Entries Tagged as 'ahi'

Coast Grille at the Hapuna Beach Prince

March 23rd, 2011 · 1 Comment

We checked into the Hapuna Beach Prince in the early evening and after we were settled we decided to get dinner. We were kind of tired from travel and just wanted to eat at the resort. I looked into our dining options and saw that there were two restaurants open – Ocean Terrace and Coast Grille. Both menus looked good, atmosphere seemed good, both required “resort attire.” I made the executive decision to go to Coast Grille, which was a bit more pricey than Ocean Terrace. I was just in the mood to have a really nice, quiet dinner together since it was the first time we were on our own since the wedding. Heck, the first time in 12 days, probably. And since we were going to be spending upcoming days with friends, it was our only night to have a nice quiet dinner. Plus, we had our fists full of wedding money!

We were not really sure what “resort attire” was. Dallas wore a nice aloha shirt, shorts and leather slippers. I wore a nice shirt and a skirt. When we got there, we seemed a little under dressed, a feeling I never felt before in Hawaii! We didn’t really care, though, and neither did the restaurant. I just think it is funny that Dallas basically wore what he wore to our wedding and he was under dressed. Ha.

The hostess said she’d have to check on a seat for us and I was afraid that it was going to be a long wait, but within 10 minutes we were seated. We were on a terrace, which I think overlooks the ocean, but honestly, it was so dark we couldn’t see anything. I liked that we were at the end of the terrace near a server stand and in an area that was not very trafficked by anyone except our server, so it was nice and quiet.

Our waitress introduced herself. She was a cute older lady that you just wanted to call Aunty! She was very helpful and curteous and I liked that she didn’t stick around and get in our way. We really just wanted to eat a quiet meal in peace. The lighting of the restaurant was really dark out there, but I didn’t mind. I just wanted to sit there and listen to the ocean!

I had a glass of Sauvignon Blanc and Dallas had a Kona Brewing Big Wave. Dallas might have had 2 beers, I only had one glass of wine. I think that the vacation was starting to take it’s toll! We had been drinking every day for about 12 days at that point, so we had to lay off!

First off, we were served bread in a bread basket. I had to remind myself not to fill up on bread becuase there was a really good olive loaf in there that I could have wolfed down. It was so salty and yummy with the slightly sweet butter. But, I was really psyched for good seafood, so I laid off!

For pupus, Dallas and I split the Seasonal Oysters in the half shell. I can’t remember where they were from, but they were not local (Sidenote: Do Hawaiian oysters even exist?). Maybe it was the ocean breeze or 12 days of drinking, but even though these oysters were not local, they were the best I ever had, I swear! We also split the Ahi Poke Tempura Roll, which was like maki with poke in the middle, then the whole roll was battered and fried. Good too. Not as good as the oysters.

Dallas and I each got a salad, the same salad, the Kamuela Spinach Salad. Kamuela is a town about 12 miles up the road, so if this spinach was from there, it could not have been more local. The salad also had red onion, goat cheese made on the Big Island, house-made bacon, and a warm mustard vinaigrette. This salad was soooo good. The tanginess of the cheese, saltiness of the bacon, creaminess of the cheese, crispness of the spinach. So good.

For an entree Dallas had the Pan Roasted Kurobuta Pork Chops. I don’t have much info on how this was prepared because it was a special that night, but Dallas seemed to really like it. The Prince is owned by a Japanese company and they have a lot of Japanese guests. The table next to us got a completely different menu than we did, all in Japanese. Anyway, we’re thinking the Kurobuta was served because it is a Japanese name for a certain quality of pork.

I had the Coast Grille Seafood Trio, which was three Hawaiian fish – Mahi, Ahi, and Ono – cooked however the chef wanted with a side of coconut rice. This was really delicious and exactly what I was in the mood for. The fish pieces were on the small side, but there were three of them, so in the end it was just the right size.


Bad lighting, brand new rings

We had a look at the dessert menu, but nothing stood out. Plus, we were rather full, so we decided to skip it. All-in-all it was a great, quiet, romantic dinner.

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Making Wontons

September 5th, 2007 · 2 Comments

Kathy & Laura
Kathy & Auntie Laura

Caroline
Caroline

Kathy & Laura Making Wontons
Kathy & Auntie Laura

Stuffing Wontons
Making Wontons

Uncooked Wontons
Uncooked Wontons

Danny Frying Wontons
Danny Frying Wontons

Wontons
Finished!

On Sunday all of Dallas’ family who were in town and who live in the suburbs came to our house for a (mostly) Korean dinner. Dallas’ parents, George & Kathy, & Auntie Laura came first. I was trying to finish up making some cookies when they arrived, but once Kathy & Auntie Laura got into the kitchen I pretty much had to surrender. I was fine with that, though. I knew the food they would be making was going to be fantastic and that they needed to do what they needed to do. Kathy was the ringleader and she gave everyone else jobs to do. In the end, Dallas’ whole immediate family, plus some Aunties and his sister’s friends and Danny all helped in making the meal. It was fun to have everyone involved.

Auntie Laura had taken George and Kathy to both a Korean market and Mitsuwa before coming to our house, so they brought all the ingredients they needed. For dinner we had oriental chicken salad, kalbi ribs, ahi sashimi, wontons, spinach namul, Hawaiian mac salad, and probably even more things that I’m not remembering right now.

I was the most excited about Dallas’ mom’s famous wontons. I’ve had a lot of the other foods we ate that day before, but not the wontons. Whenever Dallas visits his parents he always raves about them, but they don’t exactly travel well, so I’ve never had them. I special requested wontons and Dallas’ mom was nice enough to agree to make them at our house even though we had to make special arrangements to get the proper cooking gear here to do it. George and Danny ended up setting up an electric wok out on our porch so that our kitchen wouldn’t get full of oil. And extra thanks to Danny, who sat out there in the hot sun over a big wok of hot oil all day to cook the wontons. They were delicious.

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Happy New Year

January 1st, 2007 · 2 Comments

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Seared Ahi :: Roscoe Village, Chicago

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Getting the Champagne Ready :: Roscoe Village, Chicago

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Christina, Caitlyn & Jill :: Roscoe Village, Chicago

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Max, Danny, Chad & Brian Watching the Ball Drop :: Roscoe Village, Chicago

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My Winnings :: Roscoe Village, Chicago

This year we went to Jen and Chad’s for New Years Eve again. Hard to pass up that party since now it’s only a block from our house and there’s no need to worry about a ride or getting a cab or anything like that. Dallas made more poke and we also seared some ahi. We ended up staying up until 4:30am and I beat all the boys to be the big Texas Hold’em winner. We were playing a cash game, which means that each chip is worth $1.

Today we went out to Jeff & Heather’s house in Schaumburg to visit with Dallas’ family. As always the food was excellent and we all ate our red beans for good luck. One last baby fix for the holiday season.

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Poke

December 23rd, 2006 · 5 Comments

2006_12_ahi_steak.jpg

2006_12_poke.jpg

Dallas and I went to Whole Foods to get dried currants and he, as always, was lured over to the meat and seafood department to drool over the choice cuts. We ended up getting a little over 3/4 pound of ahi and making poke that night.

For those who don’t know, poke is a raw tuna salad served in Hawaii. It’s made with tuna (ahi), shoyu (soy sauce), green onions, sesame oil, and crushed red pepper. And then there are some variations off of that too. When we were in Hawaii, there were many different kinds of poke with different fish and stuff, but that’s the basic recipe.

Also note the new Shun knife. It was one of Dallas’ Christmas gifts from his parents. Now we each have a nice chef’s knife. I have my Mac, he has his Shun.

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Red Dirt Day

July 20th, 2005 · 3 Comments


Waimea Brewing Co.


Flowers at Waimea Brewing Co.


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


Kathy, Dallas, Caroline


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


George


Kathy, Dallas, Rachelle


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


Waimea Canyon – Koke’e Park


GTE Hawaiian Tel is now Verizon


Looking for the house George & Kathy used to live in – Waimea Canyon


Dallas


That’s NOT the house


That’s the house


Strawberry Guava


Waimea Canyon


Jo-Jo’s Shave Ice


Jo-Jo’s Shave Ice


Jo-Jo’s Shave Ice


Jo-Jo’s Shave Ice


Jo-Jo’s Shave Ice


Rachelle


Driveway to the house where Dallas grew up


Engraved names in this piece of cement in the driveway


View of Waimea


View of Waimea


Back of the house


Red Dirt everywhere


Caroline, Dallas, Jane, Nancy, Kathy


Grilled Fish


The Winships, from Sweden


Dallas grilling


George & Linda


Bob & Jane


Linda, Nancy, George, Caroline


Ahi & Onions


Dinner in Waimea

Last week Tuesday we spent the whole day on the west side of Kaua’i, in and around Waimea. This is where Dallas lived. In fact, like last year, we were having dinner at the his parents still own, the house where he grew up.

First we had lunch at Waimea Brewing Company. They claim to be the world’s westernmost brewpub. Dallas had been to their restaurant in Seattle when visiting his brother there, but had never been to the original in Waimea. Pretty good food, I didn’t try the beer though.

Next we drove up to Koke’e Park to take in some views of Waimea Canyon. While we were up there we walked down this winding gravel road to see if we could locate a house that Dallas’ parents lived in after they first got married. A little had changed, but the building was still there. After driving down we tried to visit Polihale Beach because I’ve never seen it before, but it was closed “until further notice”. Later on we heard stories of some problems they’re having in the park with “aggressive hippies camped out”. Don’t know if that’s why the beach is closed or not, just a rumor I heard.

Jo Jo’s Shave Ice in Waimea is the best on the island so I had to be sure to stop for that. Dallas and I were inside and we had to pool all of our cash together to buy one $3.50 shave ice. Lucky for me he didn’t want any so I could get the upgrades – cream on top and mac nut ice cream instead of vanilla. Still I didn’t get away without him teasing me that there was only enough money for me to get shave ice, not him. But truthfully he didn’t want any. I guess growing up with the best shave ice shop on the island (or all of Hawaii) at the end of your driveway makes it not such a big deal.

For dinner there were about 25 people. It was great to see everyone one last time before leaving for Honolulu the next day. And the food. There was sooo much food. Between the pupus and the dinner and dessert this is everything I noted we had:

  • Boiled Peanuts
  • Seared Ahi
  • Grilled Chicken
  • Grilled Steak
  • Grilled Pork
  • Grilled Ono
  • Grilled Aku
  • Grilled Portuguese Sausage
  • Kauai Asparagus
  • Broccoli
  • Portuguese Meat
  • Lettuce/Veggie Salad
  • Fruit Salad
  • Macaroni Salad
  • White Rice (always!)
  • Chantilly Cake (is this local?)
  • Blueberry Cheesecake
  • Jello
  • Carrot Cake
  • Coffee Cake

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