Abalone, Salt and More at Fish Farmers Market: Day 22 of 60 Days of Eating Locally Grown
Saturday, September 25th, 2010
Abalone, Salt and More at Fish Farmers Market: Day 22- My Experiments with Food Truth- 60 Days of Eating Locally Grown
Join the Eat Local Challenge (Sept. 25 – Oct. 3) for a meal, a day or a week!
This afternoon I went down to the Fish Farmers Market at NELHA. NELHA stands for the Natural Energy Lab of Hawaii Authority and is home to a variety of aquaculture, renewable energy, science and educational ventures. The primary attractions are access to deep sea water (which is pumped up to NELHA) and abundant sunshine. Tenants grow abalone, hirame (Japanese flounder), shrimp, Kona Kampachi and probably more that I don’t know about. In addition to farmed fish, Bite Me! was selling wild caught ahi, mahi, ono and opakapaka. Sadly, the lobster tail and crab that Kona Cold Lobster was selling was imported from the mainland. Of course the best way to obtain lobster is to have some hunky man crawl out of the dark sea, lobster in hand. The lack of local lobster was made up for by the presence of Big Island Abalone. I have only rarely eaten abalone. The last time I thought I had abalone was at Roy’s. It was served with mushrooms and I thought I was eating the abalone, but it turned out that I was only eating the mushrooms and my friend had eaten all of the abalone.
My friend Guy Toyama stoked me out by giving me some Kona Sea Salt, which is also made at NELHA by dehydrating the deep sea water. It is a really delicious gourmet finishing salt- meaning you don’t cook with it, you add it on at the end.
Lotus Cafe’s Howie Simon was also at the market selling fresh pressed sugar cane juice with ginger and lime, lilikoi juice and heirloom tomatoes. The Lotus Cafe tries to be as local and organic as they can possibly be. Howie has been able to save money and provide fresher better tasting food by growing some of what they need and by processing their own coconuts.
I am not a meat eater, but the smell of the locally made Island Thyme Gourmet sausages was very tempting. Dan and Clare Bobo make the sausages from local meat, but they do use a small amount of non-local pork. Dan talks about how they can’t source local, certified pork. Which was surprising to me, given the prominence of pork in the local diet.







