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On Thu, 08 May 2008 11:48:39 -0500, Conan The Librarian
wrote: wrote: Interesting. I've never had lomi-lomi salmon that was like what I would call "ceviche," but hey, like I said, "ceviche" covers a lot of ground. I thought it was smoked salmon, which by itself wouldn't necessarily kill all the nasties, but freezing first and then smoking is sort of a double whammy. Are you familiar with cold-smoked salmon? If so, was what you had anything like it? Nope, it wasn't smoked at all. Well, that's why I asked about _cold_ smoked (or cured) - if you're not familiar with it, it's markedly different that hot smoked. I don't know if this was the "traditional" preparation of lomi-lomi Neither do I...and in fact, don't know if it is "traditional," something recently adapted, or even just something recently "invented" , but it was in a little dive on Kauai (the Aloha Cafe, IIRC), so I don't have any reason to doubt that it was authentic. I know very little about true "native" Hawaiian food: I don't like poi, but do like much of the other stiuff I've tried, and I understand, but don't _know_, that much of what is now considered "Hawaiian" food is late 19th-to-20th century introduction/adaptation from the US mainland, Japan, other islands, etc. That's about it, so I have no basis on which to comment "authentic." I'd wonder how/why Hawaiians got their hands on salmon for it to be a typical "traditional" dish of any long standing, but ??? As far as the similarity to ceviche -- that's what caught my attention. Throw in some cilantro and a few serrano peppers and it could have passed for it. TC, R |
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