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Pau Hana Friday for May 3

Harvesting Kauai Shrimp on the westside. Daniel Lane photo

Harvesting Kauai Shrimp on the westside. Daniel Lane photo

NEWS:

After four years, Kauai Shrimp has finally received their certificate to sell locally grown, fresh clams! They will be selling direct to local restaurants and markets soon. There is a limited supply, but they expect to meet Kauai demands by the end of June. I’ll post a list of outlets once I get them. They will also be opening a Hanapepe processing plant with a walk-up window to buy frozen Kauai Shrimp in bulk very soon. Tasting Kauai is working with Kauai Shrimp as well as other tasty and culturally significant westside people to create a third culinary tour.

Orchid Alley's Dendrobia nobile smells a little like honeysuckle. Daniel Lane photo

Orchid Alley’s Dendrobia nobile smells a little like honeysuckle. Daniel Lane photo

 

Hawaiian Island Juice has re-introduced their extremely popular coconut limeade for the summer. It’s the perfect combination of sweet coconut water with tart, fresh squeezed lime juice, served over crushed ice. You can get it every Saturday at the Kauai Culinary Market farmers market in Puhi.

If you’d like to order orchids for Mother’s Day, check out Orchid Alley. Neill and Fely Sams of Orchid Alley Kaua‘i have been growing and selling award-winning orchids for 15 years. Orchids grow in three greenhouses on the couple’s 1.6-acre property in Kapaa. Next Wednesday, May 8th, being the final shipping day for Orchid Alley to send our orchid baskets to the mainland before Mother’s Day.

 

 

 

After our Waipa tour, Lynn Madigan (right) revisits to make poi. Marta Lane photo

After our Waipa tour, Lynn Madigan (right) revisits to make poi. Marta Lane photo

 

Tasting Kauai would like to thank Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi for her wonderful article about “A Taste of Old Kauai” that ran in the April 28 edition of the Honolulu Star Advertiser. Part culinary, part eco, the tour is charming, full of heart and magical. I not only created it because Waipa is a beautiful place to learn about Native Hawaiian agriculture, but because I feel the taro plant is misunderstood. Once people get to know it better, they fall in love with like I have. In fact, Lynn is from Oregon and she was on our April 26 tour. She connected so strongly to the people, place and culture, she was at Waipa yesterday so she could learn how to make poi!

Haku are head lei that can also be worn around the brim of a hat or on the wrist or ankle. Daniel Lane photo

Haku are head lei that can also be worn around the brim of a hat or on the wrist or ankle. Daniel Lane photo

Saturday, May 4

Lei Day

Kauai Museum, 9:30 a.m. tp 5 p.m., free

Kauai Museum’s Annual May Day Lei Contest has been the benchmark of lei-making on Kaua`i for the past 33 years. Enjoy live Hawaiian music, lei-making demos, workshops, free aloha lomi massages, food booths, shave ice, baked goods, silent and live lei auctions, and all day long donations for chances to win.

9:30 a.m. Hawaiian music and entertainment outside. 10 a.m. doors open. Noon, awards ceremony. 1 p.m. live auction. 5 p.m. museum closes.

Kauai Community Farmers Market

9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.(extended 1 hour), Kauai Community College Campus

Special Mother’s Day Celebration! The market will be co hosting a Mother’s Day celebration with Kauai Made crafts, gifts and sweets in addition to our Kauai Grown items to promote gift giving. It’s also a great time to look for local products for graduation.

Bouquets by Tropical Flowers Express. Daniel Lane photo

Bouquets by Tropical Flowers Express. Daniel Lane photo

There will be island handcrafted jewelry by Donna Cockett of Kula Kala O Kauai; Mailelani’s colorful print bags, Aunty Lilikoi’s ever expanding line of products; photography by Kerry Oda Fine Photography; and Shinil Island Candle & Soap. Plus, a variety of Kauai Made and local vendors selling a variety of jewlery, pottery and ceramics, photography, kapa and woven lauhala products and other fine gifts for mom or an upcoming graduate.

On the Market side there will be:

  • Mauro Politi from Hanalei Pasta will be featuring creme brulee and chocolate mousse in addition to his Italian pastas and sauces
  • Midnight Bear Bakery will be featuring their new chocolate croissants
  • Hula Baby Biscotti and Ko Bakery will be featuring their new cakes to order, including special flavors for Mother’s Day. Come to sample, and order for next week.
  • Tropical Flowers Express will have floral specials to pickup or for delivery, they are certified to deliver to Mainland
  • Also check out Elvrine Chow (haku lei) and Laurena Silva (arrangements). Elvrine will be back and forth as she does May Day Lei Day contest at the Museum
  • Enter the Monkeypod Jam contest to win gifts for Mom
  • There will also be a variety of gifts from the market including gift certificates and other items you can win in our prize drawing

For those who enjoy Cinco De Mayo is next day, so in addition to John Cabello’s Puerto Rican Tacos we also will be having Rafael’s Aloha Tacos debuting his food truck. Come early for food and get into the spirit.

Sunday, May 5

Cinco de Mayo Celebrations

Verde

Tequila Tasting and Paring, $15

Tanteo Tequila tasting of Jalapeno, Tropical and Cocoa flavors
Taco Bites – Homemade sopaipilla, carne pork adovada with blue agave drizzle

 

Tortilla Republic's Poipu Heat Margarita. Daniel Lane photo

Tortilla Republic’s Poipu Heat Margarita. Daniel Lane photo

Tortilla Republic

Margarita Brunch, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Dinner, 5:30-9 p.m.

Tortilla Republic’s Margarita Bar will host a Grande Cinco de Mayo Fiesta from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. with menu and drinks specials including $7 House and Jalapeño Margaritas, $5 Corona and Negro Modelo, and $32 pitchers of house margaritas.

The laid-back, lively Margarita Bar offers spacious indoor/ outdoor lanais featuring over 80 authentic Mexican tequilas and Tortilla Republic’s signature modern Mexican dishes. TR Margarita Bar is open for breakfast, brunch, lunch, happy hour, and dinner and features live music on Tuesday and Thursday nights.

Merriman’s Gourmet Pizza & Burgers

The downstairs cafe of Merriman’s Kauai is bringing back their popular fish tacos for Cinco de Mayo. Warm tortillas are filled with braised cabbage, pico de gallo, cilantro lime crema and pan-seared fresh fish. $4 wine, $3 Coronas, $5 Lava Ritas and specials all day long! Ole!

Kilauea Lighthouse 100th Anniversary Celebration

10 am.n to 4 p.m., free

This community celebration begins with a parade through Kilauea town and ending at Kilauea Park. There will be a concert, food, game booths, water slides, hula, a lighthouse slide show, an art show and a lighthouse keeper’s reunion. The Kilauea Lighthouse Centennial Celebration began May 1 and ends May 5. Daily guided tours of the lighthouse offer a close up view of the interior of the restored Kīlauea Lighthouse. For more information, visit the Kilauea Point Natural History Association website.

The History of Kauai and Hanalei

Luau, Hanalei Lawn, 5 ro 8:15 p.m., $120

The Westin Princeville celebrates their five-year anniversary with a special luau. Hula Halau Na Hula O Kaohikukapulani and their Kumu Hula Kapu Kinimaka– Alquiza have put together a very special program honoring the history of Hanalei and the island of Kauai. Cocktails and live music begin at 5 p.m. with a dinner buffet and show to follow. Complementary valet parking at the Westin Princeville. For reservations call 808-827-8808.

Monday, May 6

Morgan Vineyard Wine Dinner

5:30 p.m., $85

The Wine Shop in Koloa, and RumFire at the Sheraton Kauai Resort, is hosting a wine event featuring a 4-course dinner paired with wines from winemaker, Morgan Vineyards.

  • 1st Course ~ Butter Poached Kauai Shrimp, Morgan Sauvignon Blanc, California 2011
  • 2nd Course ~ Prosciutto Wrapped Diver Scallop, Morgan Chardonnay “Highlands”, Monterey, California 2010
  • 3rd Course ~ Sonoma Valley Duck Breast, Morgan Pinot Noir “12 Clones”, Monterey, California 2011
  • 4th Course ~ Roasted Kauai Rack of Lamb, Morgan “Cote du Crow’s” Grenache/Syrah, Monterey, California 2010

For reservations contact RumFire at 808-742-4RUM.

 

Breezy and beautiful gourmet lunch and cooking demonstration at the Kauai Marriott Resort. Daniel Lane photo

Breezy and beautiful gourmet lunch and cooking demonstration at the Kauai Marriott Resort. Daniel Lane photo

Friday, May 10

A Culinary Romp Through Paradise

Various locations in Kapaa, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., $130

Tasting Kauai’s Culinary Tour offers an intimate glimpse into the Garden Island’s culinary scene. We start with a farm tour and learn about exotic fruit grown on Kauai. At the Kauai Marriott Resort, we join executive chef Guy Higa for an outdoor cooking demonstration and gourmet, four-course lunch made with Kauai grown ingredients. Our last stop is at The Feral Pig, where Bob Gunter, president of the Koloa Rum Co., will give a presentation about the award-winning rum.  Afterwards, we’ll have two cocktails at The Feral Pig featuring Koloa Rum and seasonal produce.  You can read what LandingStanding said about this tour, or visit our Kauai Culinary Tours page. We have a Facebook photo album that shows how much fun the tour is, and our 5-Star TripAdvisor reviews. Chef Higa donates proceeds from his portion of the tour to the Salvation Army Soup Kitchen. For a complete list of 2013 dates, check out our Kauai Culinary Tours Calendar. Call 808-635-0257 to make a reservation.

Saturday, May 11

Kauai Community Market

9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Bring mom to the Kauai Community Market and focus is on things you can do for Mom this weekend. Make breakfast in bed with the Midnight Bear breads and croissants, Monkeypod Jams and Moloaa Bay Coffee and Kunana Dairy Goat cheese along with varieties of tropical fresh fruits and greens from the market. There will be flowers with special demonstrations:

  • Elvrine Chow of Heavenly Hakus will be doing a haku lei demonstration in the “hale” at 10:30am
  • Jen Ortal will be doing a special plumeria lei activity for keiki – to make a lei for your mom for Mothers Day
  • Kawaikini kids will be doing a floral bouquet fundraiser
  • Terry Gordines always sells out of her bouquets, so come early
  • Laurena Silva should also be there with her arrrangements

Sunday, May 12, Mother’s Day

Collin Darrell at the 2012 Kauai County Farm Fair Cook off with cotton candy made from local beets. Daniel Lane photo

Collin Darrell at the 2012 Kauai County Farm Fair Cook off with cotton candy made from local beets. Daniel Lane photo

Pop-up Dinner

Na Aina Kai, 5 to 8 p.m., $85 per person

Grow Culture is featuring a six-course progressive meal will be served tapas-style and the food will be paired with wines from Spain. Quinten Frye of Salt Kitchen & Tasting Bar on Oahu will be the guest chef. Frye won the 2012 Hawaii Rising Star Sustainability Chef award by pushing for sustainability through supporting a network of Oahu farmers, using whole-animal butchery and making dishes that focus on line-caught fish and local octopus. You can learn more about Grow Culture in this week’s issue of MidWeek Kauai.

Look for additional Mother’s Day menus on Tasting Kauai’s Facebook page. I will be posting menus from Roy’s, Ilima Terrace, Poipu Bay Golf Course, RumFire, Nanea, Makana Terrace and more. The May 8 issue of MidWeek Kauai will feature 10 fun and delicious things to eat on Mother’s Day.

Friday, May 17

Oahu resident Tara McKellar samples three preparations of taro. Daniel Lane photo

Oahu resident Tara McKellar samples three preparations of taro. Daniel Lane photo

A Taste of Old Kauai

Waipa, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., $155

Tasting Kauai’s north shore tour is part agritourism and part ecotourism. We visit Waipa, one of 67 watersheds homesteaded by the first Polynesians, which remains undeveloped. This one-of-a-kind experience was designed by Tasting Kauai and the Waipa Foundation especially for those who wish to learn about traditional agriculture systems, endangered wildlife, and enjoy real Hawaiian food saturated in Kauai’s rugged beauty.

Tucked in a valley and surrounded by towering mountain ranges, our guests learn about Hawaii’s culture and food. Waipa is nestled in the Hanalei Valley which is an is a Wildlife Refuge and endangered birds flourish here. We explore a vast loi (taro garden) fed by auwai, or irrigation system, that supplies water from mountain streams.

At the “Poi Garage” we learn about Hawaii’s staff of life: taro, or kalo as it’s called here, and guests sample cooked taro corms, poi and kulolo, a traditional dessert made with coconut.

We tour the farm and learn how Waipa teaches kids about the circle of life through farm animals and gardens. Continuing through the property, we’ll learn the difference between native, canoe and introduced plants, while we walk to the Halulu Fishpond.

Guests learn the difference between native, canoe and introduced and plants at the Halulu Fishpond. Daniel Lane photo

Guests learn the difference between native, canoe and introduced and plants at the Halulu Fishpond. Daniel Lane photo

 

Lunch, prepared by Waipa’s chef, changes seasonally and is made with vegetables grown in onsite gardens, locally sourced meat or fish, and mamaki tea with lemongrass and mint. Guests eat ohana (family) style while enjoying the beauty and breezes of Hanalei Bay. Proceeds from this tour go to restore native plants and to preserve and perpetuate Hawaiian culture through education. For more information, visit A Taste of Old Kauai, or visit check out our Facebook photo album. To make reservations, call 808-635-0257.

Saturday, May 18th

Papaya’s Natural Food’s and Cafe 15th Anniversary Celebration

8 a.m. to 9 .p.m., free

  • 15-percent off items store wide
  • Free samples
  • Free Tastings from local vendors such as Uncle Mikey’s Dried Fruit, Kauai Living Goodies, Kauai Kombucha, Lotus fudge, Da Cha Teas and Rick’s Hawaiian Gold Mustard
  • Free Music by Madison and Paradise Found 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

“We would like to thank the community for their continued support in making Papaya’s what it is today!” says event coordinator Chelsea. For more information, call 808-823-0190

Sunday, May 19

Lisa Fuller and Sun. Daniel Lane photo

Lisa Fuller and Sun. Daniel Lane photo

One Song Farm: The Garden As Teacher Workshop

9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,$36 per person, cash only please

Lisa and Sun will share their 30 years combined knowledge and experience in organic, bio-intensive gardening to the people of Kauai. Come prepared to be in the sun bring a water bottle, big hat, sunscreen and snacks. For experienced and novice gardeners. Topics include:

  • Soil testing and planting bed preparation
  • Weed management
  • The benefits of insects
  • Creating quality compost
  • Maintaining your garden from seed to table
  • Plant variety selection

Contact Lisa and Sun at 808-635-3020, for directions and registration.

ONGOING:

May 23-26

12th Annual Kauai Polynesian Festival

Vidinha Stadium

All Kauai residents and visitors are welcome to attend the Kauai Polynesian Festival. The event kicks off with “A Polynesian Evening of Stars”, a Polynesian cultural protocol ceremony with Hawaiian and contemporary entertainment.

The weekend festival May 24-26 features Tahitian, Maori, Samoan and Hawaiian entertainment, Polynesian arts and crafts, solo and group dance competitions, food booths, workshops, and much more.

On May 23, there will be a fashion show and a newly added event, “U TINK U GET TALENT” a contest for youth and adult singers, dancers and musicians.

For more information, visit the Kauai Polynesian Festival website.

Sunshine Farmers Market in Kapaa. Daniel Lane photo

Sunshine Farmers Market in Kapaa. Daniel Lane photo

Farmers Market Class

Wednesdays, 3 to 4 p.m., $30

Learn how to select perfect produce, when it’s in season and how to cook with it during Tasting Kauai’s new one-hour farmers market classes. Marta Lane, Kauai based food and farm writer, teaches residents and visitors how to negotiate market pitfalls.

“One day I was at the farmers market and I saw friends who were visiting from Colorado,” says Tasting Kauai founder Marta Lane. “As we hugged and said hello, I saw a table full of near-rotten mangos. It was still snowing in Denver and my friends were excited about the big, beautiful tomatoes they just bought. Their faces fell when I told them they were not grown on Kauai. I felt bad for them, and was inspired to offer this class.”

Farmers markets are an affordable way to immerse yourself in local culture and the best place to buy produce that’s so fresh, it was harvested that morning. But buying at the farmers market doesn’t always insure that it was grown on Kauai.

It happens all over the world. In Hawaii, customers want mangos year-round. In Colorado, they want tomatoes in May. To make that sale, vendors buy imported mangoes or tomatoes and sell them as their own. Customers unfamiliar with the seasons can insure their dollars are spent on local products by learning how to identify locally grown produce.

There’s a whole world of delicious produce that many residents never try. Let’s face it, some of it looks like it came from another planet. Once unfamiliar produce is demystified and cooking tips are shared, it may become a regular at dinner table.

Many factors can make exotic produce expensive and the last thing you want to do is buy a pineapple that isn’t at peak perfection. This class will also teach you how to tell when produce is ripe as well as how to store it for best results.

Learn what to look for, the right questions to ask and how to prepare exotic ingredients. You’ll never get taken advantage of and you have a table full of delicious, local produce.

For reservations, call 808-635-0257.

Pau Hana Friday, May 25

NEWS

Real Time Farms

Kalapaki Joe's Lavender Crush. Daniel Lane photo

Kalapaki Joe's Lavender Crush. Daniel Lane photo

My “internship” with Real Time Farms (RTF) has begun. I’m not in school, but they have accepted me anyway. I am a Food Warrior, along with 25 other people from across the United States. Last Tuesday eight of us met on Google+, and it was fantastic to meet others who care about food as much as we do.

Starting next week until mid-August, things will look a little different here at Tasting Kauai. For the next eight weeks I’ll post profiles, pictures and videos of Kauai’s farmers, food artesians and farmers markets which RTF will then publish on their site. We will still post Pau Hana Friday, and the restaurant profiles will return once the internship is pau.

My RTF expectations guide says,

“Real Time Farms is a crowd-sourced online food guide that provides users with one location in which they can learn about where their food comes from. Whether eating in or eating out, they can feel confident in the food they eat. As they learn more, they can grow the site by sharing what they know to improve their communities’ health and environment.”

Tasting Kauai was created to spotlight local food growers and makers, and Real Time Farms values food transparency. So we’ll make a great team.

“As food is such a major part of our daily lives, and the way our food is grown and processed is increasingly convoluted and hidden, we believe it is now more important than ever before for people to have access to the basic information about how their food is produced, processed and distributed.

 

“Rather than telling people what they should or should not eat, Real Time Farms encourages people to educate themselves on the food they eat by offering them the necessary information to do so. Consumers are empowered with knowledge and can then make their own decisions rather than have them made for them.”

It is Tasting Kauai’s hope that you learn more about Kauai’s food system, and learn about yours by checking out the website at Real Time Farms.

Gaylord’s at Kilohana

Named One of the Top Outdoor Dining Spots in the U.S. by OpenTable Diners

Gaylord's at Kilohana. Daniel Lane photo

Gaylord's at Kilohana. Daniel Lane photo

Gaylord’s at Kilohana announced that it has been named a winner of OpenTable Diners’ Choice Awards for top Outdoor Dining Restaurants in the United States. The list of winners is derived from more than five million reviews submitted by OpenTable diners for more than 15,000 restaurants in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

“We are very pleased by this acknowledgment from OpenTable diners,” said Fred Atkins. “We are proud to know that these diners thoroughly enjoyed their overall experience at Gaylord’s at Kilohana and gave us such high marks.”

“The Top Outdoor Dining Diners’ Choice winners are exceptional for more than amazing al fresco seating,” said Caroline Potter, OpenTable’s Chief Dining Officer. “They are serving creative cocktails and delicious food that complement their standout settings. OpenTable congratulates Gaylord’s at Kilohana on being the place people want to relax and enjoy a meal in a perfect outdoor setting.”

Gaylord’s at Kilohana has been open under new management as of January 9, 2012. Chef Jonathan Pfleuger and General Manager Dylan Scott have created a product driven menu concept that incorporates seasonal produce grown on the 105-acre estate, fresh ocean delicacies, as well as the finest meats available. The handcrafted menu currently includes Potato Crusted Mahimahi, Sesame Seed Seared Ahi Tuna and the signature Grilled Ribeye Steak.

Gaylord’s at Kilohana is open Monday through Saturday at 11 a.m. for lunch at 5 p.m. for dinner. Sunday brunch is available from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and is closed for dinner. For more information, please visit Gaylord’s website or phone 808-245-9593.

The Feral Pig

100 percent Kauai Ground Beef Burger. Daniel Lane photo

100 percent Kauai Ground Beef Burger. Daniel Lane photo

“The Pig” is one of our favorite places to go to enjoy good food and cocktails. The pub sources as much as it can from local farmers including Kauai Shrimp and Pua Kalo Farm, and the cocktails are handcrafted to order. Besides Dan’s favorite indulgence, the Feral Burger (kaiwe smoked pork is ground with local beef and topped with house-cured pork belly and drizzled with chipotle aioli) we now have another reason to go. The Pig has live music every Thursday from 9 p.m. to closing time. For more information read my MidWeek Kauai article on The Feral Pig.

Kalapaki Joe’s in Lihue

Kalapaki Joe's Ahi Avocado Poke. Daniel Lane photo

Kalapaki Joe's Ahi Avocado Poke. Daniel Lane photo

My article about Kalapaki Joe’s in Lihue is running this week in MidWeek Kauai. I was excited to report that they are beginning to embrace the farm-to-table movement, and have a new chef who’s cooked this way for over 20 years on Kauai. They also hired a new bartender who made cocktails at Gaylord’s and 22 North using fresh ingredients from Kilohana’s gardens.

There are two Kalapaki Joe’s. Besides the one in Lihue, there is one in Poipu. Right now, the one in Poipu is only offering cocktails made with fresh produce. They’re all delicious, but my favorite is the one shown above. The Lavender Crush ($8) is made with fresh pineapple, coconut vodka, house-made lavender “essence” and African blue basil. Sweet, refreshing, herbaceous and absolutely delicious!

EVENTS

Thursday, May 24 through Sunday, May 27

Kauai Polynesian Festival

The Kamanawa Foundation’s Kauai Polynesian Festival presents a colorful variety of cultural offerings, including dance competitions, crafts, food, workshops, and other entertainment. Performers compete for titles in Hawaiian hula; Tahitian Ori, Otes, Aparima and Ahuroa; Samoan fire knife; Maori dance. Males and females ages four years old and up compete in different age brackets and categories.

Saturday, May 26

Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers

Calamonsie tasting at Harvest Market in Hanalei, 10 a.m. to noon

Calamonsie are about the size of Key Limes. Marta Lane photo

Calamonsie are about the size of Key Limes. Marta Lane photo

Compared to an orange, calamonsie is tiny, tangy and packs more vitamin C. And it’s the star at a free, ultra-exotic fruit tasting and culinary demonstration. Taste the fruit and see how it’s prepared by Chef Miguel Magana of Tahiti Nui Restaurant. Local growers Liz Ito and John Anderson will be on hand to answer questions.

While it looks like a miniature orange, the calamonsie or calamondin is actually a lime. A favorite treat in the Philippines where it’s available year-round, calamonsie bears well in Hawaii. The fruit’s flavor lends itself to sauces and glazes. It is very similar to the kumquat and can be used in the same way. Both the peel and juice are employed for jam and the juice can be used to make a flavorful limeade. The entire fruit can be frozen for a novel “ice cube.”

“Besides offering unique flavors, shapes and colors, these ultra-exotic fruits bring novelty to the table and can delight the senses,” says Ken Love, HTFG president, who will also be at the event.

HTFG is working to build markets for these juicy rarities via free public taste tests and culinary demonstrations at stores on four Hawaiian Islands throughout 2012. Titled “New Markets for Ultra-Exotic Fruits,” the event series is funded by the Hawaii Department of Agriculture through a USDA competitive grant program to foster small farm sustainability.

A total of eight educational demonstrations are planned and participating stores will stock the fruit in their produce sections, accompanied by recipes and additional fruit information to take home.

For more information, contact Love at ken@mycoffee.net or 808 (969-7926).

Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers incorporated in 1989 to promote tropical fruit grown in Hawaii, HTFG is a statewide association of tropical fruit growers, packers, distributors and hobbyists dedicated to tropical fruit research, education, marketing and promotion.

Thursday, May 31

Kauai Beach Resort, Shutters Lounge

Art, wine, pupus and music. 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., $ 25 per person

Kauai-based landscape artist Mazzarella will be onsite this evening for a live demonstration and mini-exhibition of his original paintings and giclee prints. This evening, Mazzarella will be unveiling his new 60 x 20 original “Heavenly Na Pali” along with three new seascape originals.

Growing up on Kauai from the age of 15, Mazzarella was fortunate enough to spend countless hours soaking up the true spirit of Kauai. Not only nature’s beauty, but the people who make the island truly one of a kind. Mazzarella feels his work is a collaboration of the pride of the people and the local heritage that soars through the trees and towers over the mountain peaks, thus protecting the islands integrity. Through his playful strokes and magical colors he is able to express his love for the islands and is honored to share it with the world.

Featuring wines from Spain:

Marques de Gelida Cava Brut Reserva Vintage: 2007 Region: Manchuela, Spain
Tasting Notes: The 2007 Rose is made from 100% Pinot Noir. Medium salmon pink in color, it has a lovely perfume of cherry blossom, strawberry, rhubarb and dominant with forest fruits and red berries. This Cava is light, dry, clean, and refreshing. Flavorful, well-balanced, and pleasure-bent, it is well-structured and agreeable at the start, with an outstanding varietal character and pleasing finish.

Vega Sindoa Chardonnay Bodegas Nekeas Vintage: 2009 Region: Navarra, Spain
Tasting Notes: Bright, greenish yellow; a pungent bouquet displays scents of smoky lees, orange peel and pear, with an oak spice note. Rich and weighty with powerful orchard fruit, melon flavors and a suggestion of licorice, a good underlying natural acidity and a hint of background vanilla. This is a medium-bodied, unbelievably flavorful wine that leads to a long, lingering finish.

Protocolo Rose Vintage: 2009 Region: Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
Tasting Notes: This Rose exhibits the color of pale glazed cherry, clean and brilliant, with aromas of wild strawberries and light notes of anise. Flavors of fresh fruit give a nice blend of sweet & snappy berry and citrus. The palate has a little weight and heft along with dry, white-peppery flavors of nectarine and apricot. Fresh, well balanced, light tannic notes well-bodied with a smooth acidity. It has an elegant fruit finish.

Codice Tinto Vintage: 2009 Region: Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
Tasting Notes: Ruby red in color with light violet in the edges of the glass. Red Fruits of nice intensity, suave raspberry, cherry and boysenberry aromas are spiced up by cinnamon, mace and vanilla. Well-structured, balanced tannins-alcohol-acidity, fresh mature fruit in perfect conjunction with the characteristics of aging (spices, toasted coffee and noble wood). A warm baking spice quality lingers on the finish and leaves a pleasant memory of lightly toasted notes.

Appetizers by executive chef Mark Sassone and his culinary team will be prepared to accompany the featured wines of the evening. Live music with Jonah Cummings begins at 6 p.m.

 

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