Los Angeles Times

OH MY, TRY THE MAI TAIS

The classic is in Waikiki, but other neighborho­ods of Honolulu offer fascinatin­g interpreta­tions. Cheers.

- By Christine Hitt

HONOLULU — San Francisco native Victor Bergeron brought the mai tai to Hawaii in 1953 when he was hired by Matson Navigation Co. to create a cocktail for its Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Waikiki.

Bergeron took his tai recipe — a boozy concoction of rum, Curaçao, orgeat and lime — that he created in 1944 at his Trader Vic’s restaurant in Oakland and added pineapple juice. Demand for this sugary version surpassed the original’s, establishi­ng it as the quintessen­tial mai tai.

The Royal Hawaiian’s Mai Tai Bar last year sold 94,225 of the cocktail, which is made according to Bergeron’s original recipe. It’s one of the few spots in Waikiki that makes a good-quality mai tai, but I wanted to search some of Honolulu’s less-visited neighborho­ods to see if I could find other variations of the classic worth sipping.

I discovered talented bartenders putting innovative spins on the drink, using good-quality ingredient­s, locally sourced when possible, and producing swoon-worthy flavors.

Fizzy fun in a speakeasy

Harry’s Hardware Emporium in Moiliili, near the University of Hawaii campus at Manoa, is the last place you’d expect to find a mai tai. The speakeasy is entered through a bookcase inside Pint + Jigger, the pub next door.

L.A. native Dave Newman opened Pint + Jigger seven years ago, and about a year and a half ago opened Harry’s Hardware Emporium with a focus on cocktails and conversati­on. The hidden room has an ornate Roaring ’20s-themed interior with tufted leather couches, a chandelier and a bar that sits eight.

Newman’s mai tai ($14), made with Pierre Ferrand Dry Orange Curaçao, lime juice, Cointreau, house-made orgeat and El Dorado rum, is mixed in a bottle, then carbonated. Once the process is complete, the air pressure is released and the cocktail turns a foamy white.

“I’m not saying that carbonatin­g this drink makes it better. It’s just fun,” Newman said.

He poured the mai tai, now the color of gold, into an iced glass and topped it with a float of two rums, Cruzan Black Strap and Barbancour­t. The fizzy bubbles made the mai tai easy to drink. Info: Harry’s Hardware Emporium, 936 S. King St., Honolulu; (808) 379-3887, bit.ly/harryshard wareempori­um

Tasty way to wind down

Oahu-born and -raised Justin Park creates cocktails like a chef preparing meals at a five-star restaurant — with a lot of time and pre-planning. It can take days for a single ingredient to be ready.

He opened Bar Leather Apron, an intimate cocktail lounge with a seven-seat bar in 2016 in Honolulu’s downtown business district. Its E Hoo Pau Mai Tai (e hoo pau means to finish or wind down) won Park the 2015 title of world’s best mai tai at Don the Beachcombe­r’s Mai Tai Festival in Kona on Hawaii Island.

It features raisin-infused El Dorado five-year rum, El Dorado 12year rum, coconut water syrup, spiked orgeat, ohia blossom honey, lime and absinthe.

“The four flavors I featured when I built the recipe were raisin, vanilla, coconut and licorice,” he said. The absinthe is spritzed over the ice to create a licorice aroma.

A hollow tiki-shaped box is placed over the cocktail, then filled with smoke, which adds the aroma of kiawe wood. Park let wisps of smoke escape from the tiki’s nostrils before removing the box and presenting the drink, ready for my full attention.

Info: Bar Leather Apron, 745 Fort Street Mall, No. 127, Honolulu; (808) 524-0808, barleather­apron.com. $18 for an E Hoo Pau Mai Tai.

Thai or Italian style

Christian Self owns Bevy, a 5year-old bar in Kakaako, a former working-class district that now is one of Honolulu’s hippest neighborho­ods. The mixologist, from Liverpool, England, pays meticulous attention to detail when creating craft cocktails.

He’s also a big fan of tiki drinks and is known for making more than a few varieties of mai tais. “I really dug into the history years and years ago, so I’ve always been tweaking and making them because I despise the Waikiki mai tai. It’s just rum punch, and it’s pulling the wool over everybody’s eyes,” Self said.

Self won the world’s best mai tai in 2010 at the Don the Beachcombe­r festival with his Mai Thai ($14) made with lemongrass syrup and candied-ginger foam. It remains on Bevy’s menu, but the new Ma Italiano (pronounced Maitaliano) will soon be added.

“This one is a limited-edition Bacardi aged rum,” he said. “I had to take an Italian amaro and infuse it with Valencia dried orange peels to make my own Curaçao. Then I cut it down to the right proof and made a pistachio orgeat [syrup] and added fresh lime and a little bit of simple syrup. It gets topped off with [flower water] that I distill from fresh island pikake.”

Park tries to stay true to the spirit of the original mai tai recipe. “For me, it’s a way to pay homage to my favorite drink.”

Info: Bevy, 675 Auahi St., Honolulu; (808) 594-7445, bit.ly/bevybar

 ?? John Hook ?? BAR LEATHER APRON’S award-winning E Hoo Pau Mai Tai uses kiawe wood smoke, absinthe, ohia blossom honey and more.
John Hook BAR LEATHER APRON’S award-winning E Hoo Pau Mai Tai uses kiawe wood smoke, absinthe, ohia blossom honey and more.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States