All posts by Genevive Bjorn

Places to eat in Lahaina Maui

Lahaina is located in West Maui, about one hour from the island’s main airport in Kahului. If you’re staying in Lahaina or any of the nearby areas, such as Ka’anapali or Kapalua, here are my “local’s knowedge” recommendations for where to eat, shop and play.

I’ll start with the disclaimer: This is a local knowledge list written with a bias for great food, low prices and hole in the wall joints. Mainland chain restaurants aren’t included. So if you’re looking for details about Cheeseburger in Paradise or Starbucks, this isn’t the place to find it. The local yellow pages is your best bet since all of those places pride themselves on being the same.

Where to Eat in Lahaina

The chain restaurants like Cheeseburger in Paradise, Bubba Gump and Benihana are already familiar. You pretty much know what to expect–large portions of deep fried or themed food–so I will skip those. For a casual lunch that is not overpriced for the quality, try Auntie Pasto’s or Balle.

For a fancy dinner Lahaina Grill (formerly David Pauls), Vino or Sansei are winners. Sansei offers an early bird special of half-price sushi before 6PM. If you can make it to dinner that early, one of the best fresh fish joints on Maui becomes downright affordable.

Other great dining options are I’O, Plantation House, Roy’s and Cafe O’Lei. The latter two also have locations in Kihei and are very family-friendly.

If you’re looking for where to eat in the Kihei area, take a look at my entry “In Kihei: Places to Eat”.

Kihei, Maui, Hosts Indian Restaurant

Maui has been a desert wasteland for Indian cuisine. Fresh fish we have in abundance. Great passionfruit sauces are easy to come by. Fusion of Eastern and Western cooking styles, no problem. Indian food, forget it! Over the past eight years, a few Indian-themed dining establishments have come and quickly gone, with food too forgettable to recall, that have provided fleeting and less-than-satisfying respite from a seemingly eternal drought of properly blended spices.

The only way to find soulful curries was to be lucky enough to get invited to dinner at someone’s house, fly to O’ahu and poke around the University district, or voyage across the pond to the Mainland, Europe or mother India herself. Many dedicated fans of Indian cuisine who live on Maui have satisfied their intense cravings through any or all of these heroic methods.

Just a few months ago, I was on a multi-city business trip on the Mainland. While I didn’t make the trip just for Indian food, I did eat at an Indian restaurant every day in each city I visited. Seattle may be famous for fresh salmon and apples, but unless they were tandoored, I didn’t bother. Dallas is known for big hunks of grilled meat and deep-fried anything, but unless those items were curried, I didn’t sit down.

With caution, my partner and I ventured last night with a few discerning and desperate friends to Maui’s newest Indian restaurant, Shangri-La By the Sea, located in Kihei in the Menehune Shores condo complex. Not wanting to face the same disappointment as we did with all of Maui’s previous Indian eateries, we kept our expectations low. It would be just fine as long as the tandoored chicken wasn’t floating in a pool of orange oil, but even that might not be so bad if tasted okay.

We were blown away. For eight people, we ordered four appetizers, seven entrees, three breads and rice. We started with samosas, pakoras, tandoored meats, and papadum. Those were served with fresh mint and tamarind chutneys. We devoured them without comment–a good sign among food critics wanting to be pleased.

With the entrees, the chef at Shangri-La did not make the usual amateur mistakes of using too much heavy cream or oil. Instead, the spices in the mahkni, korma and vindaloo were perfectly blended into pleasing textures and flavors. Even the bhindi masala, the usual low-water mark at Indian eateries, tasted savory with pleasingly firm okra–far from the slimy green dish found in most “curry in a hurry” joints . The breads were light, fluffy and flavorful. We ooed and awed over the pratha, a bread often so laden with oil that it seems deep-fried , which came out of Shangri-La’s tandoor oven like a delicately buttered French pastry.

We washed their delicacies down with bottles of riesling that we brought with us. Shangri-La is new enough that they don’t yet have a liquor license. This means that for the next few months, it will be possible to pair the best Alsacian whites with their savory, spicy dishes at bargain prices.

When it was time for desert, we passed. Too full to take another bite, we decided to save desert for next time. Thankfully, there will be a next time without buying a plane ticket.

Sunil, Shangri-La’s friendly owner, shook our hands after dinner and mentioned that he also owns two other Indian restaurants in Anchorage, Alaska. Happy to escape winter, he has brought some much needed heat to Maui. This foodie hopes he’ll stay.

Additional Information:
Shangri-La By The Sea
Menehune Shores
760 S. Kihei Road. Suite 109
Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Dinner: Sun. to Thurs. 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.;Fri.-Sat. 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
875-4555
shangri-labythesea.com

Debarred and Defrocked

If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn’t it follow that……

Electricians could be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models deposed, and dry cleaners depressed?

Wouldn’t you expect laundry workers to decrease, eventually becoming depressed and depleted?

Likewise, bedmakers might be debunked, baseball players debased, bulldozer operators degraded, organ donors delivered, software engineers detested, and underwear manufacturers debriefed.

And won’t all composers one day decompose?

Or perhaps we can hope politicians will someday be devoted?
Or as my neighbor Diane noted, since royalty can be dethroned, does this mean that visitors to Maui will be detoured, school teachers detested, and waiters and waitresses deserving?