For our Hawaiian friends or anyone...I would like a killer Hawaiian Coleslaw

karennoca

Well-known member
recipe to go with pulled Hawaiian chicken sandwiches.. I am going to use Pat's Cilantro Coconut Rice as a side. Having our second son and family over the weekend and wanted to do something different. I watched the Kids BBQ Championship today and they had a luau episode and it gave me the idea. One of the kids make a Hawaiian Coleslaw, her name was Josie, which the judges raved over...but I cannot locate the recipe. Maybe they do not post them?

Is there a fun drink I can serve with dinner...easy one?

Thanks for any ideas or suggestions.

I have a 14 year old granddaughter who is vegetarian, but I think if I serve her the grilled Hawaiian buns with butter, the coleslaw, and rice, she will get enough to eat. Thinking I might serve fresh grilled pineapple with brown sugar sprinkled over the top, as well.

 
I have never run into a "Hawaiian Coleslaw" Karen. They eat coleslaw here of course......

It is generally the creamy kind made with mayo. Usually with carrots and onions besides cabbage. Maybe someone made up a recipe for coleslaw and put the ubiquitous ingredient that everyone thinks of Hawaiian in it.....pineapple and called it Hawaiian Coleslaw.

 
If you Google Hawaiian Coleslaw, there are tons of recipes for it.

Many have just what you mentioned, plus mango, pineapple, purple cabbage and green most with mayo, many without. Since I have never made a coleslaw with tropical fruits, I thought someone might have a tried and true they loved. All good ingredients so I think it will be great no matter which one I decide to try.

I think you are right about the ubiquitous ingredient. Yesterday, as I was watching the Kids Championships in the Luau episode, all six of them chose pineapple to do something with,, even though they provided a wide array of tropical fruits. The judges threw the kids a curve and told them they had to get more creative with the other fruits, as well. One of the best young chefs, settled on Star Fruit which he grilled.

 
I remember reading in CI that "Congo Bars", which are simply butterscotch brownies with...

...coconut in them, are called "Congo..." because someone back in the 50s associated coconut with the Congo in Africa!

Wacky bakers...

Michael

 
Congo Bars! Oh my, talk about memories. I was in high school and in a play

My best friend said, let's make Congo Bars for the party after the play> Congo Bars? I had never heard of them. They became a love of mine for years, and I made them for our kids too. Must see if I still have that recipe. Thanks for the memories!

 
REC: Congo Bars

Congo Bars

From Cook's Illustrated. Published July 1, 2005.

Makes 36 bars.

Despite their name, Congo bars have nothing at all to do with Africa. In fact, they are little more than blondies enriched with coconut -- an ingredient that was exotic in years past perhaps but is far from it these days. We tried adding both sweetened, flaked coconut and unsweetened, shredded coconut to our blondies, and tasters unanimously preferred the unsweetened. Sweetened coconut did little but make the bars overly sweet and unpleasantly chewy. We were able to extract a bit more flavor from the unsweetened coconut by toasting it golden brown before adding it to the blondie dough. If you have trouble locating unsweetened shredded coconut, try a natural food store or an Asian market. Keep a close eye on the coconut when toasting as it can burn quickly.

Ingredients

1 cup pecans (or walnuts), toasted and chopped coarse
1 1/2 cups unsweetened shredded coconut
1 1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour (7 1/2 ounces)
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon table salt
12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks), melted and cooled
1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar (10 1/2 ounces)
2 large eggs , lightly beaten
4 teaspoons vanilla extract
6 ounces white chocolate chips (1 cup) or chopped bar, or 3 ounces each white chocolate and semisweet chocolate chips

Instructions

1. Adjust oven rack to the middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Spread nuts on larged rimmed baking sheet and bake until deep golden brown, 10 to 15 minutes. Transfer nuts to cutting board to cool; chop coarsely and set aside. Toast coconut on same rimmed baking sheet, stirring 2 to 3 times, until light golden, about 5 to 7 minutes.

2. While nuts and coconut toast, cut 18-inch length foil and fold lengthwise to 8-inch width. Fit foil into length of 13 by 9-inch baking pan, pushing it into corners and up sides of pan; allow excess to overhang pan edges. Cut 14-inch length foil and fit into width of baking pan in same manner, perpendicular to first sheet (if using extra-wide foil, fold second sheet lengthwise to 12-inch width). Spray foil-lined pan with nonstick cooking spray.

3. Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt together in a medium bowl; set aside.

4. Whisk melted butter and brown sugar together in medium bowl until combined. Add eggs and vanilla and mix well. Using rubber spatula, fold dry ingredients into egg mixture until just combined; do not overmix. Fold in chocolate, coconut, and nuts and turn batter into prepared pan, smoothing top with rubber spatula.

5. Bake until top is shiny, cracked, and light golden brown, 22 to 25 minutes; do not overbake. Cool on wire rack to room temperature. Remove bars from pan by lifting foil overhang and transfer to cutting board. Cut into 2-inch squares and serve.

 
Whoops, just looked over the originl post and realized I left out...

the pineapple and honey!!!

Add to the salad 1 cup chopped fresh pineapple.

Add to the dressing when you whisk it together: 2 tbls. honey.

 
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