More Hawaiian Food

2007-07-14 (permalink tags: , )

The Island of Oahu is one of those American places that fully embraced the car half a century ago.

If you are in Waikiki, you'll find everything in a walking distant. A bit pricey, but you can walk to it. Things are different in Manoa or in Kaneoe. You have to walk 15 minutes to reach a café, 30 minutes for a bakery, one hour for an Irish pub and I have yet to see a cheese shop. And there are many streets without sidewalk. There is a decent bus system, but things are so far apart that it is hardly convenient, except for the daily commute to the beach.

Fortunately, there is more than the suburbuian shopping malls. Here and there, if you know where to look, there are many family owned shops with a lot of warmth, humanity and cachet.

In the middle of Mo'ili'ili there is Da Spot, an exceptional smoothie and plate lunch snack bar. "Do you mind if I do it myself? Things are still in the same place?" A customer steps behind the counter to prepare his own special kind of smoothie. Is it possible that he can't find the one that he wants in the impressive list of 20 or so flavors? "Taste this sample while you make your mind." Chocolate, haupia, and something else with an exotic name. This one is not advertised yet, it's in beta.

Ako and her husband Ahmad seems to know all their customers by name. "Hello Mahdi, did you find an apartment yet?" The food they sell is quite unique too: Egyptian with a touch of South Pacific. Traditional middle eastern meals are augmented with tropical flavors. Coconut and pineapple meet curry and fava beans. They cook whatever they feel like that day; the menu changes all the time. There is always a vegetarian meal and there is no spam in sight.

For 6.50 USD you get a medium plate meal, a smoothie, and a baklava. That's good enough for me. I'm a strong supporter of mass transit. But, the bus from Kaneohe drops me at Ala Moana mall. If I need a car to go to Da Spot, so be it. Live Aloha.

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