MARY FURR -- DINING OUT
L & L Hawaiian Barbeque, at Beach Boulevard and Utica Avenue, is a
casual place among a cluster of eating choices, not quite a restaurant.
It’s of the “give your order and take a number” variety with a limited
menu, but what great new tastes for Huntington Beach!
Its popular fast-food style is imported from the islands -- the
Newland Center location is the second in the United States -- and its
citrus marinade and sauce makes the food addictive. Everything is served
in Styrofoam, ready for take out for the office, beach, home video or one
of the inside or outside tables. Combo plates ($6.29-$7.29) and the plate
lunches (mini $3.69; regular $5.69-$5.89) all have a scoop of some of the
best steamed rice this side of Japan, thanks to chef Matt Morita,
mayonnaisy macaroni salad and a pile of shredded cabbage on which your
meat, chicken or seafood selection rests. According to co-owner Kiva
Morita, chicken katsu is chicken breast butterflied and battered, then
folded back together, dipped in batter and fried, which results in an
extra light crispiness on the tender meat. It’s the crustiness that is so
distinctive and the lively citrus dipping sauce that goes with it.
A combo plate barbecue mix ($6.29) is more ordinary but still has that
Hawaiian flavor. Piled on the plate are two thick, grilled chicken
breasts; two pieces of thin, marinated beef; and two strips of short ribs
-- satisfying but still light.
A beef dish that Kiva says is really popular is loco moco
($3.89-$5.89) -- a selection that would do for breakfast or lunch. A
thick hamburger patty and egg (any style) rests on top of beefy gravy --
as hearty as a hungry surfer could want.
Another robust dish back in favor with diners now is the Hawaiian
barbecue pork chop ($3.79-$5.79), the wonderfully flavored, lean chop has
plenty of meat and little bone.
For a lighter lunch, saimin -- noodle soup ($2.79-$3.99) -- is
perfect, lots of tangled thin noodles in a clear beef broth to which you
may add either chicken, beef, shrimp or vegetables. The vegetable choice
is thick with bright broccoli flowers, onions and carrots, the chicken
katsu has lots of marble-size, breaded chicken pieces with onion bits
floating on top.
Fish, a sure bet in any of the islands, is an excellent choice here.
Three lightly battered slices of mahi-mahi ($3.99-$5.99) top the
rough-cut cabbage with an excellent pinkish tartar sauce that was so good
we mixed it with the cabbage for an impromptu salad. Four tail-on fried
shrimp ($3.99-$5.99) are naked and unbattered but brushed with that
citrusy Hawaiian sauce. A good cocktail-type sauce would have been a
welcome addition.
Sandwiches, burgers and salads are available but no desserts -- fresh
assorted fruit ($2.79) can be a good substitute. Matt and Kiva Morita,
along with co-owners Derryck and Elaine Tom, have all enjoyed the
distinctive taste of Hawaiian barbecue in the islands. Matt and Kiva,
from San Gabriel Valley, settled in Huntington Beach 18 years ago, when
she was a designer for St. John Knits. Now her uniform is the bright
orange shirts of L & L Hawaiian Barbeque.
She loves the change of career and welcomes the diners who pour into
the busy cafe, which opened a month ago.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments
or suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI
o7 L & L Hawaiian Barbequef7
WHERE: 19692 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, in the Newland Center
PHONE/FAX: (714) 968-1898
HOURS: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m to 10 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday
MISC.: Credit cards
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