Pages: 1 15 replies
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 27, 2007 7:50 AM
Some of you may have been following my post asking for an authentic okolehao recipe and the ingredients to make it. I now have a nursery man contact, who has the ti root, in Hawaii that has been working on the project. He has been keeping be updated on his quest. He's become like Indiana Jones drying to get the the information. He sent me this incredible email the other day: "Aloha, I am still on the hunt for your Okolehao recipe. I have an appointment next Monday with a direct decendant of Queen Ka'ahumanu. I have to four wheel drive in to see her, she still lives on land that King Kamehameha set aside for certain people. I talked with her momentarily on the phone. I mentioned the recipe that you emailed me and she said not rice, they used ripe bread fruit. She still has the ti plants that her grandfather planted to make Okolehao. I guess he’s long dead and the plants are very old. So, wish me luck, maybe she will let me dig one up. Garry" The plot thickens! |
S
Swanky
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 27, 2007 8:50 AM
I wanna go! I wanna go! It would be fun to make the stuff and ship it to Hawaii... |
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 27, 2007 11:19 AM
I've got a firm commitment on the ti root, but how in the hell am I going to get ripe bread fruit??? I live in California. I don't even know what a bread fruit looks like. Maybe I could get him to freeze some and ship it overnight in a cooler, but that's got to cost a fortune. I'll figure something out. Maybe the stuff can be done with home canning. |
S
Swanky
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 27, 2007 12:56 PM
There has to be a source around. But, finding it is going to be a challenge. Close to Hawaii, it might be easy enough. What I have read says it is similar to taro in some ways. Might get it through Jamaica on the East coast. [ Edited by: Swanky 2007-08-27 12:57 ] |
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Aug 27, 2007 3:54 PM
Doing some web searching I've found that there is an Asian market, especially in Indonesia, for canned breadfruit, but I haven't found any American sellers yet. I don't know if canned would be as good as fresh, but it's probably the best I could do. I may try to strike a deal with my contact to see if he wants to try a test run there in Hawaii. Fermenting is very easy and cheap copper stills from Turkey can be bought on eBay. Let's hope the ATF doesn't read Tiki Central posts. :) |
C
Chrisc
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Aug 29, 2007 3:12 AM
Funnily enough, breadfruit is quite easy to come by here in England: a lot of Asian and west Indian grocers sell it... CHRIS |
TG
The Gnomon
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Aug 30, 2007 7:07 AM
Check these guys out. Artocarpus altilis is on their list of fruits. As tricky as it is to bring fruits and veggies into CA, you'll might have to find CA growers. The CRFG might be able to tell you who has Breadfruit near you. Considering the varieties of Artocarpus altilis and other species that are called Breadfruit, lets hope the supplier you find has the right one. As for the Ti roots, according to this you'll be SOL unless you can import it from Hawai'i. TMI on Artocarpus altilis National Tropical Botanical Garden Breadfruit Institute in Hawai'i |
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Aug 31, 2007 9:03 PM
Well, I've found the other difficult ingredient of Oke - breadfruit. After searching several Asian food markets I found one that had a few dusty cans of the stuff. It's canned in Vatuwaqa, Suva, Fiji. "Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement". [ Edited by: Okolehao 2007-08-31 21:06 ] |
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Sep 10, 2007 2:48 PM
I got another email from my Hawaiian contact. The story keeps getting more interesting all the time. He's doing some important cultural research on this thing with the help of lots of other people. Can you imagine getting different family recipies? "Aloha, Yes, I got the ti roots. They still have to be rinsed so I don’t know how much they weigh. I kept them in soil so they would stay alive and fresh. Recipe is not what I would like though. I was told that your recipe must have been the commercial one that was used. The one she told me about was older and I guess more like moonshine and was evidently against the law to make back then. Not sure which one you want. No percentages on ingredients though. She is checking with family members to see if we can get it more nailed down. She said the core is green ti root, bread fruit, and sugar cane, and then depending on who was making it they would add different fruits to alter the taste a little, so different families had slightly different tastes to their Oke. I figured maybe you could use your percentages from your recipe and apply it to this one and see what you get. Personally I would run both batches. I have people all over tracking this down so I’m certain more information is going to be trickling in to me soon |
UT
Urban Tiki
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Sep 11, 2007 9:08 AM
This is so cool- Hawaiian moonshine archaeology! |
K
Kahu
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Sep 28, 2009 10:30 PM
Well I watched the Three Sheets Hawaii tonight, and it reminded me of this long ago post. Did some research sad to say, from what I can come up with is this. Kolani Distillers is suing Sandwich Islands Distillers. This was started in 2007 and is still in court on going. |
J
jackceol
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Jun 15, 2010 2:38 PM
Hey guys! I'm a newcomer to the forum, hope you don't mind if I chime in. I was born and raised in Hawaii but have lived in NYC since '95. It's a drag breadfruit is so hard to come by in California, here in New York you can go to lots of West Indian markets and get a fresh green one. The Hawaiians, unlike the rest of Polynesia preferred them ripe (yellow, sweet and soft) rather than green. The Asian lady who sold me my last one considered this "rotten", though I have fond memories of my dad mashing up a ripe one and frying it up like a pancake. Yummers! I guess ripe would make more sense for okolehao, since the sugar content would be much higher. |
C
CincyTikiCraig
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Jun 15, 2010 10:15 PM
I have read in Da Bum's latest tome that he now recommends Rye Whiskey as a better substitute for Okolehao than Bourbon, which was the go-to sub in his previous book. Any opinions on using Rye?? |
O
Okolehao
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Jun 16, 2010 8:14 AM
Holy Mackerel! Rye Whiskey!! Which book? I've got a commercial micro-distiller in my town that does boutique rye. I was going to work with him on bourbon but he already makes an incredible rye. 'Fog's End Monterey Rye'. |
RB
Rum Balls
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Jun 17, 2010 7:42 AM
Beachbum Berry Remixed |
HT
Hale Tiki
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Mar 13, 2013 7:05 AM
I felt this was worthy of digging up. |
Pages: 1 15 replies