Please wait a few seconds while we redirect you
to the new and improved House of Annie website at
www.houseofannie.com !

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Mana Bu's Musubi (Honolulu) PLUS Musubi Maker Giveaway

Can heaven be found behind this little door on King Street in Honolulu?

Mana Bu's Storefront

mana bu's storefront

Keep reading to find out (and stick around for a prize giveaway announcement)!

Whilst checking out different Hawaii foodbloggers to invite to dinner with us, I happened upon Pomai's Tasty Island blog, which chronicles in beautiful detail her food finds from around the island. Her post titled Musubi Mania at Mana Bu's caused me to put this shop on my "to do" list of places to eat.

The store opens at 11 am and Pomai recommends going there at 11 to get the best selection, as the number of musubi are limited each day. But the first day we went, we were running late. We got in almost at closing time. Sure enough, the shelves were bare. We ended up getting some mediocre ramen for lunch instead.

The next time we went was on Friday, the day before we were to leave Hawaii. We had to fit our visit between the last swim at the beach in the morning (oh, it was HARD to get out of the water!) and 1:30 when we had to pick my mom up for a hair appointment. When we got there, the shelves were almost bare, but there were a few musubi left:

Mana Bu's Teri Spam Brown Rice Musubi

Mana Bus Teri Spam brown rice musubi

Notice that for each variety of musubi, there is a card which shows exactly what ingredients go into the food. Impressive, and reassuring at the same time.

Annie actually reached for the white rice Spam musubi first, but the shop's owner Manabu-san recommended the brown rice musubi. The brown rice's nutty flavor complements the Spam better, he explained. He said that it was very hard to make musubis with brown rice but cooking the rice with the right amount of water allows it to hold together.

Mana Bu's Shiso and Wakame Brown Rice Musubi

Mana Bus shiso and wakame musubi 2

We bought a bunch of different musubi and hurried off to pick up my mom. We hadn't had lunch and all of us were starving so we opened up the musubi to eat in the car.

Oh. My. God.

I take back what I said about brown rice not belonging in musubi. The rice was perfectly cooked, still having brown rice texture with every grain intact and yet just sticky enough to hold the musubi together. That teri Spam was also perfectly done, not greasy or burnt, and the sweet teriyaki glaze was well balanced. Boy are we glad that we went with Manabu-san's recommendation! He was spot-on.

This is all that I got after the kids and Annie had their tastes. (Daniel had eaten the salmon musubi all by himself.)

Mana Bu's Teri Spam Musubi

Teri Spam with brown rice  musubi

After the Spam musubi was done, we went for the more interesting varieties:

Mana Bu's Shiso and Wakame Musubi

Mana Bus shiso and wakame musubi 3

Who says a musubi has to have seaweed on the outside? Here, the wakame seaweed is actually mixed in with the rice along with flecks of shiso leaves and sesame seed. This musubi isn't as strongly flavored as the savory Spam or salmon musubi. The floral shiso and wakame flavors are playfully hidden within the rice. But it was still delicious!

Mana Bu's Konbu Brown Rice Musubi

Mana Bus kombu musubi

This musubi uses konbu, a different type of seaweed that is thicker and crunchier than the wakame. Annie took a bite of this musubi and said, "it tastes like the ocean!" The brininess of the konbu, combined with the sweetness of the rice, evokes a sense of the sea in your mouth (in a happy way).

About the only flavor that we didn't like was the vegetable curry pilaf. It was just too weird for our tastes.

Mana Bu's Tofu and Broccoli Salad

mana bus pork and tofu

Annie also picked up a small tub of this Tofu and Broccoli Salad. It sounds simple but don't let the name fool you. When I tasted this dish, I went speechless. The flavors were so refined, so skillfully put together. There was the barest hint of wasabi in the dressing. So subtle, it almost made me cry (no, I am not exaggerating!).

"We have to go back," I told Annie. "NOW!"

But Mom's hair appointment was at 2 pm, Mana Bu's closing time! We dropped Mom off and raced through the backroads of Mo'ili'ili to get to the musubi store before he closed. Fortunately, we made it with 5 minutes to spare. I walked in, and Manabu-san came out from the back, surprised.

"I'm back!" I smiled, "Your musubi are so good, I just had to come back and get some more!" I gushed about how we devoured his musubi and loved every bite (except for the curry one). I raved about how good the Tofu and Broccoli Salad was. I told him about how I was from San Jose and found out about him through Tasty Island.

"Ah, Pomai-san, yes!"

I said to him that I was so impressed with the quality of his musubi that I would tell everybody else about him (check!). On my way out, he picked a box out of his dessert case.

"A sample," he offered, "for you. It has whole strawberry in it. Just made it at 8 am this morning."

Mana Bu's Whole Kula Strawberry Mochi

Mana Bu's fresh whole strawberry mochi

The outside of the mochi looks like any other mochi. But cut into it...

Mana Bu's Whole Kula Strawberry Mochi

Mana Bu's fresh whole strawberry mochi split

...and you'll see that there is a whole fruit in there, blanketed in a thin layer of azuki bean paste.

Awesome. Just awesome. These are the best musubi we have ever eaten. If you ever are in Honolulu, YOU MUST GO and get these musubi. Forget about picking up a Zippy's Zip-Pack or (God forbid) a McD's Happy Meal on the way to the beach. Pack these musubi to go. They will make you so happy. Not only that, they will make your SOUL happy! :-)

Mana Bu's Homemade Japanese Musubi's and Sweets. A little bit of heaven right there on South King Street in Honolulu.


View Larger Map

Musubi Maker and Korean Seaweed Giveaway

Well, we got back from Hawaii and we brought back a few little gifts for our friends. One of them is actually for YOU, our dear readers. It is a musubi mold so you can actually make your own Spam musubi at home. And since a good Spam musubi needs good nori, we'll throw in a package of Korean seaweed to go along with it. (No, we will not send the Spam or the rice. I figure those things are readily available anywhere.)

Musubi Maker and Korean Seaweed Giveaway

Giveaway Rules

"How do I enter?" you ask. Due to difficulty in getting contact information from the winner of our last giveaway, I am asking everyone who wishes to enter the giveaway to subscribe to this blog by email.

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


The winner of the prize will be randomly selected from the list of active email addresses, so you have to verify your email after signing up. (Note to current email subscribers: if you do not wish to participate in the prize drawing, just shoot me a message via the Contact page.)

Deadline for entries will be 11:59 PM, Pacific Daylight Time, on Friday, September 19. Good luck!

Aloha, Nate

Related Posts

Mochi Ice Cream from Bubbies (Honolulu)

Waiola Shave Ice: the Best Shave Ice in Hawaii

20 Comments:

daphne said...

oh wow! that's really generous of u! This look like Japanese rice ball? Is it the same?

Anonymous said...

My mouth is watering just looking at the pictures!

NKP said...

Wow, when it said Spam I thought that it was a word for something else. I can't believe it has real Spam in it!
I love the pic of the strawberry, so vibrant and colourful.

Anonymous said...

Gosh i miss Hawaii so much. The musubi looks incredible, never had one that looked that good. I wish also i could have a bite of that mochi with the whole strawberry inside. Yum!

Bob said...

OOOOO! Strawberry mochi, a Hawaiian 'ting for sure. Yeah, Spam, it is surprisingly good, I couldn't believe it when I first had it, how good it was. I dunno about everyone finding Tamanishiki Brown rice, that stuff is good though. BTW, musubi is Japanese rice ball, grew up on that stuff, picnic food, teri chicken, mususbi, mac salad, our version of Nisei picnic.

Manger La Ville said...

This musubi looks delicious. The rice looks perfectly cooked and interesting. That mochi is truly special.

Anonymous said...

Wow - I cannot wait to try these musubi and the strawberry mochi next time I'm in Hawai'i! This just makes me miss the food there even more.

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@Daphne - Yes, these are Japanese rice balls.

@Jenny - thank you! This was *before* we got the new DSLR, so hopefully my later pics will be even more mouth-watering!

@Natashya - do you not like Spam? Spam musubi is one of the great culinary creations of the world, IMO.

@ZenChef - yes, these were really special musubi.

@Robert - They must grow that Tamanishiki rice around here, right? Wonder if we can find it in the Japanese markets?

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@Manger La Ville - yes, I've never had a whole fruit mochi before. The Kula strawberry is a great ingredient for this.

@Regina - I miss it too!

Katie Zeller said...

I forget how much loved Spam is in Hawaii... Really must get back for a visit but it's soooo far!
Then I could try these wonderful musubi.... Don't find them here in France! Or Spam!

Anonymous said...

theres a place in hilo thats called two ladies kitchen that makes that same kind of mochi and its wonderfull.

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@katiez - No Spam in France? sacre bleu!

Anonymous said...

That strawberry mochi looks fun to make... If only I knew how to make mochi dough.

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@Jude - the easy way to do it is to cook Japanese glutinous rice powder and water. I should do a post on that!

Anonymous said...

That salad looks INCREDIBLE. The rice business looks pretty good too but all this talk of spam is scaring me a little. I need convincing on the spam front.

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@Dani - it would be hard to convince a strict vegetarian to eat Spam. Bacon spam might make it easier, though ;-)

Anonymous said...

That looks fabulous!!!

Nate @ House of Annie said...

@Katie - thanks.

Anonymous said...

Just found your neat blog while cruising around the blogosphere. I can't wait to go back home to Hawaii (also Hawaii ex-pat) so I can try Mana Bu! I've heard so many good things about it.

The Tasty Island is great, isn't it? I'm pretty sure Pomai is a male though...

Nate @ House of Annie said...

Howzit Jiin - what school you went?