Ethel’s Grill

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Photo: Laura La Monaca

In a city crowded with excellent holes-in-the-wall, tiny Ethel’s Grill shines with deft touches on local comfort food. Grated daikon and ponzu balance a hamburger steak; the famous ‘ahi tataki is finessed with shoyu-marinated paper-thin slices of garlic. The short menu expands to almost twice the size with the daily specials, which have recently included fried chicken sprinkled with ume powder and paired with shiso sauce. I miss dining in the small space, a shrine to sumo efficiently run with just Minaka Urquidi in the front and her husband, Robert, in the kitchen, but no word on when dine-in service will reopen, if ever. But takeout is a good excuse for a picnic at Moanalua Gardens.

 

Editor’s Note: Ethel’s Grill announced a temporary closure at the end of 2024 and will reopen somewhere new.

 

$ | 232 Kalihi St., (808) 847-6467, Kalihi, @ethelsgrill_kalihi

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Japanese White

Sushi Sho

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Hawaii Stars Sushi Sho Nakazawa
Photo: Courtesy of Sushi Sho

I don’t usually advocate for expensive tasting menus—my tastes generally run simple. But if you are going to spend $300 a person, reserve one of the 10 seats at Sushi Sho’s curving cypress bar. For every morsel, chef Keiji Nakazawa takes into account the season, provenance and texture of the seafood and adjusts his preparations accordingly, from aku cured in banana leaf to Moloka‘i amaebi marinated in Shaoxing wine. But these same Edomae techniques of aging, curing, marinating and cooking can also be experienced in Sushi Sho’s takeout bara chirashi, consisting of 20 different seafoods and vegetables scattered over sushi rice. You might find lean tuna aged in ice or Kona abalone steamed for three hours over clam stock. It’s one of the greatest deals in town at $40 and must be reserved in advance. 

 

$$$$ |  Sushi Sho, The Ritz-Carlton, Waikīkī Beach, 383 Kalaimoku St. Waikīkī, ritzcarlton.com, @sushishowaikiki

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Okinawan
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Izakaya Naru

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Photos: Laura La Monaca
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This is one of Honolulu’s most intimate—and the later it gets, boisterous—izakayas. And it is our only one offering Okinawan food, such as slippery and gooey peanut tofu; stir-fried bittermelon, Spam, tofu and egg; and house-made Okinawan soba noodles in a light pork and fish broth. At Naru, the taco rice, a result of the American military presence in Okinawa, comes in a hot stone bowl, and the taco ingredients (ground beef, cheese, lettuce, salsa) are mixed with a raw egg yolk and rice tableside. It is an exuberant melding of influences, reflective of Hawai‘i’s own cuisine. This is also the place to decide if you like awamori, distilled from rice, and at Naru, available infused with shiso, pineapple, coffee or Okinawan brown sugar.

 

$$ | 2700 S. King St., #D104, Mōʻiliʻili, (808) 951-0510, naru-honolulu.com

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Japanese

Bozu Japanese Restaurant

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Photo: Laura La Monaca

Choosing a favorite izakaya feels impossible in our city where izakaya excellence is the norm. But these lists must be made, and I choose Bozu, where cooked dishes include a tomato-y beef tongue stew topped with cheese, and a cold chawanmushi with uni. Specials have highlighted tiny firefly squid in a piquant miso; grilled pork jowls, the perfect balance of meaty, tender and fatty; and fried flounder with the bones fried crisp, a no-waste fish and chip staple of izakayas. But it’s all that combined with sashimi artistry that sends me to Bozu most often. Order the chef’s sashimi assortment that might include crunchy mirugai or lightly torched and fatty nodoguro. One night, sitting at the sushi counter, I watched chef Katsuhiro Hoshi assemble an envy-inducing parade of sashimi and sushi platters for a table with one of Hawai‘i’s most famous chefs.

 

$$$ |  McCully Shopping Center, #209, 1960 Kapi‘olani Blvd., (808) 955-7779, @bozu_japanese

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Vietnamese

Pho to Chau

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Photos: Laura La Monaca
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In contrast with other Vietnamese restaurants around town, with menus sprawling to a hundred items, the choices here are streamlined: the size of your beef pho, the addition of tripe, tendon, flank or brisket, and whether you prefer the slices of rare beef in your soup or on the side. Pho to Chau feels spare and old-fashioned, with its fluorescent lights and windows fringed with red curtains, but the plates accompanying pho generously heaped with fresh herbs including sawtooth coriander, plus dishes of sliced jalapeños, lemon wedges, and chile sauce evoke a verdant abundance. Add on the spring rolls, which are made with rice paper that bubbles and crisps after a dip in the fryer. Not much appears to have changed at Pho to Chau since it opened more than 30 years ago—a visit here is like stepping into a different time and country, but the clarity of its broth restores you to the here and now.

 

$ |  1007 River St., Chinatown, (808) 533-4549

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Japanese

I-naba

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I Naba L1420348
Photo: Laura La Monaca

The sliding shoji doors at I-naba reveal a spare space, reflecting dishes with no extraneous frills and flourishes, but a simple and perfect execution of soba noodles, whether topped with uni and ikura, or served alongside chirashi. The tempura is also top-notch, crisp and light—don’t overlook the à la carte tempura menu, which includes lotus root with minced shrimp, maitake mushroom, and chicken bundled with shiso and ume. You’ll also find the less common battera sushi, pressed sushi tiled with vinegared mackerel and a translucent sheet of kombu. Really, there are no missteps at I-naba.

 

$$ | 1610 S. King St., McCully, (808) 953-2070, inabahonolulu.com, @inaba_honolulu

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Hawaiian

Helena’s Hawaiian Food

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Helenas L1410886
Photo: Laura La Monaca

We have a number of excellent Hawaiian food spots, and certainly ones that are more accessible in hours and parking, but only Helena’s has that famous pipi kaula, one of Honolulu’s most iconic dishes. You most likely know it by now—short-ribs with chewy parchmentlike bits around the bone, the predecessor to the ubiquitous beef chips you see everywhere now. The pipi kaula is the star, though the supporting cast of beef and watercress soup, imu-cooked kālua pig, and poke with ‘opihi, when available, pull their weight.

 

$$ | 1240 N. School St., Kalihi, (808) 845-8044, helenashawaiianfood.com

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Thai Laotian

Olay’s Thai-Lao Cuisine

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Photo: Olivier Koning

Thank goodness Macy Khounkeo convinced her mother, Olay Somsanith, to cook the food of her native country, Laos, in addition to the safer Thai dishes she was selling at markets around town. The sai oua, or Laotian sausage, contains unabashed chunks of pig skin, spiked with lemongrass and lime leaves, while the nam khao, or crispy rice salad, tangles with fermented sausage. While the Lao dishes are the draw, don’t miss some of the Thai dishes, such as the whole fried fish with chile-lime sauce, best enjoyed in one of Honolulu’s most alluring outdoor dining spaces, fringed with ferns and palms and twinkling lights and anchored by a koi pond. Finish with the lod xong, made by an aunty of the family—pandan squiggles bathed in coconut cream and palm sugar syrup, altogether tasting like salted caramel pudding.

 

$$ | 66 N. Hotel St., Chinatown, (808) 536-5300, olaysthaihawaii.com, @olays_thai_lao_cuisine

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Eclectic

Koko Head Café

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Hn1907 Dc Chefwong 2832
Photo: David Croxford

Even with its move to a much larger spaceand now with outdoor seating—lines form as soon as Koko Head Café opens. It’s easy to see why. By 8 a.m. on a recent weekday, it was sold out of its ‘ulu cinnamon rolls, soft and slathered with cream cheese icing. Chef Lee Anne Wong’s dishes veer maximalist, as with the lūʻau and eggs, topped with tempura onions and pressed in a cast-iron skillet that crisps the garlic rice. Simpler dishes such as the breakfast congee still have fun flourishes of cinnamon-bacon croutons, and the simplest and rarest of all is a fruit plate that showcases our diversity of local fruit rather than defaulting to the usual imported berries. It’s not an easy task, but like the notoriously difficult Koko Crater hike, the payoff of Koko Head Café’s efforts is a unique Hawai‘i point of view.

 

$$ |  1120 12th Ave., #100, Kaimukī, kokoheadcafe.com, @kokoheadcafe

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Mediterranean

Olive Tree Café

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Olive Tree Cafe L1410764
Photo: Laura La Monaca

Olive Tree tells its customers that this isn’t fast food—you’ll have to wait a bit for food made from scratch—and yet, it is arguably the most consistent restaurant in Honolulu that isn’t fast food. Savas Mojarrad came up with the first menu in 1995, and it remains the same under Steven Iida’s watchful care. There’s fish souvlaki made with fish still brought by anglers directly to the restaurant, lamb shawarma, fresh greens with the best Greek salad dressing, and baklava scented with orange blossom water. Even the daily specials rotate on the same schedule: spanakopita on Sundays and Mondays, braised lamb shank on Wednesdays.

 

$ |  4614 Kīlauea Ave., Kāhala, (808) 737-0303, @olivetreecafehi

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Japanese

Sushi Izakaya Gaku

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Photo: Laura La Monaca

The OG izakaya still holds its own against newer entrants. The classics remain, including the house-made tofu topped with dashi jelly and the oft-imitated dashi marinated ikura, as well as the negihamachi tartare, the fish scraped off the bones and served with a stack of toasted nori. The menu is so extensive that I still discover new-to-me items, like tatami iwashi, baby sardines dried in a crisp sheet like a tatami mat. And, of course, always check the specials menu that includes seasonal fresh fish.

 

$$$ | 1329 S. King St., Makiki, (808) 589-1329, @izakayagaku

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Japanese White

Tonkatsu Tamafuji

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Photos: Laura La Monaca
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Though originating in Hokkaido, Japan, Tamafuji sources its bread from La Tour Bakehouse for the crisp, airy panko crust around its tonkatsu. It also relies on locally fresh-milled rice from Rice Factory, showing the same fanaticism to rice that Italians have for pasta. Such details contribute to the multisensory experience at Tamafuji, from the copper pots the tonkatsu are fried in, to the sesame seeds ground with a mortar and pestle to create sauce, to the refillable cabbage salad with more fairy strands than the clunky vegetable we know.

 

$$ | 449 Kapahulu Ave., Suite 203, Kapahulu, (808) 922-1212, tamafuji-us.com

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Local

Shige’s Saimin Stand

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Shiges Saimin Stand
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Sun Noodle’s dominance (and excellence) in the noodle-verse makes it hard to stray from its strands. But Shige’s still doggedly makes its own saimin noodles with a 1950s machine from Japan the size of an office printer, producing noodles that slip and slide in saimin broth more easily than Sun’s. Make sure to order a cheeseburger, too, one of the old-school bests on the island.

 

$ | 70 Kukui St., Wahiawā, (808) 621-3621, @shigessaiminstand

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Chinese

SXY Szechuan

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Sxy Szechuan L1410623
Photo: Laura La Monaca

Go ahead, call it sexy, even though SXY is an acronym for a more poetic sentiment, shǔ xiāng yuán, roughly translating to “Sichuan hometown connection.” Because the food does indeed feel sexy, warmed with cumin and hot with chiles. For the dry pot, what could have been a mundane stir-fry of beef (or other meat of your choice), turns delightful with crisp slices of lotus root, supple and crunchy wood-ear fungus, deep-fried potato chips and whole green Sichuan peppercorns, citrusy and numbing. Whole-roasted fish is dramatically presented in a silver tray, bathed in a red chile sauce that hides wide, slippery glass noodles, tofu and veggies in its depths.

 

$$ |  Ala Moana Center, 1450 Ala Moana Blvd., (808) 942-8885, sxyszechuan.com, @sxyszechuan

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Korean

Yakiniku Korea House

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Yakiniku Korea House L1420310
Photo: Laura La Monaca

There are almost as many opinions on Korean restaurants in Honolulu as there are of kim chee recipes. Some are go-tos for Korean barbecue, others for stews, some for a certain vibe. But Korea House is my favorite, with a solid menu of meats, including my go-to kalbi, for grilling; roiling and overstuffed budachige (inexplicably only available for lunch, though); faultless naengmyeon to cool off with; and always a good assortment of banchan.

 

$$ | 2494 S. Beretania St., Mōʻiliʻili, (808) 944-1122

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Japanese

Sushi ii

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Photo: Laura La Monaca

Lately, a new sushi omakase seems to pop up every month in Honolulu, but returning to Sushi ii, one of the first places to offer nigiri beyond the usual tuna-salmon-hamachi trifecta in a nonintimidating atmosphere, feels like coming home. The low-key manner of owner Garrett Wong and the other sushi chefs belies their precise knife work—witness the cuts in the squid, ruffling the surface like lace. The sushi’s delicacy is offset by a playfulness in dishes from the kitchen, such as soft eggplant spread over roasted bone marrow, the eggplant echoing the bone marrow’s jiggly velvet, and ikura pan, the fish eggs spooned over crème fraîche spread thickly on King’s Hawaiian Bread, zinged with lime zest.

 

$$$ |  655 Ke‘eaumoku St., #109, Ke‘eaumoku, (808) 942-5350

Star Black
Pizza Black

Pizza Mamo

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Photos: Laura La Monaca
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Pizza Mamo was a pandemic pivot, proof that sometimes brilliance is born out of necessity. Putting aside Neapolitan pies that wouldn’t take out well, Matthew Resich of Brick Fire Tavern and Danny Kaaialii and Jonny Vasquez of Encore Saloon and The Daley teamed up to recreate Detroit-style pizzas that I didn’t think I’d love until I tried my first bite. It’s a compact rectangle that you think would hardly feed two people, and yet it does, rich with cheese, crackling crisp at the edges in contrast to the soft and thick dough, and doused with a bright tomato sauce that keeps it all in check.

 

$ | 16 N. Hotel St., Chinatown, eatpizzamamo.com, @pizzamamo

Dingbat
Chinese

Asian Mix

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Photo: Laura La Monaca

Daniel Leung, once the owner of Panda Cuisine, helms Asian Mix, which explains the quality of food from this strip mall takeout Chinese counter. First, there’s a roast meat counter, where you’ll find juicy roast duck and meaty honey barbecue ribs, as well as a made-to-order menu including Hong Kong style noodle soups, curry-tinged Singapore noodles, and lamb stir-fried with leeks. Where you’d expect just steam table fare, there’s instead skill and a touch of nostalgia at Leung’s erstwhile Chinese restaurant.

 

$ | 1234 S. Beretania St., Makiki, (808) 521-1688, hiasianmix.com

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Best Restaurants in Honolulu https://www.honolulumagazine.com/best-restaurants-in-honolulu/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 20:00:08 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?page_id=597556

Best Restaurants in Honolulu

HONOLULU Magazine’s picks for the top eateries on O‘ahu.

by Mari Taketa, Thomas Obungen and Melissa Chang

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Restaurants that define a city’s dining scene—the premise is at once giddy and daunting, and for us, Honolulu, it holds so much. It’s only in the last 15 years or so that our foodscape has become a destination. Richly layered and strongly rooted, it’s an expanding scene of homegrown and faraway influences, where old-school and contemporary expressions of Hawai‘i sit next to newer players from Sichuan, El Salvador and the American South.

 

This list is a collaboration by three food writers who have watched and tasted the scene our whole lives. Whose food sets a bar? Whose staffs and environs welcome? Which places are worth our hard-earned dollars, whether $20 or $200? The 34 restaurants here paint a collective picture of the best of Honolulu dining today. —Mari Taketa, HONOLULU Dining Editor

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Japanese

Aburiya Ibushi

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Hn2006 Dc Ono Aburiya 5675
Photo: David Croxford

“Nice to meat you” is the tagline at Toru Ibushi’s cheery izakaya, where flames ignited by fat dripping from chicken, pork belly and beef grilling over charcoal bathe the meats in an essence of smokiness. Small plates abound—this is an izakaya, after all, and a popular one despite a lack of easy parking. As if for nutritional balance, vegetable dishes get real play, a rarity in Honolulu. Shio koji-marinated grilled chicken thighs, snappy sausages, chilled okra in ume sauce, a bowl of oxtail zosui, or fluffy Yukon gold rounds slathered with mentaiko, cheese and butter: Ibushi’s food is unabashed homey comfort. —MT

 

$$, 740 Kapahulu Ave., Kapahulu, (808) 738-1038, @aburiya_ibushi

Dingbat
Japanese

Bar Maze

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Photos: John Hook, courtesy of Bar Maze
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It’s a perfect pairing: Michelin-credentialed chef Ki Chung and award-winning mixologist Justin Park, whose exquisite omakase menus match each course with a thoughtful, handcrafted cocktail. It doesn’t hurt that the restaurant itself is eye candy, with natural wood surfaces set off by indigo and brass accents and soaring two-story windows. Though the menu changes almost monthly, dishes you might see are the shrimp or smoked salmon toast, a luxurious wagyu donabe rice, and, reflecting Chung’s Korean heritage, oysters with white kim chee granita. —MC

 

$$$$, The Collection, 600 Ala Moana Blvd., Kaka‘ako, barmaze.com, @bar.maze

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Eclectic

 Cino

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Cino is a chophouse dressed to the nines, its blingy art deco motifs and zigzag tile floors dolled up with flowery banquettes. The food holds similar surprises—like a cheesy baked potato with the crispy-cloud texture of toasted marshmallows and an ‘ahi crudo whose intricate tuille frame you’re instructed to smash in with the pristine fish. On no account should meat eaters pass up the 14-day aged pork chop. The kitchen is helmed by Kalihi-born Arnold Corpuz, whose first stint back home after years in San Francisco and Las Vegas made Cino the Hale ‘Aina Awards’ Best New Restaurant of 2024. —MT

 

$$$, 987 Queen St., Kaka‘ako, cinohawaii.com, @cinohawaii

Star White
Eclectic White

Da Seafood Cartel

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Seafood Cartel
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

* * *

Spilling out of a repurposed gas station, Da Seafood Cartel’s buzzing brick-and-mortar expands the popular farmers market menu centered on Sonoran shrimp aguachile to a full-spread fiesta. Fresh options include tiraditos, Baja-style ‘ahi sashimi with spicy ponzu, and raw oysters on the half-shell topped with ceviche and the signature BSOD, aka Black Sauce of Death. The coastal Mexican fare is a bright departure from the meat-focused taquerias, breakfast burritos and enchilada plates that have dominated the local Mexican food scene for years. —TO

 

$$, 98-380 Kamehameha Highway, ‘Aiea, (808) 762-0044, daseafoodcartel.com, @daseafoodcartel

Dingbat
Spanish

El Cielo

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

A second-generation Argentinian trained in kitchens in Japan and Spain, chef-owner Masa Gushiken opened El Cielo with, in his words, food from his Latin heart. It’s mostly Spanish, with dishes like pintxos of guindilla peppers and anchovies, hearty paellas and juicy, twice-grilled Iberico pork filling most of the menu. But since that menu mirrors Gushiken’s life, you’ll also find his mother’s raisin-flecked Argentinian beef empanadas, creamy uni pasta (a Japanese favorite suggested by his wife) and perfectly grilled octopus with a dab of his mother’s chimichurri. As we said, it’s food from the heart. —MC

 

 $$$, 346 Lewers St., Waikīkī, (808) 772-4533, elcielo-hawaii.com@elcielo_hawaii

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Local Japanese

Fukuya Deli

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Fukuya Plate 3 Mari Taketa
Fukuya Deli. Photo: Mari Taketa

Time stands still at Fukuya, where OG dishes from 1939, the year it opened, still line the counter. Shiraae, bread hash, chow fun, beef teriyaki, makizushi rolls with shoyu tuna and fresh watercress—all are as close to plantation-era flavors and textures as fourth-generation owner Arrison Iwahiro can make them. Newer items like nori-wrapped chicken and sushi rolls stuffed with vienna sausages are on the menu now, drawing college students and surfers into the line of retirees and office workers that snakes out the door. A golden rule for every okazuya: Go early for the best selection. —MT

 

$, 2710 S. King St., Mō‘ili‘ili, (808) 946-2073, fukuyadeli.com@fukuyadeli

Dingbat
Chinese

HK Café

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HK Café became an instant hit when it opened in 2023 as one of Chinatown’s few cha chaan teng, or Hong Kong-style diners. A cup of the Hong Kong milk tea, hot or cold, is enough to power you through a lunch of look fun rice rolls, wok-fried noodles and congee. For a different take on carbs, order one of the clay pot rice dishes and savor the crispy bits. For dessert, a breakfast item of French toast oozing with peanut butter or Ovaltine and condensed milk hits the spot; for dinner, get a bowl of piquant laksa brimming with seafood. —TO

 

$$, Multiple locations, @hkcafehawaii

Hn2404 Ay Hk Cafe Tea 3764
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Chinese

Hawai‘i Dim Sum & Seafood

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Hi Dim Sum Seafood 261
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Most people know Hawai‘i Dim Sum & Seafood for the lunchtime dim sum; not enough know about its dinner fare. Chef Rui Zhang cooks some of the best Cantonese food in town, including his signature char siu platter, which needs to be ordered at least 48 hours in advance. While the restaurant’s standard dishes are solid, regulars know to preorder Zhang’s specialty items, like chilled fried sweet-sour shrimp and homemade tofu with abalone sauce. —MC

 

$$, 111 N. King St., Chinatown, (808) 888-2823, @hawaiidimsumseafood

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Hawaiian

Helena’s Hawaiian Food

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Helenas Hawaiian Food Assorted Pc Thomas Obungen
Photo: Thomas Obungen

The place may be bigger and busier now, thanks to its James Beard American Classic award and appearances on national food shows, but the heart of Helena’s Hawaiian Food hasn’t changed in nearly 80 years. Racks of marinated pipi kaula short ribs still hang over the stove, waiting to be pan-fried to order, and lau lau, squid lū‘au, chicken long rice and pretty much everything is as founder Helen Chock cooked it. Don’t make every first-time tourist’s mistake and order just two dishes—eat as locals do and let your spoon roam between bowls of kālua pig, steaming lau lau, lomi salmon, sweet onions dipped in Hawaiian salt, poi (or rice), and back all over again. —MT

 

$$, 1240 N. School St., Kalihi, (808) 845-8044, helenashawaiianfood.com, @helenashawaiianfoood

Star White
Turkish

Istanbul

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Istanbul’s menu started as a page of favorite dishes that owner-chefs Ahu Hettema and her mother, Nili Yildirim, wanted to share from their native Turkey. As they hit their stride, the menu ballooned. The mezze platter of assorted spreads and appetizers, a bestseller, is a must, and the lamb dishes—especially the Bordeaux-braised shank—are outstanding. Be sure to finish with Turkish coffee or tea and baklava or kunefe for dessert. Brunch, cocktails and a set of plant-based dishes that mirror their meaty counterparts round out the menu. —MC

 

$$$, 1108 Auahi St., Kaka‘ako, (808) 772-4440, istanbulhawaii.com@istanbulhawaii

Dingbat
Japanese

Kaimukī Shokudo

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

A relative newcomer to an eclectic dining neighborhood, Shokudo is a solid choice for approachable Japanese food that won’t break the bank. The lunch menu centers on rice bowls as well as hot and cold soba topped with everything from luxurious uni to duck to a simple heap of fresh Sumida Farm watercress and green onions. Close your eyes, and you’ll feel like you’re in a noodle shop in Tokyo. The nighttime menu is izakaya fare, a mix of popular Japanese dishes (hello, wagyu curry), locally inspired fusion plates (like Okinawan sweet potato salad topped with ikura) and everything in between. Don’t forget the honey toast for dessert. —MC

 

$$, 1127 11th Ave., Kaimukī, (808) 367-0966, @kaimukishokudo

Dingbat
Eclectic

Kapa Hale

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Kapa Hale 260
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Keaka Lee’s food is often as beautiful as his commitment to local sourcing—like his Haku Lei Po‘o salad, which resembles the crownlike lei that adorns people’s heads; its ingredients come from a half-dozen farms across the Islands. The Kapa-ccio, another favorite, spells out Kapa Hale’s initials in translucent slices of fresh raw fish and nori. Entrées are hearty, like the rich, satisfying “Where’s the Beef” house-made tagliatelle and the roasted local chicken with cucumber yogurt and pickled grapes. The best parts? Lee doesn’t sacrifice flavor for creativity, and portions are generous, which makes for good value. —MC

 

$$$, 4614 Kīlauea Ave., Suite 102, Kāhala, (808) 888-2060, kapahale.com@4614kapahale

Dingbat
Salvadoran

La Casita

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Lacasita Edit Courtney Mau 2
Photos: Courtney Mau
Lacasita Edit Courtney Mau 3
Photos: Courtney Mau

Your first taste of Yosselyn De Abreu’s La Casita transports you out of its green strip mall in Waipahu to a new world of flavor. Start with her mother’s hand-formed Salvadoran pupusas stuffed with beans, cheese and loroco buds. Between bites, a side of pickled cabbage curtido lifts with acid and crunch. Also noteworthy are pastelitos, fried empanadas of seasoned ground beef whose flavor packs a punch. Carnitas plates with rice and refried beans are more familiar but also deliver on flavor and texture. This little pupuseria next to Skyline’s Pouhala station is worth seeking out. —TO

 

$, Tropicana Square, 94-866 Moloalo St., #34-D11A, Waipahu, (808) 676-6987, @lacasitahawaii

Dingbat
Chinese

Lam’s Kitchen

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Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Lams Kitchen 1536
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Lam’s brings a strong sense of authority to a core menu of thin, house-made rice noodles that shine—or rather, glisten—in stir-fried chow fun dishes and steaming noodle soups with chunks of beef and tendon. At lunch, seemingly all tables are ordering one or the other. In the morning, a bowl of congee soothes you into the day, especially with sides of youtiao doughnut sticks and look fun rolls. Despite being on the outskirts of Chinatown, Lam’s is a place where everyone and their grandma tucks in. —TO

 

$, 1152 Maunakea St., Chinatown, (808) 536-6222, lamskitchenhawaii.com

Dingbat
Vietnamese

Le’s Banh Mi

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Hn2502 Ay Les Banh Mi 6
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Les Banh Mi 46
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Les Banh Mi 106
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

For many of us, banh mi sandwiches were just banh mi sandwiches until Le’s came along in 2022. That’s when Chi Lam and her husband, Min Tuan Le, turned the scene on its head. Le’s Banh Mi is an ode to their homeland, a third-floor shop where the couple bake airy Vietnamese baguettes and fill them end to end with house-crafted ingredients. The crispy pork, replete with chunky bits of fat and crispy skin, is a textural joy; the Saigon Special, with steamed pork and char siu and head cheese, has everything you want in a sandwich. Ask for Le’s hot sauce on the side. —TO

 

$, 808 Center, 808 Sheridan St., #306, Ala Moana, @les_banhmi

Dingbat
Eclectic

MW Restaurant

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Hn2402 Ay Mw Restaurant 151
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2402 Ay Mw Restaurant 121
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

MW is an upscale restaurant with approachable food. Husband-and-wife owners Michelle Karr-Ueoka and Wade Ueoka’s recipes frequently draw on memories of foods they grew up with. Won tons of pork hash and foie gras, pressed cubes of jidori fried chicken in a garlicky soy, and miso-honey glazed butterfish are standouts at dinner, and every dessert, from elevated, seasonal shave ice to the chocolatey layers of the MW candy bar, is appropriate for a sweet ending. If Karr-Ueoka’s ice cream sandwiches make a rare appearance, make a special trip. —MC

 

$$$, 888 Kapiʻolani Blvd., Suite 102, Kaka‘ako, (808) 524-0499, artizenbymw.com, @artizenbymw

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Eclectic

Miro Kaimukī

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Hn2403 Ay Miro Kaimuki 8455
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2403 Ay Miro Kaimuki 8527
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Miro delivers luxurious tasting menus at decent prices, with warm and attentive service. While prices vary with the season and what’s being featured, dinner generally includes fancy “snacks” and six courses for $100 to $125, with wine pairings about $60. If you’re visiting Hawai‘i, go early in your trip—people have been known to book second dinners before flying home. Supplements are worth the extra and less subject to change—the escargots are good for sharing, especially with fluffy, savory milk bread (get two). And Chris Kajioka’s ‘ahi, uni or caviar brioche—iterations of an intermezzo that’s followed him through successive restaurants—can induce bliss. —MC

 

$$$, 3446 Wai‘alae Ave., Kaimukī, (808) 379-0124, mirokaimuki.com@mirokaimuki

Dingbat
Eclectic

Morning Glass Coffee & Café

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Hn2502 Ay Morning Glass 3 Copy
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Morning Glass 139
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2502 Ay Morning Glass 199
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

If UH Mānoa were the brains of the valley, Morning Glass Coffee + Café would be the heart. A tight-knit crew brews perfect cups of coffee and serves up iconic baked goods and breakfast fare, all with a relaxed demeanor despite a constant line. Liliko‘i honey butter biscuits, mac and cheese pancakes, Egg-a-Muffin sandwiches—everything is worth getting out of bed for, especially on weekends when you can take your time on the shaded patio. Dinner with music and natural wines is on the horizon, a fitting progression to extend the good vibes. —TO

 

$, 2955 E. Mānoa Road, Mānoa, (808) 673-0065, @morningglasscoffee

Dingbat
Eclectic

Mud Hen Water

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Mudhen Water Akule
Photo: Steve Czerniak

Come for the mapo rice cakes and the chicken long rice croquettes in Japanese curry. Or the corned beef-kalo hash. Ed Kenney is a master at warping time, fusing classic comfort dishes with updated sensibilities and local meats, seafood and produce. That means a salad of pohole fiddlehead ferns is available some days, others not, so get the fried ‘ulu instead. The bar program highlights cocktails with seasonal local touches; seating includes bistro tables and a long bar indoors, and picnic tables on Kaimukī’s chillest alfresco urban patio. Whatever you get, never leave without dessert of miso-butterscotch rice pudding. —MT

 

$$, 3452 Wai‘alae Ave., Kaimukī, (808) 737-6000, mudhenwater.com, @mudhenwater

Star
Japanese White

Nami Kaze

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Jason Peele
Longtime industry veteran Jason Peel opened Nami Kaze in phases. Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Nami Kaze L1410165
Photo: Laura La Monaca

Nami Kaze is what happens when a longtime right-hand chef to Hawai‘i’s fine-dining luminaries finally opens a place of his own. Jason Peel’s dishes erupt with originality, folding in influences from his childhood on Kaua‘i (‘ulu tots, showered with tomme shavings, nest in a pool of his grandfather’s barbecue sauce) to his penchant for izakaya-style dining. Brunch features everything from honey walnut shrimp waffles to luxe sushi rolls, and dinners of small shared plates can wrap in a lemony lobster chawanmushi, cold-smoked local tomatoes draped on custardy tofu, and ethereally fluffy sweet-corn beignets dipped in curry salt and Kewpie. —MT

 

$$$, 1135 N. Nimitz Highway, Iwilei, namikaze.com@namikazehawaii

Dingbat
Thai Laotian

Olay’s Thai-Lao Cuisine

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Olaysthai L9a0594
Photo: Olivier Koning

For a good part of her life, Olay Somsanith cooked Thai food in other people’s restaurants. At age 63, at daughter Macy Khounkeo’s urging, she finally spotlighted the cooking of her native Laos. The Olay’s Thai-Lao menu is still mostly Thai, because we’ll always have a spot for green curry and stuffed chicken wings, but its locale amid Chinatown’s destination restaurants puts Somsanith’s Lao cooking front and center. Olay’s is where much of Honolulu got its first tastes of lemongrass-flecked pork sausages; crispy rice salads twined with herbs and raw chiles; and khao poon, Laos’ signature vermicelli curry soup. All are best eaten in the fairy-tale courtyard garden. —MT

 

$$, 66 N. Hotel St., Chinatown, (808) 536-5300, olaysthaihawaii.com, @olays_thai_lao_cuisine

Dingbat
Vietnamese

Patê Vietnamese Cuisine

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Pate
Photo: Mari Taketa

Patê has the requisite variations of pho—what Vietnamese eatery doesn’t? Skip these in favor of a house specialty and an inconspicuous standout among the rice dishes. Bun bo hue spicy beef noodle soup accomplishes what many versions outside Vietnam don’t—a meaty broth as rich as it is spicy, with a near-overload of beef shank, beef tendon, pork hock, pork meatballs and pork loaf (unless you specify otherwise, jellified pork blood is in there, too). Patê’s grilled pork plates offer a similar next-level touch, with marinated pork riblets replacing typically thin grilled chops. Out of street view in Samsung Plaza, details make all the difference in this homey nook. —MT

 

$$, Samsung Plaza, 655 Ke‘eaumoku St., (808) 940-5432, patehi.com, @patehiofficial

Dingbat
Vietnamese

Pho Que Huong

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Pho Que Huong Goat Hotpot Credit Martha Cheng
Goat hot pot at Pho Que Huong. Photo: Martha Cheng

Its spot on Chinatown’s thinly trafficked mauka side notwithstanding, Pho Que Huong packs in Vietnamese diners. Tables are loaded with family-style soups, hot pots, crispy noodles and other IYKYK staples. The menu, vast even among Vietnamese restaurants, has well over 100 options including garlicky tangles of sautéed ong choy, spareribs or catfish caramelized in clay pots, and clear, steaming soups of mustard cabbage and shrimp; with rice, these would be a workaday family dinner in Ho Chi Minh City. Goat hot pot, a rarity even in Vietnam, pairs tender chunks with kalo, fresh greens and fried tofu skins; it outshines home country versions. —MT

 

$, 1160 Maunakea St., Chinatown, (808) 528-3663, @phoquehuong.hi

Dingbat
Local Japanese

Pioneer Saloon 

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Pioneer Saloon Salmon Kama
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Plate lunch through a Japanese lens was never really a thing until Pioneer Saloon showed up on Monsarrat Avenue in 2009. A cult classic from the beginning, Pioneer makes a name for itself with rather large plates of garlic ‘ahi, fried mochiko chicken and menchi katsu with shiso wakame rice and pesto macaroni salad. Fans crossed town for these plates, and before Pioneer opened a second spot in Kaka‘ako, anyone who wanted one had to jockey for parking on the slopes of Lē‘ahi. It’s still worth it. —TO

 

Multiple locations, pioneer-saloon.net, @pioneersaloonhawaii

Dingbat
Vietnamese

The Pig & The Lady

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Hn2502 Ay Pig And The Lady 9942
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Andrew Le’s ideas run wild across his menu, which is precisely the draw for Pig fans. This isn’t a Vietnamese restaurant, it’s Viet-inspired, which can mean anything from a braised brisket banh mi smeared with Thai basil chimichurri and dipped in pho broth, to Moloka‘i venison tartare with roasted pear and Laughing Cow cheese, a staple of Vietnam’s banh mi street carts. Le’s potato banh xeo of hot, creamy mash with carrot salsa and cheese in lettuce wraps was one of the best things we ate all year. Pray it stays—creativity comes with a price, and Pig diehards know their favorites may disappear with the next seasonal menu. —MT

 

$$$, 83 N. King St., Chinatown, (808) 585-8255, thepigandthelady.com@pigandthelady

Dingbat
Pizza

Pizza Mamo

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Hn2402 Ay Pizza Mamo 9695
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2402 Ay Pizza Mamo 9573
Jonny Vasquez, co-owner of Pizza Mamo. Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Pizza Mamo brings Honolulu closer to East Coast pie culture with its foldable pan pizzas—both Brooklyn-style and cheese-laden Detroit-style versions. The Detroit-style square is one of the best examples around, even outshining those of venerated Buddy’s Pizza, which created the style generations ago in the Motor City. The trick is keeping toppings like pepperoni, pesto, hot honey and pickled jalapeños simple enough to harmonize with the Wisconsin brick cheese and house-made marinara sauce, on a crust so airy it seems to defy gravity. —TO

 

$$, 16 N. Hotel St., Chinatown, (808) 369-2445, eatpizzamamo.com, @pizzamamo

Dingbat
Eclectic

Shige’s Saimin Stand

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Hb1708 Ay Parting Shot Shiges Saimin Stand 3902
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Him1907 Shiges Saimin 9970
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

A drive through Wahiawā is never complete without a stop at Shige’s. Whether you’re a diehard saimin and barbecue burger combo fan or you waver between the hamburger steak and the fried saimin with a side of teri beef sticks, Shige’s rarely disappoints. It’s the only saimin shop on O‘ahu that makes its own noodles, a signature thick and curly style that holds up in the clear dashi. Despite its small size and long lines, after 35 years, Shige’s is still reliably consistent. —TO

 

$, 70 Kukui St., Wahiawā, (808) 621-3621, @shigessaiminstand

Dingbat
American

Southern Love

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Hn2502 Ay Southern Love 4
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Since day one, with no announcement about opening, Southern Love has been slammed. Partly that’s because Corey Love is a one-man cooking show, partly it’s because of pent-up demand among transplanted Southerners. But mostly it’s because of Love’s food. Silky grits, fried catfish, pork ribs, mac and cheese: Love cooks everything himself, lunch and dinner, with four burners and one oven, in a seamless, unruffled symphony of motion. Get there as early as possible not just to score one of the four parking stalls, but to make sure he doesn’t sell out. —MC

 

$$, 753 Queen St., Kaka‘ako, (808) 762-0223, @southernlovehawaii

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American

Sunset Texas BBQ

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Image 3
Photo: Thomas Obungen
Image 4
Photo: Thomas Obungen

Good Texas barbecue is difficult to come by outside of, well, Texas. So Honolulu is lucky that James Kim, who’s from Austin, decided to settle here and start a side hustle smoking meat. Now, it’s his full-time gig. After starting out with a food truck at Sunset Beach, Kim set up his smoke pit in industrial Kaka‘ako, where he turns USDA Prime brisket into jiggly lumps of black gold. His racks of pork spareribs are also masterpieces—and they take almost no effort to devour. —TO

 

$$, 443 Cooke St., Kaka‘ako, sunsettxbbq.com, @sunsettxbbq

Star White
Japanese

Sushi Gyoshin

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Hn2407 Ay Sushi Gyoshin 0284
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2407 Ay Sushi Gyoshin 0286
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

In spring, there might be nigiri of hirame crowned with ume gelée and a salted cherry blossom; in the fall, fatty katsuo, its surface brushed with flame to wake up the oils. Gyoshin debuted on Honolulu’s crowded omakase scene in early 2024 and left the rest behind. The seven-seat counter across from Ala Moana Center books up months in advance. It’s not just the quality of Hiroshi Tsuji’s seafood—other sushi bars have similar. It’s the combination of restraint, refinement and exuberance with which he crafts his prix fixes, which open with crispy monaka wafers sandwiched around luxuries like snow crab, uni and a shower of gold flakes. —MT

 

$$$$, 436 Pi‘ikoi St., Ala Moana, (808) 853-7079, sushigyoshin.com, @sushi_gyoshin

Dingbat
Eclectic

Threadfin Bistro

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Tucked away with little signage in a corner of Kilohana Square, Threadfin is Jason Kiyota’s fusion take on local, American and Asian food. Thai touches are frequent, since he studied cooking in Bangkok for a time. His three-course menus change frequently; standouts have included escargot-style abalone in cognac butter, washugyu rib-eye au poivre, and Thai crab curry pasta. The cozy eatery recently expanded into the space next door, so while the $68 menus are an amazing deal, Kiyota plans to add à la carte dishes sometime this year. —MC

 

$$$, Kilohana Square, 1014 Kapahulu Ave., Kapahulu, (808) 692-2562, threadfinbistro.com, @threadfinbistro

Dingbat
Japanese

Tonkatsu Sangi

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Sangi 3
Sangi 2
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Fast-casual Tonkatsu Sangi bridges the gap between Japanese restaurants and everyday plate lunches—a nod to Sangi’s previous incarnation as Menchanko-Tei, for years a Japanese comfort food destination on Ke‘eaumoku Street. Go for the tonkatsu—crunchy, thick slices of tender pork loin atop a mound of fresh cabbage shavings—and the generously portioned chicken nanban. Ramen bowls are made with the recipes of long-gone Goma Ichi, Menchanko-Tei’s former neighbor down the street. These menu items are all Sangi serves, a focus that produces restaurant-quality lunches from a takeout counter. —TO

 

$, Pioneer Plaza, 900 Fort St. Mall, Downtown, (808) 840-9700, tonkatsusangi.com, @tonkatsu_sangi

Dingbat
Chinese

Wu Wei Chong Qing Cuisine

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Hn2404 Ay Chong Qing 2369
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino
Hn2404 Ay Chong Qing 2407
Photo: Aaron K. Yoshino

Wu Wei Chong Qing is what every Asian-facing city should have: a hole-in-the-wall whose noodle bowls deliver as much excitement as nostalgia. A rarity among Honolulu’s Cantonese-dominated Chinese restaurants, Wu Wei’s menu highlights the flavors of Lulu Sie’s hometown, until recently part of Sichuan province. On one visit, you might lose yourself in the fiery, tangy depths of Sie’s boiled fish and preserved mustard cabbage noodles; on another, in an aromatic jumble of barbecued, twice-cooked pork belly strips in a familiar black bean sauce. Wu Wei is worth repeat visits to discover more. —MT

 

$, 1738 S. King St., McCully, (808) 741-2297, @wuweicuisine

Dingbat
Chinese

Yi Xin Café

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Yi Xin Bitter Melon On Chow Funn Melissa Chang
Photo: Melissa Chang
Yi Xin Garlic Shrimp Melissa Chang
Photo: Melissa Chang

Yi Xin, which means “one heart” in Mandarin, offers dishes with Singaporean, Malaysian, Thai and Chinese inspirations that you won’t find in other Hawai‘i restaurants. Comfort foods abound, and while some dishes carry some heat, Yi Xin’s signature is the boldness of its flavors. Simpler dishes like garlicky sautéed green beans and pork chops smothered in tomato sauce and melted cheese are reminiscent of Chinese home cooking; fancier dishes like Singapore-style chile crab might be found in restaurants in Asia. Order the salted egg yolk chicken wings, Thai-style pork cheek and—if you’re splurging—the curry crab. —MC

 

$, Market City Shopping Center, 2919 Kapi‘olani Blvd., Kapahulu, (808) 738-0818, @yi_xin_cafe_808

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Coming in Hot (Pot): Luxe Beef at Onkee and Mikiya https://www.honolulumagazine.com/hot-pot-onkee-mikiya/ Tue, 14 Jan 2025 18:30:43 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=749014

Onkee Korean Grill House

Noodles Hot Pot

$32 per person, minimum two orders

On Onkee’s new lunch menu, Noodles Hot Pot catches my eye. A departure from the grilled meats the restaurant is known for, it features prime rib-eye, a vegetable medley and kalguksu, or knife-cut noodles. The meal also comes with the day’s assortment of banchan. It’s hosted by the restaurant, as is the one below at Mikiya, a coincidence of timing that raises our curiosity about how Honolulu’s two newer high-end hot pots compare.

 

It’s a good spread. Banchan starts with bowls of tangy, chilled mul kim chee. Two more kim chee dishes arrive—one freshly made, the won bok leaves firm and sweet; and the other sour, aged kim chee. The anchovy broth for the hot pot is clear and golden and savory and light, perfect for highlighting our ingredients’ full flavors. Raw garlic and pepper are on the side.

 

With a few swishes in the boiling broth, long strips of rib-eye emerge tender and juicy. And the vegetables and mushrooms—cabbage, bok choy, green onions, enoki mushrooms and fresh shiitake—mysteriously take on a buttery flavor after cooking in the butter-free soup. Perhaps this is a result of following the rich rib-eye?

 

We save the kalguksu for last. The knife-cut noodles are thick, chewy and perfect for slurping up the broth.

 

I’d eat more if I had room, but after a filling lunch of rib-eye, veggies and sides, the leftover noodles and veggie-filled broth become a whole other meal. This may not be an AYCE hot pot, but it fills you up and then some.

 

You can walk off some of your rich lunch by parking for free in any Ward lot. The closest are at Whole Foods Market and Consolidated Theatres, both on the next block. If you’re here for dinner, Onkee has valet parking in the same building for $6.

 

1000 Auahi St. Unit 220, onkeehi.com, @onkeehawaii

 


SEE ALSO: Onkee Korean Grill House Is a New High Mark of Modern Korean Barbecue in Honolulu


Mikiya Wagyu Shabu House

This national shabu shabu chain specializes in wagyu cuts, making for a luxurious all-you-can-eat hot pot. Offerings span four tiers that range from $48 with American wagyu to $98 with Japanese A5. We order the Gold Wagyu Set ($78), the second-highest tier.

 

In addition to the set menus are unlimited side dishes that you can order or grab at the self-serve bar, including wagyu curry and rice. It’s too much for even two people to try everything, so we go for the choices with the highest-grade wagyu. All of this needs to be eaten in 90 minutes or less, Mikiya’s time limit for AYCE.

 

The experience is similar to other AYCE hot pot places: You order your broths (up to two at a time) and ingredients, and if you want to try other broths, you can swap out the pot during the meal. We get the two most popular, the sukiyaki and house broths. Tip: Choose sukiyaki broth only if you love sukiyaki because that flavor permeates everything in the pot. The house broth is lighter and better for tasting the natural flavors of ingredients.

 

Wagyu needs only a few seconds in the boiling broth for the buttery strips to melt on your tongue. You don’t even need sauce. While the few pieces on the platter might not look like a lot, each is so full of flavor that I’m more than satisfied. And with the wagyu specialty dishes and seafood, there’s more than enough food. The quality of the ingredients means it’s not hard to eat up your money’s worth, even if you’re a pretty small eater.

 

Mikiya’s weekday lunch specials include an Australian wagyu set for $32 per person—plates of chuck rib-eye, brisket, shoulder and vegetables—and another with wagyu and seafood for $39. Though the set items are limited, appetizers, drinks and desserts are AYCE.

 

Park in the building’s garage for validation. You’ll need to scan the QR code in the parking lot, fill out your info and start the timer before you head to the restaurant. At the end of your visit, ask for the validation code to enter on the payment screen.

 

1221 Kapiolani Blvd. #104, mikiyashabu.com, @mikiyahonolulu

 

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Here’s Where to Get Free Korean Rice Cake Soup on Jan. 1 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/free-korean-rice-cake-soup-jan-1/ Mon, 30 Dec 2024 18:30:25 +0000 https://www.honolulumagazine.com/?p=748356

 

Dukkuk1

Photo: Diane Seo

 

Having duk kuk or rice cake soup is a must for Koreans on New Year’s Day. While Korea celebrates the start of the Lunar New Year, happening Jan. 29 in 2025, Korean Americans enjoy duk kuk on Jan. 1, the beginning of the calendar year. Eating at least a small serving of the soup—a mild beef broth with sliced rice disks, egg and meat—is thought to bring good luck, a fresh start and allow you to get a year older. While aspiring to age may seem counterintuitive, Koreans don’t question the longstanding tradition; they just make a point, wherever they are on New Year’s Day, to have the dish.

 

Personally, duk kuk is one of my go-to orders at Korean restaurants year-round. It’s the Korean equivalent of chicken soup, the ultimate comfort food.

 


SEE ALSO: 100-Plus Christmas and New Year’s Menus at O‘ahu Restaurants


 

We found three local Korean restaurants that provide a small bowl of the soup for free on Jan. 1, serving it to accompany whatever else is ordered. So, even if you’re not Korean, but want to partake in this tradition, here’s where to go to get it gratis.

 

Sorabol
1525 Rycroft St.
(808) 947-3113

 

Choi’s Garden
1303 Rycroft St.
(808) 596-9585

 

Korea Garden (one free bowl of duk kuk per table)
1683 Kalākaua Ave.
(808) 949-9909

 

 

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