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                KILOHANA GRILL Newsletter

JANUARY, 2010
In This Issue
HAWAIIAN EVENTS
POINT OF INTEREST
DAYS OF MY YOUTH
PIDGIN CORNER
HAWAIIAN WORD
HAWAIIAN EVENTS
grad cap

January 1:  KILOHANA GRILL IS CLOSED

January 9, 10:  Tradewinds of the Tropics, Alden Lane Nursery, Livermore 925 447-0280 10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Orchid Show and Workshop.  kilohana Grill will be serving our great food at this event- so come on by!
POINT OF INTEREST:  LAHAINA, MAUI


Seen from a short distance offshore, LAHAINA is one of the prettiest towns in all Hawaii, still recognizable as the peaceful, tropical village it used to be. Its main oceanfront street is lined with timber-frame buildings; a tall-masted sailing ship bobs in the harbor; coconut palms sway to either side of the central banyan tree; surfers swirl into the thin fringe of beach to the south; and the mountains of West Maui dominate the skyline, ringed as often as not by beautiful rainbows. Up close, however, many of Lahaina's decrepit-looking structures turn out to be mere fakes, housing T-shirt stores and tacky themed restaurants, and the crowds and congestion along Front Street can seem all too reminiscent of Waikiki.

Lahaina boasts a colorful past. By the time the first foreigners came to Hawaii, it was already the residence of the high ali'i of Maui. Kamehameha the Great sealed his conquest of Maui by sacking the town in 1795, then returned in 1802 and spent a year preparing for what was to be an unsuccessful invasion of Kauai. His successors, Kamehameha II and III, made Lahaina their capital between the 1820s and 1840s, ruling from the island of Moku'ula, in a lake in what is now Malu 'ulu o Lele Park, south of downtown.

When whaling ships started to put in during the 1820s, seeking to recuperate from their grueling Pacific peregrinations, fierce struggles between the sailors and Lahaina's Christian missionaries became commonplace.

With the decline in whaling, Lahaina turned towards agriculture. Sugar arrived in 1862, when the Pioneer Mill Company was established, while pineapples followed early in the twentieth century. The roadstead had never been quite as safe as the sailors had liked to imagine, and a new harbor was constructed in 1922 at Mala Wharf, just north of town. Unfortunately it proved to be dangerously storm-prone, and Lahaina is no longer a port of call for ships of any size.

Devastated by a huge fire in 1919 and by the state-wide tsunami of 1946, Lahaina remained a sleepy backwater until the 1970s. Only with the success of the Pioneer Mill Company's resort development at neighboring Ka'anapali did it return to prominence, as the hectic tourist destination of today. The mill itself, meanwhile, quietly closed down in 1999.

http://travel.yahoo.com/p-travelguide-475384-lahaina_vacations-i

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  HAUOLI MAKAHIKI HOU!
                                Happy New Year!

Wow!  Another year is upon us and we hope that you all had a marvelous holiday season.We pray that this year brings you and your family  much happiness and prosperity.

In Hawaii, because of the large Asian community, fireworks for New Year's Day is a bigger event than the Fourth of July. The fireworks were supposed to ward off the evil spirits.

We used to gather at my grandfather's house that was high on a hill in Kalihi and watch as the city became covered in smoke as the night progressed.  I remember seeing strings of fireworks hanging from telephone wires till it touched the ground.  it was typical that each family would have their own string and at midnight, everything would blow.  Back then, roman candles and aerial fireworks went up all over town.   

It's not like that anymore, air pollution regulations due to asthma sufferers and dumb people throwing fireworks off hotel balconies have restricted much of the fireworks use.

 Hope you are all well - Malama Pono - Take care,
Pam and Myron Kashima and all of the staff at Kilohana Grill
DAYS OF MY YOUTH - MYRON KASHIMA

HULA  Bamboo Cannons - Plantation Style Noise makers

When I was in high school, us boys would hike into the forest and cut down bamboo to make cannons.  Now it sounds pretty simple except, the bamboo we used were about 15' to 20' and probably 8" in diameter.  We only wanted about 10' of the bamboo so we would climb half way up the stalk and cut the top off. The top would drop to the ground and of course, we had to be careful not to kill the other kid below.  It was this bottom piece - about 10' that we cut to use to make our "cannons".

Now you'll have to use your imagination about how we constructed this cannon.  We would take a long steel rod or pipe and poke holes through all the knots except for the one on the bottom of the bamboo stalk.  Then, laying the bamboo down, we would drill a hole on the top side of the last chamber and fill it with gasoline or turpentine.  Then two of us took turns blowing into the hole so the fumes would fill each chamber all the way to the top.  Even with two boys, we would have to blow until we almost passed  out...  Then, we would get a separate long stick, wrap the tip with cloth and dip it in gas to use to ignite the fumes through the little blow hole and it would go  BOOM!   It was our way to make a lot of noise without spending money on fireworks.   We were constantly improving our "process" and started using a bicycle foot pump to get the air flowing instead of doing all that blowing.  Got even smarter when we used Freddy's dad's air compressor!

We used to have a blast (literally).  We would set off these cannons near the drunk driving check points knowing that the police officers couldn't leave their stations to chase us.  We would also have cannon wars shooting empty carnations cream cans out of the top.

Only time someone got burned (literally) was when one of the bamboo cannons split and the flaming gas got onto one of the younger kids.  Two older boys tackled him into the reservoir nearby.  His clothes didn't fare so well.  Kid almost drowned instead of having serious burns because they held him down to douse all the flames.  After that, we improved our design and wrapped the bottom chamber with wire to prevent splitting for "safety" reasons.

In hindsight, there are several points in this story where we could have probably died but we must have been lucky because no one was ever seriously injured as far as I can remember.

So, until next month, enjoy this special time with your family and friends. - Aloha, Myron   BOOM!
PIDGIN CORNER - LEARN SOME LOCAL "SLANG"

Chance 'Um

This simply means, take a chance...  When we were deciding whether to open this restaurant, I told Myron, let's CHANCE 'UM.  I did not want to look back later in life and wonder if we would have been successful  or how different our lives would have been.  I must say that our lives have been forever changed since we started this adventure and we have met literally THOUSANDS of wonderful people through the years.

(Needless to say, this phrase can also get you into
serious trouble once in awhile!)
HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE MONTH

Kapakahikap·a·ka·hi [ kąppə ka'a hee
Confused, mixed up or out of kilter, messed up, crooked.

I tried to knit a sweater but it didn't come out so good, it was all kapakahi..

Spicy Spam Kabobs

Preparation:  Combine first 7 ingredients in 9x12" dish. Wrap pea pods around pineapple chunks. Alternately thread SPAM cubes, pineapple chunks, and bell pepper pieces on eight skewers. Place in dish with marinade. Cover and marinade 2 hours, turning occasionally. Grill kabobs over medium-hot coals 10 minutes, turning occasionally. Or, broil 5" from heat source 8-10 minutes, turning occasionally. Serve with hot cooked rice.

http://www.bigoven.com/64582-Spicy-Spam-Kabobs-recipe.html

I hope you enjoyed our newsletter.  I welcome your feedback and you can unsubscribe at anytime.  Until next month.....

A hui hou - until we meet again

Aloha,
PAM KASHIMA
KILOHANA GRILL