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TheTikiGuy
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Sat, Jan 21, 2012 1:58 PM
The Orange County Register posted this article on Friday Jan 20th. http://fastfood.ocregiter.com/2012/01/20/o-c-s-tiki-bar-scene-is-still-active/148723/ O.C.’s tiki bar scene is still active Could the tiki bar be making a comeback? Maybe, maybe not. When news dinosaurs like the New York Times and CBS giddily announced the fad over the last year or so, that only proved to some bar mavens that the tiki renaissance had probably come and gone. It doesn’t help that the grandaddy of all tiki bars, the Tonga Room in San Francisco, which opened in 1945, might be closing (the owners of the Fairmont Hotel want to class up the place, and the bar doesn’t fit into their plans). The jury’s apparently still out on that. (“What? Absolutely not!” said the bartender when I called on Thursday. “We’re as popular as ever. When would you like to come in?”) Personally, I hope tiki trendiness remains on the fringes. There’s nothing more annoying than your favorite dive bar being invaded by an army of fedora-topped, goatee-sprouting hipsters who drink nothing other than PBR. I prefer my tiki bars to remain friendly historical anachronisms — places that reflect American pop culture of the 1950s, when returning U.S. servicemen from the Pacific theater brought back a new-found thirst for all things tropical. Places like Trader Vic’s are emblematic of the era, and they were crammed with plenty of tacky to go along with the tiki. That was part of the look. Here in the O.C., tiki bars have come and gone over the years. Don the Beachcomber is still the heart and soul of the scene, at least if you live north of Laguna. (That moniker is a reference to the protean tiki bar of the same name that was born in L.A. back in the 1930s.) I can point to two favorable developments for lovers of rum-based umbrella drinks and fake palapa booths. Laguna’s Royal Hawaiian got freshened up a few years back, a nice reno that improved the place without robbing it of its cheesy charm. Last June, the Disneyland Hotel opened a tiki-themed bar called Trader Sam’s, which replaced the Lost Bar in the pool area. Its concept was developed in conjunction with MarkeTeam, a Mission Viejo-based company that helps bars and restaurants create drink menus and other elements to help brand themselves and their products. Disneyland fans will immediately see that there are obvious tie-ins with Disneyland’s Jungle Cruise. “If you’re on the Jungle Cruise, one of the last things you see is Trader Sam. The joke is he’ll trade two of his heads for one of yours,” said Brad Horner of MarkeTeam. “A lot of the drinks and food items on the menu are pulled from the Tiki Room in Disneyland. And the names of the drinks are based on characters from the Jungle Cruise and the Tiki Room.” You’ll find all the time-honored stuff here. On the food side of the menu are the traditional pu pu platter and kalua pork, although there are a few concessions to the 21st century: chicken-lettuce wraps, ahi poke, flatbread, panko-crusted Chinese long beans. The pseudo-Polynesian drinks include the obligatory multi-person monster, which Sam’s calls the Uh Oa. Here’s the recipe: light and dark rums, orange, passion fruit, guava and grapefruit juices, falernum, cinnamon and freshly squeezed lime juice. It looks like it’s bubbling out of a tabletop volcano. [ Edited by: TheTikiGuy 2012-01-21 14:00 ] |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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posted
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Sat, Jan 21, 2012 2:26 PM
Here is the fixed link: |
FT
forgotten tikiman
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Sat, Jan 21, 2012 2:45 PM
This is cool!!! I think the O.C needs a few more tiki bars. One of my buddys dreams is to open one up in the O.C. He lives there. |
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Luckydesigns
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Mon, Jan 23, 2012 1:25 PM
In my opinion, The Royal Hawaiian wasn't 'freshened up'... The 'reno' ruined the place. |
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Luckydesigns
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posted
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Mon, Jan 23, 2012 1:25 PM
In my opinion, The Royal Hawaiian wasn't 'freshened up'... The 'reno' ruined the place. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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posted
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Mon, Jan 23, 2012 3:08 PM
Spike, I concur, full frontal %100 concur. |
Pages: 1 5 replies