A Loco Moco from Kona Kakes

**** Kona Kakes has moved to Point Loma and no longer serves plate lunches

Recently, I had just finished up my errands on a nice Saturday morning and was heading home down Linda Vista Road. As I drove past the strip mall, you know where Ballast Point is located, I saw Kona Kakes. It had been over five years since I last visited (yeesh!) and tried their plates. I was really hungry, so I decided to stop by. For some reason, the place seemed a bit cleaner and brighter than I recalled.

Kona Kakes Loco Moco 01

Being quite famished; I decided to get what is a guilty pleasure these days, the Loco Moco ($10.99). It did take a while to arrive, but I got to watch all of the happy folks coming to pick up cakes for various occasions. The loco moco made its way to my table and was fairly hefty.

Kona Kakes Loco Moco 02 Kona Kakes Loco Moco 03Since getting just downwind of a loco moco is means for celebration these days; I decided to bust out the "Rubio scale", a scoring system originally developed by James Rubio on his now defunct "Big Island Grinds" blog way back in 2005. I modified the scale back in 2005; man, fourteen years ago, and hadn't used it in over six months. So, you ready? Hea' goes……

BURGER: Was supposed to be 1/3 pound, but seemed thinner and smaller than expected. Too lean and tough, but well seasoned. Studded with green onions. Beefy with a decent char. 3.0

Kona Kakes Loco Moco 04

EGGS:  Perfectly runny, though not seasoned, and it would have been a winnah' if the edges were crisp. 4.0

RICE: A bit on the dry side, but adequate. 2.5

GRAVY: Very dark, though not too gluey, salty, I definitely don't think this is made from scratch. Bitter bits in the gravy. And no Tabasco either! What's up with all these places not having Tabasco???? 2.5

STUFF: The Mac salad was much better than what I'd had before and served nicely chilled. Could have been seasoned and fairly standard. Standard is also the word for the green salad. 2.5 Kona Kakes Loco Moco 05

Overall score – 14.5. Decent, but nothing to go out of your way for. Considering that a typical L&L usually scores a 10, this ain't bad, but it's definitely not in the same league as Island Style Café.

Really friendly, nice woman working about my age, who spent her high school years on Oahu. It was nice chatting with her and I got a couple of to go treats for my friends….who loved the guava cake the best.

So, at least I got my Loco Moco fix in!

Kona Kakes
5401 Linda Vista Road Suite 402
San Diego, CA 92110
Hours:
Mon – Tues 11am – 3pm
Wed – Sat  11am – 6pm
Closed Sundays

Circling Back to Leilani’s Cafe

During my lunch at Homestyle Hawaiian; I started pondering my little blogging history with plate lunches and loco mocos in particular. When we first moved to San Diego; there were a lot less places for plate lunches. The first couple of places that I recalled having plate lunches were at Da' Kines and Kealani's, both places are now gone; I think they both now do catering. Among the next places I tried was Leilani's Café and then Da' Kitchen, which became Mo's Island Grinds, which in turn became what is now the little empire called Homestyle Hawaiian. So you could say; other than those ubiquitous L&L's and similar knock-offs, Leilani''s might be the only one of those "originals" still in place.

Which had me wondering how things were at Leilani's. So, the following morning, thank goodness Leilani's opens early, 7am, so I could beat the traffic in PB, I headed on down to see what was going on with Leilani's.

Leilanis Rev 02 Leilanis Rev 01It was interesting to see that the outdoor area was pretty busy; at a few minutes past 7 on a Sunday morning. It looked like folks were having French toast and omelets. I had other things in mind. Since it had been nearly 9 months since my last Loco Moco, I decided on the Hilo Loco ($11), which is what I had on my last visit over three years ago.

Since my musings seem to take me back to the last decade; I though I'd bust out the "Modified Rubio scale", first developed in September of 2005, a while 13 years ago, a version of "loco scoring", first done by James Rubio in his now dormant food blog; Big Island Grinds.

Leilanis Rev 03 Leilanis Rev 04For those playing at home – "The original Rubio Scale measured each item on the Loco, I decided to take the "base" items, the Burger, Gravy, Egg, and Rice. To this I added "Stuffs", that include macaroni salad, Spam, or any other item that comes with the Loco. All items are graded on a scale between 1 through 5, with 2.5 being average."

So, let's have at it shall we?

BURGER: Obviously hand formed with little filler; making it a bit on the tough and dry side. It was quite thick, with a decent beefiness, but could have used more seasoning. Adding a nice char would have brought up the score – 3.0

EGGS: Nice and runny, with crisp and crunchy edges. Winnah! 4.5

GRAVY: Nice and dark, fairly mild in flavor, a bit too "gloppy". And minus for not having Tabasco….only Sriracha. 3.0

RICE: Fairly moist, though many unbroken "lumps" more on the the other "stuffs" next. 3.0

STUFFS: Lots of Portuguese Sausage in the rice, good flavor, though there were lumps of rice not coated with shoyu/sauce and bit more spicy than I remembered. I do think the fried rice at Island Style Café is better. 3.5

Total score – 17, not bad. Considering that the last time I used the Modified Rubio Scale, that L&L only scored a 10.

Service was very friendly. Leilani's is a wonderful neighborhood joint, one that is nicely imbedded, since all the customers looked like folks from the area. I hope they keep going strong! Leilanis Rev 06

Leilani’s Cafe
5109 Cass St
San Diego, CA 92109
Hours:
Daily 7am – 3pm

I'd like to dedicate this post to DerekR who often comments. And in this case had coincidentally asked about Leilani's in the comments of my latest HH post. How funny! 

Revisits – Luong Hai Ky and Homestyle Hawaiian (Tierrasanta)

I should actually call this "weekend procrastination lunches"……two revisits where I took the "long way" to work.

Luong Hai Ky:

LHK Rev 01

On the Sunday that I took the "really long way" to work; I decided to drop by Luong Hai Ky since it had been over three years since my last visit. Let me just say things haven't changed much….the service was perfunctory at best; and that Beef Sate Noodle; well, with all that iceberg lettuce and all that basil….check out all the stems they included; would you like to eat that or perhaps reach into your bowl with your hands and remove them? Sheesh, it's pretty much an egg noodle salad these days.

LHK Rev 02 LHK Rev 03And that broth that tastes like msg water.

This was basically fifty percent iceberg lettuce which made the dish get cold quickly, the egg noodles were over-cooked. Too little sate was used on the beef. Too bad, because the beef was rather tender.

I think it's back to Tim Ky for me.

LHK Rev 04

This is quite sad because once upon a time before the original owner passed away, the location on Convoy did a pretty good job. But that was over a decade ago…..

Luong Hai Ky Restaurant
10606 Camino Ruiz #2
San Diego, CA 92126

Homestyle Hawaiian (Tierrasanta):

HH has spread out quite a bit since Homestyle Hawaiian opened up near Mesa College nine years ago. With 6 locations; though they disavow the Point Loma location, it's now a nice little kingdom. On a recent weekend; I decided to sleep in and drop by the office in the afternoon. It was nearly 1130 and I was starved, so I decided to take a detour, and wouldn't you know it…somehow, I'm not sure how….I ended up here.

HH PMeal 01

I'd only been to this location once; but it was close to the 52……

The young lady who waited on me was a joy; she humored me when I asked that my combination plate be served in a take-out container. I knew there was no way I'd be able to finish it. I ordered the chicken katsu; Korean chicken combo. An old favorite of mine from back when I could put away a whole lot more…..

HH PMeal 02 HH PMeal 03The katsu was nicey fried this time around. It was crisp, moist, the breading wasn't peeling off, and of course I do enjoy the "local-kine" katsu sauce…..I grew up eating chicken katsu with a ketchup based sauce. The Korean chicken seems to have changed over time; the sweet-salty flavors, now tend toward the sweeter side. The batter was more hard than crisp this time around and the chicken, while moist, was on the chewy side.

Like, I've mentioned before, never been a big fan of HH's mac salad, but this wasn't bad,  nicely chilled, it seems to have gotten better over the years.

Of course I managed to eat less than half of this. I took the rest to work and wouldn't you know, there was someone else who decided to come in on this day…..he was rewarded with a rather hefty container of food.

Homestyle Hawaiian Pub & Eatery
10601 Tierrasanta Boulevard
San Diego, CA 92124

Island Style Hawaii BBQ & Local Food

***** Island Style has closed

Island Style Hawaii is a favorite of one of my "customers" and after finding out that I'm originally from Hawaii she had asked me what I thought of the place. I told her that I'd had had my fill of these Hawaiian BBQ type of places and really hadn't been motivated to visit. But one day at work I got a call. She had a meeting in the same building and decided to drop of "some lunch" for me……from Island Style. How sweet.

So I suddenly had mini-plates of Garlic Chicken and Mochiko Chicken on my hands.

Island Style Hawaii 01 Island Style Hawaii 02Now, I didn't expect Sugoi's or Mitsu-ken, and this was pretty mediocre. Even though she had picked this up on the way to our offices, it hadn't held up well and was more gummy than crisp. I expected more garlic flavor, but what I mostly got was burnt bitterness. Sugoi and Mitsu-ken have both garlic flavor in the seasoning for the chicken as well as a sauce; it reminds me a bit of karaage. This was basically fried chicken.

It's the Mochiko Chicken that had the sauce.

Island Style Hawaii 03 Island Style Hawaii 04While I thought the batter on this was a bit better; the sauce was pretty one-dimensional. This style of chicken isn't really hard to make.

I gotta say, for a mini-plate, the portion sizes were quite hefty. Compre the $6.99 mini-plate with the $11 food truck plate lunch.

The rice was fine, but I really didn't care for the potato "mac" salad. The quotes on the "mac" is because this was like chopped spaghetti noodles. It also just tasted of plain mayonnaise with no other seasoning. The young lady really wanted to know what I thought, so I told her. Man, if I were a millionaire, I'd love to buy her a ticket to HNL, so she could actually have the real deal.

Anyway, this got the ball rolling so I decided to drop by the place. It's in Pacific Beach, near the corner of Cass and Garnet. I can honestly say, I don't get down here very often.

Island Style Hawaii 05

Wasn't this a location of Rakadeka in a previous life? So, it was a Saturday morning and I'd read that the place opens at 11; so I got there at 1105…..no Bueno. Must've been on Hawaiian Time. So I took a walk around the block. I returned at 1120 and the open sign was on; but the door was still locked….go figure. Eventually, I did get in.

Island Style Hawaii 06

The menu had all the usual suspects. Since this was a weekend and I could definitely just roll back home and take a nap, I decided to add another one to my Loco Moco collection. I ordered a regular sized Loco Moco ($9.29).

Island Style Hawaii 07 Island Style Hawaii 08This was a passable Hawaiian BBQ/Chain style loco moco. The beef patty was cooked to death and tough. The rice was strange, some of it was dry and hard and the rest really mushy. The eggs were nice and runny, though I enjoy a bit of crispness around the edges for a textural contrast and these weren't seasoned, thus in dire need of some salt. The gravy was on the thinner side, but other than having a bit too much black pepper was fine.

During this visit, I noticed an "Aloha Friday Special" ($13.99) on the menu. So, with the Missus at work, I returned on my way home that Friday.

Island Style Hawaii 10 Island Style Hawaii 12Man, this was a hefty plate. First things first. I noticed a lot of liquid that smelled like laulau at the bottom of the package. I opened the container up to see all the liquid from the laulau on the bottom. It hadn't been drained well.

The laulau itself wasn't very good. This being "mainland laulau" I expected no salted fish, but the pork was really dry and stringy, and the luau leaves weren't cooked enough for my taste and were hard. Island Style Hawaii 13Even here in the laulau wasteland that is San Diego, I thought Poke, Etc was better.

I'm still not a fan of the potato mac salad; though I did find a couple of small cubes of potato in this. It really needs a bit more seasoning.

The kalua pork was not bad. On the dry side, the trick I learned when I worked drive-in kitchens back home was to mix the fat and liquid that drained off the pork back into it when shredding. It did have enough salt and smoke flavor though.

Island Style Hawaii 11

I didn't expect much of the lomi salmon and it was just that. Really in need of seasoning; the tomatoes not ripe enough, too watery, quite bland.

Island Style Hawaii 14 Island Style Hawaii 15Island Style has a very nice location, close to the beach and all that. If you enjoy quantity over quality this might do it for you.

The service very laid back. The young lady at the front likes to spend her time on the iPad. Not sure if I'll return and if I do, what I would get….the katsu perhaps? Saimin? I dunno.

Here's a to Soo's visits to Island Style.

Island Style Hawaii BBQ & Local Food
4508 Cass St
San Diego, CA 92109
Hours:
Mon – Wed 11am – 10pm
Thurs – Sat 11am – 2am
Sun 11am – 8pm

Hana Hou To Go Food Truck

**** This truck is no longer in business

A couple of guys in the office like this food truck that comes by every couple of weeks.

Hana Hou 01 Hana Hou  02It named "Hana Hou to go". Hana Hou means "one more time" in Hawaiian. While I'm not fully sold on the Food Truck explosion; I grew up eating from lunchwagons, so local kine food from a truck makes sense to me. So I decided to give it a try. Though I gotta say' this ain't lunchwagon prices.

I ordered the Chicken Katsu Plate ($11).

Hana Hou 03 Hana Hou 06To be perfectly frank; the item I enjoyed the most was the katsu sauce; which was rather thick, but had a nice tanginess to it. It seemed between the typical Japanese style (like steak sauce) and the "local kine" (ketchup based). The chicken was fairly moist, even for white meat; though it was quite bland and cold and the breading was past the point of having very much crunch.

Hana Hou 05 Hana Hou 04The kimchi was the typical "quick kimchi"; crisp, slightly spicy, but lacking in fermented flavor. I just wasn't a big fan of the macaroni salad; which was really dry; with some hard pieces, and quite bland overall. The rice? Well, that was well done, not too mushy, no hard bits. Only "one scoop" though. Which, these days is enough for me.

This was ok overall. So, thinking that perhaps it wasn't the best strategy to get something basically fried from the food truck (though Tsukenjo's made a mean mochiko chicken and Grace's started serving their chicken katsu from a lunchwagon), I decided to give them another chance. Daniel from Georgia told me to get the "Kalua Cabbage Plate" ($11), which we call Kalua Pork and Cabbage back home.

Hana Hou 07

The pork was rather chewy and stringy; and there was quite a bit of cabbage. Perhaps I was being too picky since I often make this at home. I'm glad it wasn't too salty and the rice was again quite good. I kimchi had more flavor this time around, though I'm still not a fan of that mac salad. Too each his own…..

Overall, okay lunches if I have no other choices. If this was a brick and mortar shop, I'd pass.

The Hana Hou to Go Food Truck

Chris’ Ono Grinds Island Grill (North Park)

Chris Ono 01After several years; I finally made it to Chris' Ono Grinds in North Park. I'd been meaning to ever since, sadly, a couple of years after visiting the Mission Gorge location, it was consumed by fire (here's a video). I'd actually been thinking of revisiting the Mission Gorge location about the time of the fire. I put the North Park location on my "list" and well, call it old age, promptly forgot about it. Until recently when one of the guys at work, "BigD from Georgia" told me how much he enjoys the place. Well, even though "BigD" wouldn't know a plate lunch from a slate lunch, I thought it was about time.

It was a nice weekend morning, about eleven-thirty-ish, when I parked and crossed the street into the tiny shop.

Chris Ono 02

The folks here are quite friendly, very hospitable. It was close enough for breakfast for me to order the Loco Moco ($11).

Chris Ono 03 Chris Ono 04Well, other than the perfect easy-over egg (it was overcooked last time), this was basically a replay. The burger had some nice beefiness, but was really tough and rubbery. The gravy had a sour-bitterness to it that I found rather unpleasant. The rice was fine.

That mac salad was the best thing about this meal. Edging on a bit too sour, it was served nicely chilled, the macaroni was perfectly cooked, the amount of mayo was hitting that top end, but was still within parameters.

Chris Ono 05

Too bad about the gravy, because that egg was lovely.

A couple of weeks later, I was in the neighborhood, so I decided to drop by. This time I went with the Huli Huli Chicken – Teri Steak ($12). One thing you can't complain about is the portion sizes at Chris's.

Chris Ono 06 Chris Ono 07Well, be it ever so humble, once again, that mac salad was my favorite thing about this meal.

I gotta give it to Chris's though, the beef, while cut thicker than usual for teri beef was fairly tender. I just wish it was better marinated and had less of the salty-heavy ginger glaze.

The Huli Huli Chicken was as before, too sticky sweet for my taste and this time it was really charred to death.

Chris Ono 08

Nice portions, nice people, not my kind of loco moco or plate lunch. In thinking about things; Chris's has the potential to be something along the lines of Diamond Head Market and Grill. Man am I missing home right now.

Chris’ Ono Grinds Island Grill
4506 30th St
San Diego, CA 92116
Open Daily
1130am – 9pm

The Lanai Leucadia

***** The Lanai has closed

One evening after a long day at work, I dropped by one of the local watering holes for a beverage. One of the folks there started up a conversation; mid-thirties surfer dude, very friendly. As is typical in the category of what "locals" back home call the "wea' you wen grad" moment….that is I was asked where I'm from and mentioned "Honolulu". In a sort of a conspiratorial whisper he asked me if I knew what a "Loco Moco" was. A funny moment in deed. Do I know what a Loco Moco is?

Anyway, the fella' mentioned his favorite spot was a place in Encinitas called "The Lanai". Which I filed away for "one of these days when I have time." Well, one of the good things about having to work weekends is that you can take as long for lunch as you wish. So on a bright and sunny Sunday, I headed up to Leucadia and hit up the Lanai.

The Lanai 01

Interesting locale…..the Surfer Dude told me that this used to be some Organic Taco shop or something? Anyway, it's quite hipster-hippy-ish looking; basically a food trailer parked in a "lanai looking" lot with picnic/patio type seating, next to a Nursery.

The Lanai 02

It's the typical "food truck" type of thing; order and pay at the window. Though they do bring your food out to you.

The Lanai 03

The menu ranges from Sandwiches, Poke Bowls (of course), Salads, Rice Bowls (the cheapest item on the menu at $9.25 and up), and Plate Lunches….with four different items available. The Loco Moco was $10.25.

The Lanai 04 The Lanai 05Whoa, sunny side up eggs on this one, instead of easy over. Really good eggs. The hamburger patty was very lean and really tough and chewy, decent beefiness though. The rice was nicely done; edging on dry, but ok. I didn't care for the gravy. It had that made from base flavor to it….like the institutional stuff I used to work with from companies like "Knorr". Still, it was not bad if a bit on the pricey side. And no Tabasco….it's Sriracha all the way here.

So of course, there was the following Sunday.

The Lanai 07

You know, I kinda like this set-up….though I wouldn't want to be here when it rains (but heck, it's SoCal) or when it's really hot.

The Lanai 06

I went for the Mixed Plate ($14.00) which after tax was over fifteen bucks, yikes! I got the Kalua Pork (thankfully they spelled it correctly) and the Chicken Katsu.

The Lanai 08 The Lanai 09First off the rice was a tragedy; mostly hard bits. The Kalua Pork was pretty darn good if on the dry side….it looks like they dump it on the griddle to heat up. Nice salt, mild smoke, other than being dry, it was nice. The Chicken Katsu was not to my liking; it looked like it had been pounded flat, with more, really hard instead of crisp breading than chicken and not much in terms of flavor. The katsu sauce tasted odd; like there was something fermented in it?

The Lanai 10 The Lanai 11The Mac Salad was ok, if a bit odd in flavor….I think some of the kimchi juice had mixed with the salad. Simple stuff; macaroni, peas, mayo…..it was decently chilled.

The bok choy kimchi was okay; I enjoy my stuff a bit more fermented and didn't expect that here. The Lanai 12

Food was kind of a mixed bag overall. Also on the pricy side. Nice folks working. I also kind of enjoyed the vibe, but am not sure how things would be if they were busy. Drinks are limited to coconut water, bottled water, some teas, kombucha (of course), and the ubiquitous Hawaiian Sun (which, strangely, I actually worked for a zillion years ago). Though if you want a plate lunch; I'm not sure what else is around here since Kealani's closed.

The Lanai Leucadia
1114 N. Coast Hwy 101
Encinitas, CA 92024
Hours:
Tues – Sat 11am – 9pm
Sun – Mon 11am – 3pm

 

Revisits – Island Style Cafe and Katsu Cafe

A revisit double dose of places with "Café" in their name.

Island Style Café:

It had been over a year since my last visit and I wanted some time away from the office for lunch. So I decided to head over to Island Style Café. Looking at my earlier posts, it's hard to believe this place has been here for nine years already! Time sure does fly.

I Style Loco 01

The place was almost full when I arrived. Seems like business is doing quite well.

Of course I got the Kaloko Moco…..I'm still fascinated with the sweet-savory interplay of flavors with that crepe.

I Style Loco 02

This time around the hamburger patty was nice and moist, the gravy not too salty, though the eggs, like a couple times before were over-well instead of over easy like I requested. The fried rice was nice and moist.

I Style Loco 03

Man, nine years….though the food here has been fairly consistent over those years; my appetite has not and I was only able to finish half of this…..

Island Style Cafe
5950 Santo Road
San Diego, CA 92124
Hours:
Tues – Fri 9am – 2pm, 430pm – 8pm
Sat 7am – 8pm
Sun 7am – 3pm

Katsu Café:

Rev Katsu Cafe 01

Wanted to stay close to the office for lunch, so I decided to head back to Katsu Café. I wanted to check out how the Chicken Katsu was doing here….well, at least now it's actually called Chicken Katsu. For a long time it was "Chicken Cutlet" on the menu; though the name of the place was Katsu Café. The place filled up very quickly; the young lady manning the register was kind of surly, but the two Server were really nice.

Rev Katsu Cafe 02

If I had to note one thing that improved since Teri Café became Katsu Café, it would be the miso soup. Which, while still not great is decent and has enough miso in it.

Man, the portion sizes here seem to be getting larger.

Rev Katsu Cafe 03 Rev Katsu Cafe 04But, just as on my previous visit the panko coating on the katsu just crumbled right off and the chicken was dry. I'm thinking either these guys overcook this stuff, the chicken is way too cold when they bread it, or the oil temp is off. The rice was also subpar; dry, with hard bits. The best items were the standard issue green salad and the potato-mac salad, which was nicely seasoned, cold, and pretty darn good.

It's still more about quantity….or even more quantity, than quality. I finished the two salads and left most of the katsu and just about all the rice.

Katsu Cafe
7305B Clairemont Mesa Blvd
San Diego, CA 92111 

Homestyle Hawaiian Pub & Eatery – Tierrasanta

I saw the new location of Homestyle Hawaiian back in April. But I just kind of took my time heading on over. These days, I need to space out those plate lunch visits….especially since Homestyle Hawaiian's portion sizes were usually pretty generous. Plus, I'd been visiting HH since beginning at the Mesa College Branch, back in September of 2009. Since then, I've done a ton of posts on HH and had visited their other locations in Chula Vista and Midway. So, not anticipating a very different menu, I just took my time until last month.

HH Tierrasanta 01

I liked the interior; very local kine "gastro-pub-ish". There are about 20 pulls; with everything from Cal Creamin, to Kona Brewing….to Bud Light. Things seemed a bit confused as I didn't quite know what the drill was while waiting for a table. It seems at first the young lady was going to take my order….so perhaps this was fast-casual? But when I said this was for "here"….I was directed to a table. I saw this happen a couple of more times during my two visits.

HH Tierrasanta 02

HH Tierrasanta 03 HH Tierrasanta 04I really enjoy a "chicken cutlet" when I'm back home. In local terms; katsu comes with local kine (usually ketchup based) katsu sauce, while cutlet means topped with gravy. Try that here in San Diego and you'll get blank stares. I did want to add a bit of gravy to my diet, so I went with the "Make your own Loco Moco" with Chicken Katsu as my base. The gravy a bit gluey, but went well (with some Tabasco…you can take the boy off the island, but….you know) with the nicely fried katsu. The egg was a bit over cooked. There was at least a scoop of rice under the proteins to go with what was topped with furikake. The rice was decent. The item that surprised me the most was the mac salad. I'd never been a fan of HH's mac salad, but it seems to have gotten better over the years. Today it was nicely chilled and decently salted and not overdressed with mayo.

The young lady who served me was very nice, if a bit disorganized and "spacy"…..she brought me my plate and then forgot my utensils having to bring me some, same with the Tabasco. Still, this was a nice enough meal.

So I returned with my coworkers Daniel and Calvin. Same really nice young lady, same forgetfulness. She almost brought us another table's food. Then Daniel's Lava Chicken arrived without any "sauce" on it.

I got the combination Korean Chicken and Katsu with (of course) gravy on it.

HH Tierrasanta 05

The Katsu was bit over fried this time around and on the dry side……thank goodness for the gravy which was nicely flavored. That Korean Chicken wasn't quite as good as I recalled; fairly low on flavor, a bit over fried with some burnt bits and on the dry side.

Perhaps they are still settling in, but things seem to be a hit and miss. I'll return in a couple of months to check back in. The location is prime for this type of concept, even with Island Style Café nearby.

Homestyle Hawaiian Pub & Eatery
10601 Tierrasanta Boulevard
San Diego, CA 92124
Hours:
Monday 5pm – 9pm
Tues – Sat 1130am – 9pm
Closed Sunday

Poke Etc.

A few weeks ago; I was in National City and decided to check out what was going on with Point Point Joint. When I drove into the parking lot I was shocked to see PPJ was gone! Wow, first Conching's and now Point Point Joint! I guess I really don't get down here near enough these days. The other thing I was surprised to see; though I probably shouldn't have been, was a place name Poke Etc had taken PPJ's place.

Poke Etc 01

I was just going to get into my car and as we say back home; "hele" to somewhere else. But I decided to take a peek inside; which was kind of interesting. The lay-out seemed very much PPJ; in spite of the freshening up, it still looked a bit worn.

Poke Etc 02

I really wasn't interested in the poke….more interested in the "etc"…..stuff like Shoyu Chicken, Lau Lau, Kalua Pork, Teriyaki Chicken….I'm not sure when I last had Ilocano Longanisa. My friends growing up were Ilocano, so I was kind of used to the vinegary; garlicky longanisa. The first time I had Longsilog in San Diego I was rather shocked at how sweet it was. But over the years I've come to enjoy it.

Poke Etc 03

There a collection of "stuffs", an almost random collection most of which you can get from Marukai, and a reach in fridge with Hawaiian Sun, haupia, mac salad, Portuguese sausage (sorry not "my" brand")…you know, etc….

I'd had enough "Mainland poke" for a while so just went with the Lau Lau Combo ($9.95)……not really expecting much.

Poke Etc 04 Poke Etc 05You know; the lau lau wasn't bad….I mean, it wasn't "really" lau lau if you know what I mean; it was missing the very important salted butterfish, which adds an awesome salty-savory touch to lau lau and is all important. The difference between this and what I typically get here on the mainland is; and it pretty much holds true for most frozen lau lau, is that it was moist, not too salty, it had quite a bit of luau leaf, but I love the steamed taro leaves, which have a smoky, flavor. Again, not really lau lau, but the pork shoulder was moist, tender, and not too stringy. What really put a damper on things is the lack of "chili pepper water"….bummer. The rice was on the dry side foe my taste; especially when eating local kine food…..

I hadn't read the menu very closely; instead of the usual mac salad, this came with a scoop of poke. Oh-oh……. There's basically 8 different poke, already made; over ice, just like home. I'm a purist, so I decided on the Ahi Limu and was pleasantly surprised.

Poke Etc 06

First off, the fish was decent quality; think basically Safeway or Foodland on Oahu. The limu was actually the fine Limu Kohu…….not the hard branches. Some not so great pieces, but mixed and coated evenly, not too salty; a bit of shoyu; this wasn't bad at all.

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So I returned and decided to see how the loco moco ($8.95) was. I should have probably just gone with maybe some poke and rice…..

Poke Etc 14 Poke Etc 15Doesn't the loco moco look like some Edvard Munch inspired, food emoji basically saying "don't eat me"?

This wasn't good eats, from the very gluey, tasteless gravy; which had the same viscosity as the egg yolk. They just kind of oozed into one another. To the burger which was pretty darn tough, to the rice which was again on the dry side. I just didn't care for this.

Poke Etc 16 Poke Etc 17The onions might have added to the dish; in this state they added some flavor; but just think if they'd been caramelized a bit more; it would have added some depth.

So, I decided to come in and just get a poke bowl……I got the "Create your own bowl" which was reasonably priced at $8.95. Of course I hot the Ahi Limu and this time added the Kimchi Poke.

Poke Etc 18 Poke Etc 19On this day the Ahi Limu wasn't right; the fish wasn't coated well, there were too many pieces with tough connective tissue; and in spite of the Limu Kohu, this seemed off. The fish in the Kimchi Poke was slightly better, but not by much. Not a big fan of the flavors which was more salty than spicy. It just wasn't very interesting. To make matters worse, the rice was even more dry than before.

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I mean, it's ok to have some pieces with "sugi" in them; but not so many……

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Poke Etc was starting to be a bit of enigma; I just couldn't put my finger on what this place did consistently well. I decided to pay one more visit. I was going to order the Shoyu Chicken; but it didn't come with poke and I wanted to give that one more shot. So I decided on the Island Bento ($11.95) to go. The menu states Teriyaki Chicken, Tonkatsu, and Poke. This is what I got.

Poke Etc 21 Poke Etc 23I have no idea what this was supposed to be, but I don't think it's what I ordered. That tonkatsu was pounded very thin, breaded, then fried to a dry, stringy place that can only be described as death. What's up with the bland sautéed onions and the frozen peas and carrots? Kind of sad because the Ginger Ahi was nicely flavored, not too much ginger, good soy, not too salty, the fish was nicely mixed and coated well, and there were only a few pieces with too much connective tissue. I'd easily have that again.

Poke Etc 22 Poke Etc 09After this….four visits in the can; I decided that I need to give the place a rest. I'm still not quite sure if they can put out a consistent product; though I do like the "old school" style poke….when it's on. If one of those "Chi-Poke" places (i.e. San Diego Poke Company, etc….) could get it right, it would be great. The woman who works here is really nice and friendly….and heck, I saw boiled peanuts for sale; I need to bring my own chili pepper water though, and there's still that Ilocano Longanisa I have to try one of these days……..one of these days.

Interesting to note that Poke Etc is a chain of (currently) four shops, two in Long Beach and one in Carson. I'm sure we'll see more pop-up here in San Diego.

Poke Etc
916 E 8th St
National City, CA 91950