Jean Hee's Best of the Best Hawai'i Recipes


Book Description

Who can resist comfort foods from Hawaii like Portuguese bean soup, soba salad, shoyu poke, chicken chili, tonkatsu, butter yaki, and haupia chocolate pie? You'll find them all here, laid out with clear instructions and packed with local color and fond memories of the people and places associated with these tasty, family-pleasing recipes.




Hawai'i's Best Local Dishes


Book Description

Easy to make recipes from the Hawaiian Islands featuring local favorites that capture the flavors of Hawaii's cuisines such as Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Hawaiian, Portuguese, and Southeast Asian, just to name a few.




Hawaii's Best Mochi Recipes


Book Description

What?s chewy and moist, comes in all shapes and flavors, great for picnics, parties, office treats for coffee break and EASY to prepare? Why, it?s a mochi dessert - always popular in Hawaii! In this grand collection of mochi recipes, not only can you find traditional recipes and today?s popular mochi desserts all in one cookbook, but also included are entrees, such as Siu Mai with Mochi Rice, Crisp Fried Shrimp, and Mochiko Chicken. There is also a microwave section for today?s busy lifestyle. The average microwave cooking time is around 10 minutes. Best of all, most mochi desserts can be prepared a day ahead and require no refrigeration.




Hawaii's Best Pupu & Potluck


Book Description

Jean Hee, author of the best selling cookbooks Hawaii's Best Mochi Recipes, Hawaii's Best Local Desserts, and Hawaii's Best Local Dishes brings together more than 100 favorite island recipes, most of them quick and easy to make, for your next get-together. From Ono Shrimp Poke to Hawaiian-Style California Rolls, from Pipikaula to Crispy Gau Gee, these are the beloved recipes passed on from coworkers, friends, and family, and found at potlucks and intimate gatherings throughout the islands.




Hawaiʻi's Best Salads, Sides & Soups


Book Description

Comforting soups, crisp salads, and flavorful sides from the Hawaiian Islands featuring local ingredients that capture the flavors of Hawaii's cuisines such as Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Hawaiian, Portuguese, and Southeast Asian, just to name a few.




The Best of the Best Hawaii Local Desserts


Book Description

Sixteen years ago, Jean Hee released her first desserts cookbook, Hawai`i¿s Best Local Desserts. Almost a decade later, by popular demand Jean released Hawai`i¿s New Best Local Desserts, a collection of recipes that couldn¿t be finished on time for her first book (Jean rigorously test and double tests each recipe) and ones that had been passed on by friends and family in the years that followed, some geared for quick preparation for the busy lifestyle that had become the norm.This newest book, The Best of the Best Hawai`i Local Desserts, is a collection of Jean¿s favorite dessert recipes compiled from all her cookbooks¿not just the desserts ones¿so they can be found in one convenient volume.For this new compilation, Jean hand-picked the most popular and favorite recipes which she tested and retested. The result is a collection of easy-to-prepare desserts that use ingredients found in any pantry as well as elegant, made-from-scratch masterpieces for those who have the time to bake on a lazy Sunday afternoon. The recipes take advantage of Hawai`i¿s bounty of fruit. There¿s plenty of bread pudding recipes, chocolate galore, and a wide variety of cookies, bars, tarts and cupcakes that are sure to be an instant hit with any crowd.







Little Hawaiian Cookbooks


Book Description




Little Hawaiian Cookbook


Book Description

"A collection of the best and favorite local recipes from pupu to desserts"--Provided by publisher.




Da Kine Talk


Book Description

Hawaii is without parallel as a crossroads where languages of East and West have met and interacted. The varieties of English (including neo-pidgin) heard in the Islands today attest to this linguistic and cultural encounter. "Da kine talk" is the Island term for the most popular of the colorful dialectal forms--speech that captures the flavor of Hawaii's multiracial community and reflects the successes (and failures) of immigrants from both East and West in learning to communicate in English.