Roll With It: Thai Street Food at Kaka‘ako’s Elephant Shack
An unlikely mini-chain from O‘ahu’s North Shore has rolled into the heart of the industrial district.
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Dining Editor

Dining Editor Mari Taketa spearheads coverage of the city’s dining scene for HONOLULU Magazine and its digital food blog, Frolic Hawai‘i. A 10-year veteran of traditional journalism, she traded in a career at The Associated Press in Tokyo and Hawai‘i Business Magazine for nonprofit adoption work in Ho Chi Minh City. Food brought her back to journalism, starting with Metromix Honolulu, The Honolulu Advertiser, Hana Hou and now HONOLULU. She is also excited by travel and periodically attempts to learn new languages.
An unlikely mini-chain from O‘ahu’s North Shore has rolled into the heart of the industrial district.
Seriously, how DO you feel about these cookies? Plus groundbreaking news and a charming food truck story.
From Kalihi to Kāhala to Kāne‘ohe, a record 12 eateries will prepare one-day-only natto creations featuring Japan’s famously slimy bean.
Congrats to America’s Best Chef: Northwest & Pacific!
Bonbon Appétit: Koho Bonbons are more than just eye candy.
Inside the heart of Koreamoku.
A Puerto Rican food truck, a roundup of new openings and where a dining editor really likes to eat.
Karma came to a tiny Okinawan hole-in-the-wall.
Craft ice cream, smash burgers, ramen and a Japanese sando shop: What’s coming to the island’s food scene.
Find them inside a luxury car showroom on Friday and Saturday nights, by reservation only.
A roundup of the stories you deemed most drool-worthy and shareable.
This stretch of Nu‘uanu Avenue is getting a new grab-and-go spot with sandwiches, desserts and banchan. The question is when will it open?
José Andrés’ fame for feeding the destitute may have overtaken his renown as a celebrity chef.
Past the produce aisle is a new spot for cocktails and toast with 400 Rabbits and a world of ideas in a glass.
Doors close for good on this experimental tiny-business incubator on April 16. We checked in with as many as we could to find out their plans.
It’s on the same block as old Sorabol and it is lit—same menu and windows literally everywhere.
Of course we expected Side Street Inn and Elena’s. Not expected: a pie shop in Wahiawā, three poke counters and a ritzy steak house.
The rich mix of seafood is normally only available in a $300 omakase at Sushi Sho.
Part 2 of Frolic’s resource for open-air dining in neighborhoods around O‘ahu.
Pageviews don’t lie—here are the stories you read and shared most.
Oxtail soup was definitely up there—but it wasn’t January’s most-read post.
Sorabol, Menchanko-Tei, Yogurstory, Ireh are giving way to—you guessed it—a new condo development.
Places we loved most from a year of extraordinary openings.
Pizza, cupcakes, curry noodles, yakiniku: Top dishes still on the brain after a year of good eating.
For the ultimate comfort food, we turn to our Hale ‘Aina winners for Hawaiian dishes passed down through generations as well as some sweet spins on a classic favorite.
It’s not easy being gold. For Keaka Lee, chef-owner of Kapa Hale, a typical week means 16-hour days, six-and-a-half days a week.
Made with O‘ahu-grown chocolate, they even have their own upscale boutique.
Whether your friends and family are naughty or love spice, you’ll find the right gift for everyone with great taste on your list.
The Waikīkī karaoke bar is hosting free turkey dinners with all the fixings—donate what you can and if you can’t, you’re still welcome.
We asked our readers and searched the island for the best of everything—locally-made light beer to locally-grown açaí, sushi cake to soufflé pancakes, sherbet to taro doughnuts—all so you can live better in Honolulu.
We asked our readers and searched the island for the best of everything—from locally designed house dresses and locally made hand sanitizers, gifts to art, jewelry to native plants—all so you can live better in Honolulu.
You won’t find these seven takeout bowls at sushi bars or restaurants, but many are worthy of them.
Move over, pink and white chichi dango. The 100-year-old shop has been innovating.
Welcome to Honolulu’s quirkiest budget happy hour.
It’s the Chinatown restaurant’s first menu overhaul in nearly a year and a half.
We’re all about deals, and after months of takeout, if it comes with elevated ambience and unexpected finesse, even better.
Fish & Rice is worth braving Pālama Supermarket’s parking lot.
Think of it as a one-stop poke convenience shop.