Category Archives: Alan Wong

Alan Wong at the White House

Our friend Chef Alan Wong is cooking for President Obama on Thursday night. It’s a White House lu‘au on the South Lawn for the President, his family and congressional delegates from all 50 states with their families.

Read more about it here.

Last year when Chef Alan made his annual visit to Hamakua Springs Country Farms, he and his chefs and restaurant staff cooked a huge feast for all the Hamakua farmers who grow and produce what he uses in his restaurants, as they do every year. And last year for the first time, there was an imu.

Imu

Chef Alan did some interesting things with that imu! For instance, I remember him wrapping long Wailea Ag Group hearts of palm in foil, with taro, and cooking it in the underground oven. All the food was just delicious.

This year, fish farmer Roy Tanaka told Chef Alan how good tilapia can be, and Chef Alan prepared it at our most recent cookout. Now he’s fixing it at the White House.

What other interesting and delicious foods will he prepare for the Obamas on Friday? Will their imu look much different than ours? Where are they going to get the right kind of rocks? Will there be a guy in jeans and a white t-shirt keeping flies away with a branch? I cannot wait to hear.

Kailiawa Coffee in Ka‘u Places 7th in International Coffee Competition

After Chef Alan Wong and his crew did the cookout at Hamakua Springs last month, they went down to Ka‘u to meet some of the farmers there.  Alan tasted the coffee that Thomas “Bull” and Jamie Kailiawa grow and harvest, and he immediately said, “Hey, send me some.” He ordered ten pounds on the spot. We all know that Chef Alan has a special talent in terms of tasting.

Last week his taste buds were validated –  Bull and Jamie Kailiawa’s Ka‘u coffee placed in the Top Ten in an international cupping competition held by the Specialty Coffee Association of America in Atlanta.

Their coffee was the only coffee from Hawai‘i to place, and it was up against the finest coffees of the world – coffees from Colombia, Panama, Ethiopia and other renowned growing regions. Their Kailiawa Coffee ranked seventh best in the world.

Imagine – a coffee growing in the hills of Pahala ranking as one of the world’s finest coffees.

Bull was born and raised at Mill Camp in Pahala, graduated from Ka‘u High School in 1981 and worked at the sugar plantation as a harvester and later a crane operator.

Kailiawa Jamie and Bull Kailiawa, with nephew Lyndon “Baba” Kailiawa-George in center

When the sugar plantation was poised to shut down, Bull moved to Hilo where he worked as a crane operator, operated his own landscaping business, and worked his way up the ropes to head security at Hilo Pier where cruise ships come in. He and his wife also ran a catering business, and he worked nights at restaurants, doing cooking, cleaning and security – but all he wanted was to go back home to Pahala.

When his aunties needed help with their coffee farm at Moa‘ula, they went, and ultimately the aunties turned the farm over to him. It’s a beautiful farm, with views of the ocean and steep hillsides, and an imu and waterfalls and rushing water.

“One thing good with my field,” he says, “is that my trees always get something to drink. Before noon there is mist and in the afternoons, it rains most every day.” Where they are, he says, the season is long, and while most farmers are pruning their coffee trees, his coffee is flowering again.

He says he learned about growing coffee by asking questions of other coffee farmers and putting it all together. This season, they netted almost 5000 pounds of parchment.

Bull acknowledges his nephew, Lyndon “Baba” Kailiawa-George, a ninth-grader who Bull says “has been my partner in work from the very beginning.”

The Kailiawas also do ranch work, raise chickens, and trade coffee for beef and pretty much any other food they need.

“It’s terrific that the highest ranking coffee in the state, the coffee recognized as having the highest quality, is grown by this Hawaiian guy,” says Richard. “And he’s just a regular guy. A former sugar cane worker who hunts and fishes and that kind of thing. Not a gentleman farmer.”

Congratulations to Bull, Jamie and Baba!

Part 2: And Then They Cooked For Us

(Part 1 is here: We Took Alan Wong To See The Tilapia)

And then, everyone just pitched in to prepare the food. Chef Alan took charge of the seafood bouillabaisse, while others inside the green shack started preparing salads and other dishes. People just seemed to do whatever needed to be done.

Every once in a while someone would come up to Chef Alan with a spoonful of something for him to taste, and he would taste it and tell them to add this or add that.

Outside, Conrad jumped in and started to scale the fish. Tilapia is a
very spiky fish, but Conrad did not even consider using the neoprene glove I had available. People just jumped in and backed him up.

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Conrad Nonaka – Director, Culinary of the Pacific

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Kevin Hopkins donated a five-pound sturgeon, and Chef Marc from the Pineapple Room did the honors.

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Marc Urquidi

Then it was time to fire up the grills – one for steaks and another for fish. Conrad put two fish on the grill and told us something about leaving it for four minutes, and then he left to go help inside. When he came back out, instead of using a spatula he rocked the fish back and forth with his bare hands and flipped it that way.

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I was amazed.

Inside, they used what they had and improvised. It was amazing to see.

Then Chef Alan asked me to come and taste the spicy bouillabaisse. He said he was thickening it with the tilapia meat, while the sturgeon would hold its form and stay firm.

He told me to try the red ketchup made from my grape tomatoes. “Make a fist,” he said. “Try this.” And he put a spoonful of the ketchup on the back of my fist to taste.

Next, I tried the orange tomato ketchup and then the goat cheese ketchup. He said, “Try the namasu made from your Japanese cucumber.”

He said, “You can make all that.”

I thought, “We really do need to build a certified kitchen so we can do value added production.”

Dinner was served with matching wines. Some of the people attending were Bob and Janice Stanga; Michelle Galimba and Chris Manfredi from Ka‘u; Chef and Mrs. Allan  Okuda; Kevin and Dayday Hopkins; my sister Lei and her husband Dennis Vierra; my Mom Florence; June; my daughter Tracy, her husband Kimo, their daughter Kimberly and their son Kapono and his friend Matt; as well as Chef Alan’s staff and friends.

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Left to right: Tracy Pa, Chris Manfredi, Janice Stanga, Ellis Hester, Laurene Oda, Chef Alan Wong, Kathy Kawashige, Leigh Ito

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Left to right: Dennis Vierra, Leilani Vierra, Grandma Ha, Kimberly Pa

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Ua and Michelle Galimba; Roy Tanaka; Kathy Kawashige

We sat there and ate and ate. We all had a great time chatting and talking story. Chef Alan Wong believes in sticking together through thick and thin. This was the fourth time he has done a cookout on our farm, and this time was very special. It was a great way to end a wonderful day of camaraderie.

Thank You, Chef Alan and crew!

We Took Alan Wong To See The Tilapia

Chef Alan Wong came to our farm and cooked an unbelievable meal for his Big Island farmer friends this past Friday.

He does this every year, bringing along staff from his Alan Wong’s Restaurant as well as the Pineapple Room, and it serves several purposes. Touring farms and breaking bread with the farmers gives his staff a totally new confidence level when they describe the ingredients that make up dishes on the menu. Instead of just a word on the menu, the ingredient becomes a product of a friend.

And as for the farmers, Chef Alan and his staff have become our friends. Can you imagine it? Chef Alan and his staff cooking for the farmers?

Farmers look at the people they supply as the customer. Customers are never wrong! And so farmers are always attempting to please the customer.

Chef Alan reverses this role. And the farmers are very, very grateful. Now, we all want to try even harder to make sure everything we supply to Chef Alan is absolutely top notch. I know I speak for all the farmers when I say this.

For all us farmers, Alan Wong’s Restaurant is no longer an abstraction. It is made up of people—real people.

We went together down to Roy Tanaka’s tilapia farm, and because it was drizzly and muddy Chef Alan had to choose between wearing slippers or waterlogged shoes. Who knew that Chef Alan wears slippers! Chef Alan and his staff are real people; they did not let a little Hilo rain stop them from checking out the fish. It impressed me and I know it impressed Roy.

Alan richard roy staff fishpondThat’s Alan Wong in the blue jacket; Roy Tanaka with hand on fishpond

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Richard (left) and Roy Tanaka

Roy’s farm is elegant in its simplicity. Water from a waterfall was piped into a series of tanks, each one dropping to the next, aerating and cleaning as it passes by. His plumbing joints were not glued so draining his tanks was just a matter of disconnecting some joints or repositioning angles. Harvesting the fish was simple when the water level was lowered to a manageable level. Alan’s crew enjoyed talking to Roy. They got it that there was definitely more there than meets the eye.

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Alan Wong with tilapia

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Leigh Ito of Alan Wong’s staff

Chef Alan and Leigh Ito had too much fun catching dinner. Chef Alan and his staff cooked the tilapia for us that night.

Thanks to Roy, we are setting up a similar system on fish farming at our farm. Since we have a difficult time raising our workers’ pay, we are attempting to grow food for our workers. Every Thursday we distribute fruit and vegetables to them.

We have running water going into our reservoir, so we diverted some and utilized the same principle that Roy uses.

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Tilapia at Hamakua Springs Country Farms

Tilapia fish are vegetarians and we are attempting to feed them some of the waste stream from our operations. And their waste goes into the reservoir that we use to irrigate our crops. We may then be able to decrease a certain amount of fertilizer input.

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Our objective is to see how much of a zero waste farm we can achieve. Thanks to Roy Tanaka for helping us. He even gave all the tilapia fish for stocking our tanks.

Stay tuned for Part 2: “…And Then They Cooked For Us.”

Richard in Islands Magazine

I was sitting at my breakfast nook table, looking at Islands magazine, when I came across this article about Chef Alan Wong.

As I read, I saw that its writer interviewed Richard as well.
…Wong speaks about him with so much enthusiasm that I immediately book a flight to see him. Ha’s Hamakua Springs Country Farms is a 600-acre slice of land in the rather unassuming Pepe’ekeo. When I arrive to the town, no signposts guide my way to the farm where that miraculous tomato was harvested. Only a few wild chickens on lush green hillsides (parts of this island receive nearly 300 inches of rain per year) alert me that there’s taste-bud-blowing agriculture brewing nearby…

Good writing. Good article. Have a look.

Alan Wong’s “Farmers Series” Features Hamakua Springs

June and I went to Alan Wong’s Restaurant on Monday evening, when Chef Alan featured Hamakua Springs Country Farms. We were the third farm in their Farmers Series of special menus. The food was unbelievable – beyond words. We also chatted with the guests and it was a great experience.

Today we received an email from Arizona. This is what it said:

I was in Honolulu last weekend and had the great fortune to dine at Alan Wongs. The server indicated that the produce used in the dishes at Alan Wongs came from your farm. I was so smitten with the food at the restaurant that I purchased the cookbook.

That said, I will be having a dinner party next month at my home and it is my ambition to use recipes from the Alan Wong cookbook. I think the best way of achieving the level of quality that I experienced at the restaurant would be to use the really extraordinary produce that I enjoyed during my meal. I am not sure whether or not you have the ability or the interest in selling and shipping your produce to the mainland but, if you do, I would celebrate the opportunity to order all of the products that I need from your farm and have them shipped to me via overnight for use in my attempt to replicate the wonderful food at Alan Wongs.

Unfortunately, we are unable to ship to the mainland due to quarantine restrictions. We also chatted with a couple who told us that they had just been to Monaco and Paris and that Alan Wong’s Restaurant had the best food by far. June and I could not believe they were talking about the four-course dinner featuring tomatoes that came from our farm.

See the amazing Hamakua Springs Farmers Series menu

Chapter 3 – Keaukaha Morning

We watched Chef Alan Wong cook something up the other morning at Keaukaha Elementary School in Hilo.

He was there in conjunction with Richard’s Adopt-a-Class program. Chef Alan had adopted the 6th grade, and then asked if he could go speak to them. So when he was in town last week, he did.

The students chanted a Hawaiian welcome to him.

That crew is from PBS. They filmed the whole morning for a Chefs Afield episode they’re doing about Alan Wong, which will air sometime next year.

He is just wonderful with kids. Very down-to-earth, very open, very real. He’s a natural-born teacher and the students really responded. They were amazingly engaged.

He and Richard both spoke to the kids. Chef Alan told them, “If Alan Wong can do it, you can do it.” He told them that he grow up thinking salad dressing came out of a bottle. They, too, can achieve anything, he told them. “You just have to work hard,” he said.

Richard told them that when he was their age they were kind of poor, and they had a picnic table in the kitchen for their dinner table. He said his father would pound on that table and say, “Not ‘no can.’ ‘CAN!” Richard told those kids they could do anything they want.

Chef Alan showed the students how to make mayonnaise and also a li hing mui salad dressing. As he cooked in front of them, he kept pointing out what part of what he was doing had to do with reading, and what was math, and what was science, and made the point that if they wanted to do that kind of job they’d better stay in school.

 

When he started, he asked how many kids hated tomatoes and most raised their hands. By the time he did a taste test with them – they tasted a piece of Brand X tomato, and then a piece of a Hamakua Springs tomato – they were believers. At the end, some of his people walked around with platters of cut-up heirloom tomatoes and the kids were actually lunging for them, trying to get tomatoes to eat.

Afterward, some of the students showed Richard and Chef Alan their kalo (taro) patch.

The principal of the school told me they never get people of such celebrity speaking to, and inspiring, their kids. Richard says that one of the teachers told him, too, that no one comes to Keaukaha Elementary to tell the kids they too can do it. He says the teacher had tears in her eyes when she told him that.

It was really an incredible morning.

Chapter 2 – The Cookout

If the Tomato Recipe Contest was Chapter 1 in our interesting times of this past week, here’s Chapter 2.

You already read about Chef Alan Wong judging at our Tomato Recipe Contest the other day. Now let me tell you about something else he just did in conjunction with the farm.

Chef Alan, who is based on O‘ahu, regularly buys produce for his restaurants from Hamakua Springs as well as a few other farms here on the Hamakua Coast. And every year he flies his staff here – chefs and other staff from his different restaurants – for a couple days.

The purpose of his annual visit? To visit the farms, and the farmers, who produce the fresh, delicious ingredients they work with every day. Chef Alan has a personal connection with the sources of his food, and he wants his chefs and other employees to know where the food comes from too, and who grows it, and how, so they can take that knowledge back with them. So they visit each farm, see how the food grows and get to know the farmers a little.

Then the culmination of their visit is that all his restaurant people and all the farmers gather at Hamakua Springs for an absolutely world-class Alan Wong cookout using ingredients from those local farms. It’s Chef Alan’s unbelievably gracious and generous (and delicious) thank you to the farmers.

This year for the first time there was also an imu. On Monday afternoon Kimo and his good friend Al Jardine prepared the imu, filling it with pig, turkey, beef, taro, sweet potato and more.

Chef Alan put some nontraditional ingredients in the imu, too. Lesley Hill and Michael Crowell, of nearby Wailea Ag Group,
brought big long “trunks” of heart of palm to put into the imu as an
experiment (they were delicious).

Here’s how it looked after they opened the imu the next day and were taking the meat and other foods out. That’s Mrs. Ha there, Richard’s mom. She’s great.

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Here they are, chopping up the cooked meat. That’s Al in the blue shirt and Kimo in the red.

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We all gathered at the farm’s recently reclaimed green shack. We’ll tell you more about that historical building on the edge of Hamakua Springs later – it has a story, too. For now we’ll just say that it was the HQ for food preparation. See all the beautiful old photos of former plantation days? They tell some of the story of what plantation life used to look like.

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So everybody gathered the food from the imu and took it inside, where tables were set up and Chef Alan and staff cooked and set up the long serving table. There were some amazing dishes made with Hawai’i Island Goat Dairy goat cheese and local Hamakua Mushrooms, and Ka’u coffee and Big Island Candies and more.

It is absolutely amazing what Chef Alan can do on a portable gas burner.

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This was a shrimp, olive and tomato concoction. Is your mouth watering?

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The serving line. There was even more food around on the other side, too, that doesn’t show here.

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Richard thanked everyone for being there and talked about why Alan had brought us together, and then Richard’s grandson Kapono said a blessing in Hawaiian and English. And then we ate. And ate.

There was also a PBS crew present, taping the whole thing. They were following Chef Alan around taping a Chefs Afield program, which will air next year. There was a lot going on.

It was really a terrific evening. From the reason we were all there – because Chef Alan has such respect for, and such connections with, his farmer friends, and thanks them with such an incredible feast – to the new connections as restaurant folk and farmers got to know and appreciate each other, talk story and eat and laugh together. It was a fun, delicious, boisterous event where everybody seemed to be enjoy the food, the setting outside under the big tent, talking, the company.

A huge mahalo to Chef Alan and all his employees, who prepared such a tremendous feast and also created such a wonderful, memorable gathering.

Salad Dressing 201

This past Saturday, I had one of my most enjoyable days ever as a farmer. I was invited to sit in on a class Chef Alan Wong taught called Salad Dressing 201.

I had previously taken Salad Dressing 101, so I met the prerequisite.

Chef Alan loves to teach and he’s very good at it. He explained that fruits can be used as an emulsion—something to keep the solution mixed.

After using mango to make a vinaigrette, he asked, “And what else could we have used? Guava? Okay, good. What else?”

He started demonstrating how to make a spicy tomato dressing. Halfway through he said, “Notice this is the tomato soup that we do. You can do different colored tomatoes and pour them in glasses, side by side. Now add miso, roasted garlic, apple cider vinegar and blend in extra virgin olive oil. You now have spicy tomato dressing, using the tomato as the emulsifier.”

He asked, “Isn’t tomato a fruit?”

“What other fruit could you use?”

He took ½ cup of rice, salt and  ½ cup of water. Blended until syrupy. I’m thinking, “Rice? What is he doing blending rice?”

Rice is a starch, he says, and he asks: “What other kinds of starches could one use?” The class answers, “Sweet potatoes.” “Taro.”

“Good,” he says. “What else?”

“Add 2 tablespoons rice vinegar and rice oil. Blend.” Did I hear that right? Rice oil?

He says, “Make shoyu vinaigrette and add it to the rice mixture with wasabi. That’s the shoyu rice cream wasabi vinaigrette.”

The students tried a spoonful of each dressing. All the while, Chef Alan asked for opinions and suggestions. One had no choice but to be engaged. It was great!

By the way, try this, he said: Hamakua Sweet Tomato raisin. Dried with Balsamic vinegar and sugar.

I need to ask about this. I need to know how to make it.

At the end, Chef Alan made a dish with caramelized tomatoes. Cocktail tomatoes caramelized with one part sugar to one part sherry vinegar. Cook down in sauce pan.

He also smashed a cocktail tomato down in a dish. Put goat cheese on top of the tomato, and parsley and basil on top of that. It was beautiful to look at and delicious to taste.

I came away from the class with so many ideas floating around. I understand the general picture now and am thinking of a thousand delicious possibilities.

A Moveable Feast

Let me tell you – when Hamakua Springs hosts a cookout, it’s not just any old backyard-type event where somebody slaps together a few burgers.

Chef Alan Wong recently made his annual trek from Honolulu to the Hamakua coast, bringing chefs and other personnel from his restaurants to visit and meet the farmers whose products they cook with everyday.

And while they were here making the rounds and visiting their farmer friends, they came to Hamakua Springs and prepared a 12-course feast—a thank you—for friends and farmers here who, incidentally, supplied most of the fresh local ingredients.

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Alan Wong cooking

Richard pointed out that Chef Alan and his crew created a really unique atmosphere for this group of farmers. Though they all know each other, most usually only see each other in work-related situations—maybe on a tour, or while showing their products at a booth, or at a meeting. “This was the first time they all could talk story in a purely social situation,” he said, “and that was very special.”

The event was called a “cookout,” but that doesn’t properly describe this memorable dinner. Wanda Adams of the Honolulu Advertiser put together a video about the event, which you can view here.

The food was absolutely delicious. There were “beer sausage” pupus, with grass-fed beef from the North Shore Cattle Company, and smoked pork lechon salad. Garlic bread was topped with Dick and Heather Threlfall’s Hawai‘i Island Goat Dairy goat cheese, and there was a Hamakua Springs tomato salad with crispy pipikaula. One really popular (and delicious) appetizer was the guava-smoked Big Island goat cheese on shiso leaves and topped with pancetta. Yum.

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Guava-smoked Hawai‘i Island Goat Dairy cheese on shiso leaves with pancetta. Photo by Macario

Our smoked sausage, made by Kimo and Tracy and “The Pig Man” Alvin Jardine, was on the menu, as well as grilled, Big Island ribeye and grilled strip loin from Kulana Meats, and a grilled rib steak with chili lemongrass and goat cheese dressing.

In addition to their other varieties, Bob and Janice Stanga of Hamakua Mushrooms brought Chef Alan samples of their new product, the endemic Pepeiao mushroom, which is not available on the market yet but coming soon. It ended up in a mushroom and snow pea chow fun dish.

There were many, many other delicious dishes, too, including fresh prawns from the farm’s streams, fish, and an unbelievable paella.

Paella

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Paella. Photo by Macario

Our chef friends cooked with Wailea Agricultural Group’s fresh, tasty Hawaiian Heart of Palm, and every kind of Hamakua Springs produce.

Chef Alan even used Hamakua Springs bananas, cooked in butter and sugar, in the otherwise traditional s’mores (made of local chocolate) that they served at the end of the meal. In case anyone was still hungry.

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photo by Macario

All of the incredible food was prepared by the chefs who work at The Hualalai Grille by Alan Wong, as well as at Alan Wong’s Restaurant, on King Street in Honolulu, which was recently named by Gourmet magazine as the 8th best restaurant in the country.

What an incredible crew it was at work under the green- and white-striped tent. Some wore their street clothes and looked like the guy/girl next door—but it was clear they were not. These were professionals.

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It was interesting to watch these chefs, accustomed to working in the most upscale kitchens, working out-of-doors in a makeshift kitchen on a gravel lot. Nobody missed a beat. There were coolers and big pots everywhere, and most of the chefs had white- and green-striped kitchen towels tucked into a pocket. Skillets rested upside down atop other skillets atop propane grills, acting as lids. As a dish neared completion, its cook would bring a spoonful over to Alan Wong – “Chef,” they call him – who, I noticed, would conduct the definitive taste test.

So many people joined us and helped make it what it was. From the Hawai‘i Community College culinary program there was Chef Allan Okuda and his wife Kay, Chef Sandy Barr and six students. In addition to Wanda Adams from the Advertiser, other food writers in attendance were Sonia Martinez and Joan Namkoong.

Harold and Eric Tanouye from Green Point Nurseries brought stunning flower arrangements. From the farm, in addition to Richard, June, Kimo and Tracy, there was Chris Respicio, Florence Lovell, Ida Castillo, Wilfred Hansen, Downey Kajime and Susie White. Charlotte and Rodrigo Romo and their girls Sydney and Hana were there, in addition to myself, my daughter Emma Rose and my husband Macario, who photographed the food.

Richard’s mom was there, too. Mrs. Ha doesn’t go out much at nights. But Richard asked her if she wanted to come to the cookout and she did. She said the food was delicious and that Alan and lots of others went over to talk with her.

On the way home, Richard’s mom told him, “Do you remember how we didn’t even have a tractor in the beginning? Now I’m taking home a plate from Chef Alan Wong.” They laughed and talked about the old days. Richard’s mom was there helping out at the farm’s very beginning and she is still involved. See How It All Started, Part One.

It was a magnificent offering by Chef Alan and his people. There was so much generosity, and aloha, in the air, and everyone present seemed to feel as I did – that we were absolutely honored to be in the presence of such great cooks, who were working so hard to prepare us such unbelievably delicious food, the likes of which is rarely seen outside of very upscale restaurants. Walking through that beautiful buffet line and loading up a plate with some of the best food I can recall having (and then going back for some more) was a thrill.

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photo by Macario

Chef Alan and associates (Dan Nakasone, Leigh Ito, Wade Ueoka, Michelle Karr, Kerry Ichimasa, Miya Nishimura, Nicole Tajima, James Ebreo, Allen Hess, Liz Suarez, Valerie and Chris): We thank you for the gift of your time, energies, enthusiasm and talents, and especially for the tremendous feast. – posted by Leslie Lang