• Hawaii is home to the longest continuously erupting volcano in recorded history: Kilauea Caldera on the Big Island of Hawaii has been producing a lava flow since January 1983. More >>
• Hawaii is the most geographically isolated population center on earth. The Hawaiian Islands are 2,000 miles from the Marshall Islands; 2,390 miles from California; 2,500 miles from Tahiti; 3,850 miles from Japan; 4,900 miles from China; and 5,280 miles from the Philippines.
• 'Iolani Palace in Honolulu's Capitol District featured electricity before even the White House in Washington, D.C. More about the Palace >>
• Hawaii has two official languages English and Hawaiian. More >>
• Hawaii is home to the tallest mountain on the planet: Mauna Kea on the Big Island — measured from the seafloor — tops out at 33,476 feet. From sea level it measures 13,796 feet high. More >>
• Hawaiian monarch King David Kalakaua (reign 1874 to 1891), was the first reigning monarch to circumnavigate the globe and the first foreign head of state to speak before a joint session of the U.S. Congress.
Once considered something of a culinary backwater, Hawai'i found its way to the center of the fine-dining universe with the advent of Pacific Rim cuisine — a melding of European techniques with familiar ingredients of Asia and the Pacific, many of which are now grown (or herded, or netted) at home in the Islands.
Even so, the base of Hawai'i's food triangle is much broader than its most visible tip. Every ethnic group that emigrated here over the last century has added its own flavors to an already simmering pot. Along with such traditional Hawaiian staples as poi and laulau (pork or fish wrapped in taro leaves and baked in an earthen oven), there is adobo (braised chicken or pork) from the Philippines and kim chee (pickled cabbage) from Korea; mochi (glutinous rice cake) from Japan and char siu (barbecued pork) from China.
Throughout the Islands, restaurants serve the native cuisine of such far-flung destinations as Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, India, Europe and even the American South! One can also find every sort of libation here, from Asian tea and fine imported sake to some of the world's best locally grown coffees, boutique microbrewed beers and several varieties of wine made from grapes grown in the lush upland vineyards of Maui and the Big Island.
Enjoy!
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