Table Of Content

The french toast was lovely and the eggs benedict with the kalua pork was a nice compliment. Yoshitsune is one of the few old-school, independent Japanese restaurants left in Waikīkī, tucked into the back of the Park Shore Hotel. Regulars order the two-tier chirashi, presented like a box of jewels, and the kamameshi, iron pots of rice simmered with seafood such as crab, abalone, or, in the fall, matsutake mushrooms. Most of the best dining in the area — and Honolulu generally — continues to be Japanese, and you’ll find it at a range of price points, from the takeout counter at Maguro Brothers to Sushi Sho’s $300 omakase.
For Brunch Time
The 10 Hottest Restaurants in Honolulu Right Now - Eater
The 10 Hottest Restaurants in Honolulu Right Now.
Posted: Tue, 11 Oct 2016 07:00:00 GMT [source]
Luckily, they come in a variety of different flavors so you that you can experience a wide variety of profiles. They open up fairly early in the morning which makes them easy to pick up before an adventure. Because we went after the dinner rush, there wasn’t much in the way of a line. We were quickly seated next to a cadre of international (mostly Japanese) visitors. Reading the reviews, this place gets busy during the actual brunch time so come early.
Give the Experience
Today, Waikiki is home to many of the large hotels on the island, high-end retailers, and a plethora of establishments focused on the tourism industry. The large floor to ceiling windows revealed delicious-looking pastries and over a dozen people lined up. This shop overall reminded me of some of my favorite brunch places in San Diego.
group DINING at
Many of the pastries have a local flair to them with flavors like passionfruit (lilikoi) and black sesame seed. Waikiki is a neighborhood on the south side of the island famous for its beach, Waikiki Beach. What was once a popular spot for Hawaiian royals became a series of small hotels in the late 1800’s. With the visit of Robert Louis Stevenson, many from the Mainland United States started coming over to visit the island. Henry’s Place is a hole-in-the wall place with signs that seem to yell at you.
Even with constant new development, Waikīkī is also the most walkable neighborhood in Honolulu, a city that at times feels aggressively anti-pedestrian. Couple that with the oceanfront location, which provides easy access to the beach and food at all times, and you get a dining destination that’s hard to pass up. It would be a mistake to not include a single place that serves coconut shrimp on this list. One of the best renditions is, surprisingly, at the restaurant of resort-wear brand Tommy Bahama.

Newcomers such as the Cuban-inspired Castro’s and French-inflected Nature have helped diversify Waikīkī’s excellent dining options too. The crowds in Waikīkī have lessened somewhat from last year, but Hawai‘i suffers the same labor shortages that plague the rest of the restaurant industry, so you’ll still need a bit of patience when dining out. This time around I saw ice cream cones that looked like a piece of art and buns made into cute little animals. They have many different types of pastries ranging from biscotti to lava cakes.
Sushi Sho
The restaurant also serves as the entrance to Sushi Sho, another spot on this list. Despite the fact Waikīkī is home to Oahu’s most famous beach — two miles of white sand where there’s never a bad view of Diamond Head or the sunset over the warm, clear blue water — it’s tempting to leave the area to the tourists. But you’d miss out on some of the best places to eat on the island, which draw plenty of locals for a bite.
KAYAK searches hundreds of other travel sites at once to find the best deals on airline tickets, cheap hotels, cheap cruises, vacations and rental cars. Come earlier in the evening for the widest selection of flavors out there. When I went last time, it was close to closing and they only had a few flavors (including Kalamansi Lime). More likely that not, you may want to get a couple of them to satiate your hunger.
You’ll find a tropical-American menu of guava baby back ribs, blackened mahi mahi tacos, and of course that cliche-but-still-delightful coconut shrimp, fried to a perfect crisp. Spam musubi (スパムむすび) is a slice of Spam, fried, on top of a bed of rice, often wrapped with a piece of toasted seaweed (のり). If you haven’t had it before, there are a few amazing shops that mix it up with things like homemade spam, teriyaki glaze, fried egg, and more.
Enjoy special prices on selections from our extensive, curated wine list every week for Waina Wednesday. You’ll find a variety of matcha-flavored shave ice, drinks, floats, and soft serve here. But what you really want is the Maiko Special, a parfait of mochi balls, azuki beans, chestnuts, matcha chiffon cake, and cornflakes, drizzled with Japanese brown sugar syrup and topped with matcha soft serve.
Giant bowls hold fresh, chewy udon in hot, thick sesame tan tan soup or cold soup topped with ikura or uni. After 30 years in the coffee business, including starting (and eventually selling) the Honolulu Coffee Co. chain, Raymond Suiter began Kona Coffee Purveyors to focus on Kona-grown beans. Find the brand’s single-estate Kona and other Hawaiian coffees at this cafe in Waikīkī, along with treats from San Francisco’s B. Patisserie. If you come just for coffee, good luck passing on the pastries and desserts, which could include a strawberry guava kouign amann or a black sesame tart. The Zetton group has a knack for tucking cozy, well-designed spaces into forgotten corners of Waikīkī. The group renovated one of Waikīkī’s few remaining buildings from the 1930s, restoring the original wooden beams, which had been plastered over when the building housed a scooter rental business and a nail salon.
Each one was delicious in its own way and perfect for exploring sights around Waikiki Beach. In general, musubi’s are the perfect food for a lunch or snack on the go in Hawai’i because they’re portable. You can be out enjoying the waves, come back to your bag, and enjoy a rice ball. One of the best places to get musubi in the Waikiki district is Musubi Cafe Iyasume. A proliferation of hotel construction by companies like Hilton as well as Duke Kahanamoku’s popularization of surfing at Waikiki Beach further led to a wave of tourism that continues to make a splash.

Inside the Prince Waikiki hotel, you’ll find the only outpost of the Katsumidori chain outside of Japan. This location ditches the model train that delivers orders to your seat at Japanese locations, but it’s still a good stop for moderately priced sushi that’s a step above your average sushi languishing on a conveyor belt. The most deluxe sushi set (still under $40) includes luxuries such as uni, abalone, and jumbo eel, an almost comically long piece of seafood. Tucked behind the Alohilani Resort, this little ice cream stand scoops flavors like yuzu creamsicle, honey furikake, and hojicha.
On the ground floor they installed Zigu, an izakaya that combines locally grown ingredients with modern Japanese flavors, while upstairs, at Nature Waikiki, the menus lean French. Brunch spot Castro’s could survive entirely on overflow customers from its neighbor, Eggs ‘n’ Things, but the food is so good that Waikīkī-averse locals will face the crowds for the Cubano, choripan, and braised brisket sandwiches. The gorgeous open-air dining room on the eighth floor of the Ritz-Carlton provides a serene view over Waikīkī, but the modern French cuisine and cocktails would be worth your time even if they were served in a bunker. Choose from a three- or four-course prix fixe, where recent standouts on the ever-changing menu included fried frog legs with escargot and dry-aged duck a l’orange with berbere spice.
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