Showing posts with label lau lau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lau lau. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Mainland Lau Lau with Pork

I may get my mug on a Hawai'i wanted poster for this bastardized version of an island native recipe favorite. And if I end up in the slammer, I hope they serve Lau Lau for jailhouse meals!

I live in Los Angeles and could probably find Taro leaves somewhere. But, I want to make sure anyone on the Mainland can enjoy my cheap$kate version of Lau Lau - which is simply seasoned hunks of pork wrapped in Taro leaves and slow cooked to delicious tenderness.


You can read all about the origins of Lau Lau here. It's similar to Kalua Pig, which I wrote a recipe of a couple weeks ago, just click here to see it. Kalua Pig is wrapped in banana leaves, while Lau Lau is wrapped in Taro leaves and steamed/baked underground; think Southern BBQ-style, it's Low 'n Slow.

And to take the comparison further, instead of using hard-to-find Taro leaf, I substitute with Southern Greens! Yep, and collard greens even look like Taro leaf. Both have large ribs with a deep green hue. Even the taste is similar. When cooked you could put them side-by-side and not be able to tell the difference, unless you are a Hawaiian cook. Just compare my steamed Collard Green Lau Lau with real Taro Leaf Lau Lau.

Click on any photo to see larger.

The main difference between Taro Leaf and Collard greens is the texture. Collard greens are a little more firm after cooking. I'm sure you could tell the difference if you tasted each cooked leaf at the same sitting, but my version of Southern-style Mainland Lau Lau is a tasty alternative.


Greens are cheap, I get mine from my local Mexican grocery store for less than a dollar per bundle. Each bundle holds about 5-8 leaves. You could stretch out my recipe (that serves 4) and get away with one bundle, but 2 bundles would give you plenty of greens to go with the pork.


For this recipe I used collard and turnip greens. While collard looks similar to taro leaf, turnip greens get more tender like cooked taro leaf. It's okay to mix and match your favorite leafy greens.



You can use any greens you find on sale at your own grocery or farmers market, including: collard, turnip, mustard, Swiss chard, kale and even spinach.You just need enough to wrap pork into bundles for steaming.

Pork is the main protein. On the Island, they add a little firm fish with the pork. I'm keeping it simple and cheap, by leaving out the fish. For my recipe I used a little over 3 pounds of meaty country-style pork ribs for around 99 cents per pound. I got 4 big ribs.They are ready to go, just trim of any excess fat, but leave some on as it's extra flavor.



Country-style ribs hold much more meat than your typical BBQ rib. And each rib is large enough for a single serving. You could go even cheaper by buying a whole pork shoulder. Just remove the meat from the bone and skin. It's okay to leave the meat in large hunks, for wrapping in greens.


It takes 3 to 4 hours for Lau Lau to steam tender. But it is so simple to make, with few ingredients. Just season the pork with salt, rub on some liquid smoke (optional) and wrap it up with a couple layers of leaves. Finally loosely wrap it with a sheet of aluminum foil.


Lau Lau is a surprise package - lay it out and watch the smile appear on your dinner guests as they unpeel it. My cheap$kate Mainland Lau Lau si going right into my recipe favorites. And you don't need to spring for a plane ticket to Hawai'i to taste my local SoCal Lau Lau.


Ingredients (about 4-5 servings)
  • 3-4 pounds pork - I used 4 meaty country style pork ribs. Okay to use any pork pieces. Cheapest to use pork shoulder (trim off the meat from bone.)
  • 2 bundles of edible greens - Enough to wrap pork 2 to 3 times. For this recipe I used collard and mustard greens. Normally taro leaves are used. If you can find them, then use. Okay to use kale or any favorite edible greens like: collard, mustard, Swiss chard, turnip, kale and even spinach.
  • Salt to taste - Get out the Hawaiian salt, if you have any.
  • 2 tablespoons Liquid Smoke - optional. Will taste delish, it's all about the leafy wrapping.
  • Aluminum foil - about 4 sheets to wrap Lau Lau.
  • Water for steaming Lau Lau.

Directions
Prepare pork. If you are using country style ribs then all you need to do is trim of excess fat. Okay to leave some fat, as it's extra flavor. For pork stew meat that's already sliced, you'll just pile it on the leaves.

Country Style Pork Ribs

For cheap pork shoulder you need to trim off the meat. It has a thick layer of skin you can discard. It's okay if the meat pieces are left large. They will cook until fall-apart tender.



Rub Liquid Smoke onto pork. Allow meat to absorb Liquid Smoke and rub again to use it all up. This is optional. The greens will flavor the meat too. Season meat with salt to taste.


Wash and set out edible greens. Trim off any yellowing stems or tough ends.


Wrap meat 2 to 3 times. The leafy packages should be big enough for a single serving - about the size of a burrito, or an extra large tamale. Finally, wrap each bundle with foil to keep it from falling apart. Some greens may get too mushy, so foil is a simple way to keep it all together. You can loosely wrap pork and greens with foil. It's okay to let some steam into bundles.

Wrapping Collard Greens

Wrapping Turnip Greens

 What you want is enough greens to eat with the pork. So you can wrap the pork with as may leaves as you like. Add leaf pieces too, just pile it on.

You can even use spinach leaves. But make sure to wrap spinach packages in foil, as spinach will get too mushy and may fall off pork.

Add wrapped pork bundles to a steamer pot. Add enough water to just reach the foil-wrapped packages. Cover the pot. Bring water to a boil then reduce heat to a low simmer. Cook pork until tender, about 3-4 hours. Check every hour to make sure water doesn't evaporate - add water as needed.

Lau Lau may cook quicker or take even longer; it all depends how thick the pork pieces are. You can cook Lau Lau as long as it takes (steam will keep it moist,) so just cook it until very tender. You can keep it warm, until ready to serve, in the steamer pot, too.


If you do not have a steamer pot, just get your largest pot and add a ceramic (or metal) bowl, upside down, on bottom of pot. Stack on the foil wrapped Lau Lau. Add enough water to just cover the ceramic bowl. You can use a small steamer rack on the bottom of the pot, too. Again check water level every hour. Add water as needed. Water can come in contact with foil wrapped Lau Lau.


When done, open one package to make sure meat is fall-apart tender. If not, rewrap and keep steaming in half hour to hour increments. It's hard to over-cook this recipe, so cooking it too long is okay.

Set out packages and allow to cool down for a few minutes so you can remove foil and serve. For a Lau Lau Plate, I like to have Macaroni Salad and Sticky Rice as side dishes. My recipes for those are a click away here. If you serve Lau Lau with above sides, then half a bundle per person may be enough -- so that makes even more servings of Lau Lau!


Also, reserve a cup or so of simmering water that's now flavored with pork and greens (called pot liquor.) You can drizzle some onto cooked meat to moisten it more.


Lau Lau leftovers freeze fine. Heat it up in the microwave. Remove foil and drizzle on some pot liquor before heating.


Hindsight
I used Liquid Smoke, but you can leave it out - the edible leaves will flavor the pork enough.

I steamed the Lau Lau, but if you have a pressure cooker, then use that. It will cook in about 45 minutes to an hour. For a crock pot it will take all day at low temperature.

You can't over-steam Lau Lau. It depends how large the pork pieces are to how long you cook the pork. My country style ribs took about 4 hours to tenderize. In Hawai'i I got some  Lau Lau from a food truck. I'm sure the Lau Lau was steaming all day and it tasted fine. Click here to see my Lau Lau truck video.

I used Southern-style turnip and collard greens, but you can use any favorite greens, like: collard, mustard, Swiss chard, turnip, kale, or even spinach. Wrap the pork with enough greens so you get a nice veggie serving. It's okay to mix and match greens.

I noticed collard greens look like taro leaves, but are more firm (when cooked) than taro leaves. Turnip greens are tender like taro leaves.

To see other Hawaii Travelogue blog posts with video, photos, text & GIFs, just click on any link below:
Visit to O'ahu, Hawai'i - intro 
Windward Shore & Keneke Grill

Sunday, August 30, 2015

The Road to Waikiki & a Lau Lau Truck - Hawai'i Travelogue Video

Our next destination is Waikiki Beach in Honolulu. And getting there is half the fun, as you will see in my latest Hawai'i Travelogue Video at the end of this blog post.

We spend a few days exploring the scenic Windward Shore, about 45 minutes from Honolulu. Indulging in a Kalua Pig Plate Lunch and fresh-fish marinated Poke; dipping into the deep blue warm ocean and lounging on white sands; and exploring the lightly populated lush coastline. Just click here to see the previous blog post and you'll know what I'm talking about.


We packed up and headed for the big city of Honolulu for our stay on Waikiki Beach, by way of the panoramic Kamehameha Highway. You can pull over anytime for food stops. There are small local restaurants along the way, and a half dozen tempting food trucks. The one that caught my eye is called Holo Holo Truck, parked under a magnificent banyan tree. (In Hawaiian, Holo Holo is the word for vacation, or a leisurely ride.) There were several folding tables and plastic chairs set out for diners.

 Click on any photo to see larger.

It was serving what I most wanted to try, Lau Lau. Boy, is this a great place for it. Lau Lau is a Native Hawaiian dish consisting of meat and/or fish wrapped in Taro leaves and slow roasted in a pit of hot rocks.


At Holo Holo Truck, I noticed the Lau Lau was kept hot, wrapped in foil and steaming in a large metal pot. So I would guess that this recipe is not done the below-ground roasting traditional way. But even if this Lau Lau is oven roasted, or steamed on the stove top, it's a delicious version.

It's all about the Taro leaves that flavor the large hunks of pork. Taro leaves are edible like spinach, but with a flavor that's closer to green tea, or a mild black tea.


The pork is fragrant, tender and moist from slow-cooking with this native plant. Since the pork is probably from the shoulder cut, there are some small fatty pockets, but that is extra flavor, or easy enough to scrape off.

The pork was wrapped in a few Taro leaves, so you get a tender leafy layer. When you open the Lau Lau package, you'll notice the meat has a slight green tint from the Taro leaves. Lau Lau has a minimal amount of seasoning, maybe some Hawaiian salt.


And it's a huge package for $5 -- about as massive as the largest burrito you could order. I saved it for our Waikiki hotel stay, and got about 3 meals out of it! Because it's wrapped in moist Taro leaves, the Lau Lau "burrito" micowaved perfectly. It's a lot of meat, so I made sure to have some fresh local fruit, or a side of cool Macaroni Salad, to serve with it.

Holo Holo Truck has a uniquely local menu, way beyond Lau Lau. Just look at the placards to see what I mean.


Holo Holo Truck was a trip. The local who runs it, George Halas, Jr., is quite a colorful, blustery "bruduh" - always ready with a quip and a hearty laugh. He took over the business from his father. So this eatery has been around and it's well known for pork and taro leaf Lau Lau.


After the quick truck meal, we hit the road to Waikiki. Our final stop was at one of the Top Ten rated beaches in the world, breathtaking Waimanalo Beach. And the parking is free.

You enter a large park with many camping sites filled with tents, wide tarps to shade partying locals, and fired-up BBQ grills all around. It's a short trek through a narrow tree line to walk on the warm, powdery white beach sands - that stretch out a large city block wide, to the ocean. The beach is at least 5 miles long, an amazing sight.


We picked a shady spot along the tree line and people watched for a while. I walked around taking video and even had time to dip into the warm ocean. (It's interesting to read the Yelp reviewers, so many whiny people out there - hey, public parks aren't perfect, duh.)


Make sure to check out my latest Hawai'i Travelogue Video of a truck stop for delectable Lau Lau and spectacular Waimanalo Beach. And come back for more Waikiki scenery, eateries, and homemade cheap$kate Hawaiian recipes.


Road to Waikiki & Lau Lau Truck Stop  - VIDEO

Play it here, video runs 3 minutes, 30 seconds.

My YouTube video link for viewing or embedding, just click here.

99 thanks to:
 George Halas, Jr, of the Holo Holo Truck.

Holo Holo Truck
47-528 Kamehameha Hwy
Kahaluu, HI 96744
Phone number (808) 230-0062

And the musicians on the beach of Waikiki that I recorded live for this travelogue video. I wish I had got their names for a credit, but was enjoying the music too much in the moment, to get the band and bandleaders name.

To see other Hawaii Travelogue blog posts with video, photos, text & GIFs, just click on any link below:
Visit to O'ahu, Hawai'i - intro 
Windward Shore & Keneke Grill

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Visit to O'ahu, Hawai'i


I have half a dozen colorful blog posts coming your way this summer -- all shot on the beautiful island of O'ahu, in Hawai'i. I'm just now getting my feet wet compiling the travelogue of food recipe videos, GIFs, lush photos, and text. Below is the story in a (macadamia) nut shell - my version and my wife's. So do check back for plenty of fun and tasty times we'll share with you.

Billy: We landed in Honolulu International Airport and went straight to Sandra's (our hostess) boat in a marina nearby, to load up her SUV with our luggage and beach chairs.

Amy: Sandra greeted us at the airport with these fresh-flower Leis.  Billy's is made of orchids, and mine is ginger.  Fresh ginger became a theme of our trip, as we also used it to make ginger ale and tea.  


Billy: It all went well. And, boy did we get around. Of course, it was nice to hang out on the open-air patio at the house (in Ka'a'awa, on the Windward shore) a few blocks above the beach - for the first few days. On the island side we were hemmed in by lush and rocky hillsides.

Amy:  From the wrap-around deck, we watched the sunrise each morning, after the birds and roosters (wild chickens are all over the countryside) woke us.  We could always hear the ocean and feel the breezes.


 


Billy: Our backyard was fragrant with avocado, tangerine, breadfruit and mango trees.


Amy:  Our host at the house, Sandra's friend Rebecca, a painter, told us about a certain quiet North Shore beach, near Laniakea Beach where we'd find sea turtles (shadowy turtle on left side of GIF below).  It was a short distance from the one everyone else knows about, which was mobbed.


Billy:  We also spent time at beautiful Kahana Beach, a short drive from the house. Sandra and Amy have been friends since they were 19 and shared a house off-campus at Auburn University in Alabama.



Billy: Amy had a Hawaiian Lomilomi massage one afternoon at a place on the North Shore; then we got Shave Ice cones from a stand just around the corner.

Amy: These angel wings were painted on the wall at the stand. I posed here because they matched my top, but really, I think they suit Sandra so much better.  She is one of many angels that have gathered around me!


Billy: I found a local roadside cafe for a Kalua Pig Plate of shredded slow-cooked pork, rice and macaroni salad.

 

Billy: Sandra, our hostess with the mostest, generously shepherded us around, so all we had to do was roll out of bed. She is a vegetarian, so Amy had her share of healthy and restorative eats, and plenty of fresh-made Ginger Ale and Tea (which we will continue to make back home.) Sandra showed me a green smoothie recipe, too.

One lovely afternoon, we went to a Yin yoga class nearby. It was mostly slow, long-held stretches. They had a musician accompanying us on a harmonium (like a squeezebox.) One side of the building was open-air and faced the ocean, so we caught a beautiful sunset.


Billy: After a few days in "the country," we headed back to the city of Honolulu, stopping at a food truck under a banyan tree, for Lau Lau (pork wrapped in taro leaves,) a local delicacy.




​On the way to Waikiki we stopped at Waimanalo Beach, which is Amy's favorite, to leave behind her Lei of ginger flowers.



Amy: Above is Waimanalo Beach - we discovered it on an earlier trip when we rented a house nearby. Isn't it the most beautiful beach ever?

Billy: Back in Honolulu, we made it easy on ourselves by staying right on world-famous Waikiki Beach so we didn't have far to walk. We checked into the Park Shore Hotel, which is on the quiet end of the action, next to Kapiolani Park, with a perfect view of Diamond Head.


Billy: I captured this rainbow.

Billy: Here's more of a panorama shot from our 11th floor balcony

We walked the warmed sands, and took in the boogie boarders along Waikiki Beach.

And, I had to find some food things to shoot. One place I walked to repeatedly is Rainbow Drive-In, just a local dive a few blocks away, but well regarded as a mecca for Hawaiian plate lunch favorites - my kind of place.  Amy says she's heard President Obama likes it..


One specialty is the Loco Moco Plate: 2 eggs, 2 beef patties, rice, macaroni salad, and gravy over everything. Gotta try it at least once, and if you do, it's so huge, that may be all you eat for the day!


Fast food in Hawai'i is grabbing Spam Musubi at the local 7 Eleven, instead of a hot dog. A fried slab of Spam with rice and wrapped in seaweed...it's yummy!


Of course, we didn't live on fast food. One evening we had Poke and fruity drinks at Duke's Restaurant, on the main drag, near our hotel. Poke is like Mexican Ceviche, which is marinated raw fish, but with seaweed, sesame oil, soy sauce and crushed nuts.

On our last night we reconnected with Sandra. On the way to a quick meal we caught a Hawai'i-style music and dance show, right next to the beach.



Billy: By the end of our vacation, I could barely keep up with Amy, I think the trip did her a world of good.

Amy: Yes yes yes.  Much gratitude.

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