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Loco moco is a dish featured in contemporary Hawaii cuisine. The traditional loco moco consists of white rice, topped with a hamburger patty and brown gravy, and finally a sunny-side up fried egg. These ingredients must exist in the dish to be named loco moco.
A Loco moco mix plate from L&L, with rice and macaroni salad. L&L Hawaiian Barbecue's menu is centered around the Hawaiian plate lunch – two scoops of rice, a scoop of macaroni salad, and a meat or seafood entrée. [48] Many of the menu items include nods to Asian and Polynesian heritage, like chicken katsu and kalua pork. [49]
A loco moco burrito with egg fried rice, brown gravy and ground beef will be rolled in a flour tortilla, while Holaloha’s loaded fries will feature carnitas-style kalua pork with guacamole ...
What to order: Try the loco moco, a stalwart on the Rainbow's menu. You'll get rice topped with a hamburger patty, an egg and plenty of indulgent gravy. Related: The Best of Hawaii on a Budget.
Some Hawaiian side dishes are lomi-lomi salmon (salmon salad) and haupia (a coconut dessert). The traditional mayonnaise-based macaroni salad is an American contribution. Another notably American element is the hamburger steak, a ground beef patty smothered with brown gravy served atop rice; adding a sunny-side-up egg makes it a loco moco.
Hawaii: A traditional preparation consisting of pork wrapped in taro leaf [40] Livermush: South North Carolina: A dish made with pig liver and other parts mixed with cornmeal, formed into a loaf, and fried. [41] [42] [43] Loco moco: West Hawaii
Curuba from Hawaii A kalo lo'i harvest in Maunawili Valley. A lo'i is an irrigated, wetland terrace, or paddy , used to grow kalo ( taro ) or rice. [ 35 ] Ancient Hawaiians developed a sophisticated farming system for kalo , along with over 300 variations of the plant adapted to different growing conditions.
Inexpensive and portable, Spam musubi are commonly found near cash registers in convenience stores or mom-and-pop shops all over Hawaii and in Hawaiian barbecue restaurants in the mainland United States. [1] Musubi can be easily made with the right materials, and typically only uses spam, rice, some salt, nori and shoyu (soy sauce).