March 2013

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The great thing about being in the United States is that there are so many great places to visit nationwide. The west coast and east coast are standard but have you ever considered the Mississippi Gulf Coast? Recently there has been a lot of tourism in Mississippi due to the growth of the travel industry in that particular region. People from all over the United States and abroad vacation there regularly and can vouch for how great the reconstruction has made it.

The best thing about the Mississippi Gulf Coast is the fact that there is literally something there for everyone. There are 3 main counties that are attached to the coast. Besides the beaches the Gulf Coast offers amazing golf getaways, casino resorts, and fishing charters.  The Gulf Coast has 7 championship golf courses that cater to all levels of golfers. There is no greater feeling than heading out to the green on a beautiful sunny day for a few rounds, perfect for anyone who is always on the run. The mild temperate climate makes it easy to golf almost every day. PGA Tour and USGA rated the Gulf Coast as one of the top 10 Golf Destinations in the United States.
There are some great golf packages available to anyone who is looking to make a trip down to the Gulf Coast. There are travel agents who can not only create a great deal for you but also make it easy for you to take advantage of all that the Gulf Coast has to offer including family packages, casino hotel packages, and fishing packages that cater to all vacation enthusiasts. So next time you are looking for a great place to get away and enjoy some time to yourself, look no further than the Mississippi Gulf Coast for your next vacation destination.

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I’m one of those people who gets annoyed when people make a big deal out of my birthday and even more annoyed when they ignore it. So yesterday when I got an e-mail from Babs, a friend in California, wishing me happy birthday, I  thanked her by whining about how the night before, for dinner, I’d gone to the ABC store and bought a bottle of Meridian Merlot and a box of Chip & Cookie Hawaii chocolate chip cookies. “It will be tough to top that for a birthday celebration.”

I know. What a martyr, right?

So Babs writes back, “Well, happy depressing birthday! This is your assignment today—to get someone to sing a Hawaiian version (or any version) of ‘Happy Birthday’ to you.”

Yeah, right. I’m going to ask some stranger to sing happy birthday.

Anyway, I’m out at the KoAloha ukulele factory and I’m just about to leave when the owner, Alvin “Pops” Okami, tells me how his son, Paul who is the company luthier and makes KoAloha’s custom ukes, is in San Francisco on business, which makes Pops a little sad because it’s his birthday and birthdays are a big thing for the KoAloha ohana, or extended family, and Paul is going to miss that and so is Pops.

Well, would you believe, I tell Pops, that today is my birthday?

“No!”

photo by David Lansing

photo by David Lansing

I pull out my driver’s license and show him. Which is when Pops grabs a ukulele off the wall and spontaneously starts singing “Happy Birthday.” And his wife, Tricia, and a couple of KoAloha employees join in. I felt like I was coming down with something all of a sudden because my throat got all tight and my eyes started to water.

“You ever play the ukulele before?” Pop asked me.

“Not really.”

“You should learn,” he said. And he handed me the ukulele he’d just been strumming. As a gift. I didn’t even know what to say. But I think it may have been the nicest birthday present I’ve ever gotten. And it came from someone who was basically a stranger.

True aloha.

 Totally by coincidence, a documentary film maker from Philadephia, Gary San Angel, had been filming while Pops was giving me a tour of the factory and he caught the whole Happy Birthday ukulele serenade on tape. So here it is. Just so Babs will know that I’m not making this stuff up. And that her birthday wish for me really did come true.  

David Lansing at KoAloha Ukulele on his Birthday from Gary San Angel on Vimeo.

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As much as I dig the foodie aspect of the Kapiolani Community College Farmers’ Market, I’m also envious over the flowers. Envious because locals come here and walk away with boxes of orchids, like phalaenopsis, for about $8 each when I’m happy to pay $15 or $20 at home.

photos by David Lansing

photos by David Lansing

And if they have half a clue as to what to do with them, these gorgeous butterfly orchids (which are easier to grow than roses, particularly in this climate) will not only bloom for years but, with just the slightest bit of care, can easily flower twice in a season. What a bargain compared to cut flowers which you stick in a vase and you’re lucky if they still look good a week later.

But what really amazes me are the cattleya. Now that’s a temperamental orchid. I’ve got eight or nine in my greenhouse but I don’t think any of them have ever bloomed. Then you come to the farmers’ market here and they’re like $20 for a gallon-sized plant. That would be a good $50 or $60 most places.

While I’m most enamored with the orchids, there are so many other beautiful flowers here, such as the almost-obscene looking anthuriums, known as “the hearts of Hawaii,” which come in every shade of red as well as green, purple, orange, white, and a golden yellow (they say there are over 500 species of this tropical). Or the fragrant gingers which you can crush in your hand and they bounce back unfazed.

People were walking out of here with big bouquets of proteas, which look like colorful artichokes to me, and various heliconia, or lobster-claws, whose waxy bracts look resembles the plumage of tropical parrots.

And it was almost impossible to find a bouquet costing more than $5 or $6—what a steal! 

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Honolulu foodies’ market

When I woke up Saturday morning, I started having second thoughts about going out to the farmers’ market at Kapiolani Community College. For one thing, the day was gorgeous and I kind of felt like just throwing on my swim trunks and going for a long swim. For another, the market is far enough from Waikiki that it would necessitate driving, which meant getting my rental from the valet and that whole hassle. But I kind of kicked myself in the ass and took a quick shower and humiliated myself into going by calling myself a lazy ass.

It was a good decision. I’ve been to farmers’ markets all over the world but this has to be one of the best. Even though there’s really not all that much in the way of fruit or veggies. It’s more about the food. In fact, they should probably call it the Honolulu Foodies’ Market to better reflect the experience. Absolutely everything here has to be grown or produced in Hawaii, which is very cool.

photos by David Lansing

photos by David Lansing

The thing to do is to make a circuit of the market and check out the vendors, kind of letting your nose and your eyes guide you, before you start eating. Otherwise, it will be like loading up on the rolls and potato salad at a buffet bar before you get to the prime rib table.

If you’re going to have breakfast here (and you’d be crazy not to), you have to decide whether to pace yourself and go with some finger food like a little mangobread or sweet potato Danish or go for something heartier like fried rice with Portuguese sausage.

My head told me to grab a cup’a Kona from Koko Crater and a banana muffin from Happy Cakes, but then my heart (or was it my stomach?) spotted the Styrofoam containers of food fronting Hawaiian Style Chili Co. Kim chee fried rice, kalua pork, taro mochi. In the end, my gut over-ruled my brain and I got the loco moco chili—a big scoop of chili on a mound of rice, topped with a fried egg.

Plenty ono grinds, brah. 

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Winnah of da winnah pizza

Here’s what you do at the Kapiolani Community College Farmers’ Market: you walk around until you find some good grinds, sit and chow down, then walk around looking for something else to eat. Repeat until full.

I didn’t even try to finish my loco moco chili. Way too much starch and carbs. What was I thinking? I needed to cleanse my palate. So I wandered over to Two Hot Tomatoes to have some of Barbara Sant’Anna’s fried green tomatoes.

photos by David Lansing

photos by David Lansing

Frankly I’ve never been a big fan of fried green tomatoes (okay, the tomatoes are green and there’s just something unappealing about that, and, secondly, the crust is always mushy), but Barbara’s secret trick is to fry the tomatoes in a panko breading so they come out crunchy and airy. More like tempura.

Those were good (although, again, I didn’t bother to try and finish the whole thing). Then, after grabbing a fresh gingerale lemonade from PacifiKool, made from their Hawaiian-grown ginger syrup, I got in line at the North Shore Farms booth for a slice of Jeanne Vana’s pesto Neapolitano  tomato and mozzarella pizza. Probably didn’t need this since I still hadn’t digested the loco moco chili (if, in fact, that’s even digestible) or the fried green tomatoes, but what the hell.

There are two things that make North Shore Farms pizza winnah of da winnah (best of the best): Jeanne’s Waialua Big Wave tomatoes, which she grows only in winter on a 10-acre farmer’s co-op on the North Shore on land that used to be a sugar plantation, and her pizza oven—which is actually just a portable gas bbq grill.

Jeanne calls her pizza Neapolitano, probably because, like a true Neapolitan margherita pizza it’s made with just four ingredients: tomato, mozzarella, basil, and olive oil. But Jeanne’s bbq’s don’t get hot enough to turn out a true crispy crust (a true Neapolitan pizza gets cooked in a 900° stone oven for less than two minutes). So while her crust is a little more limp than I like, the Big Wave tomatoes are unbelievable. A true loco moco pizza. 

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