Thanksgiving with the Duke
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DINING REVIEW
If you want to show off Surf City to visiting friends and
relatives this Thanksgiving, there’s no better place than Duke’s, the
1940s colonial island restaurant at the base of the pier where Main
Street meets Pacific Coast Highway.
A friendly casualness pervades Duke’s with servers in Hawaiian
style shirts and diners in informal “SoCal” attire -- but its cuisine
is far from casual.
According to Executive Chef David Baumann, Thanksgiving food
service will run from 2 to 8 p.m. with additions to the regular menu.
Mahi mahi, which we tried recently, is wonderful -- sugar-spiced with
a dark, sweet papaya-mustard sauce that blended well with the firm
white fish. Herb-crusted fish is one of the most popular dishes with
fish being flown in daily from Hawaii, according to Manager Julia
Parker.
Duke’s offers meat, as well, with a slow roasted prime rib
($19.95) with fresh herbs and garlic and herb-infused au jus. Or
there is Huli Huli chicken ($14.95), voted Honolulu’s favorite
barbecue chicken, with garlic, ginger and shoyu (Japanese soy)
flavors with a fresh tropical salsa that is based on a family recipe.
If your Thanksgiving extends to Sunday brunch ($16.95), Duke’s
offers a brunch buffet that spreads through three rooms. There are
trays of crisp bacon and big plump link pork sausages with a mildly
spicy taste. The scrambled eggs, however, were disappointing, not
fluffy and almost cold. Not only could the steam trays be adjusted
for more consistent heating, but warm plates would help. A chef
carves ham and roast beef, and best of all, there are labels on
clever little surf boards identifying each tray’s contents.
The salad and dessert buffets are at one end of the main dining
room. There is fresh fruit -- the pineapple sweet and juicy -- elbow
macaroni salad not often found at buffets and the usual greens and
Caesar in large bowls. Here, too, area baskets of bagels, mounds of
cream cheese and silky smooth yogurt.
But the round table covered with tiny pastries, dark
chocolate-dipped strawberries, mini custard-filled eclairs and
squares of delicious cakes filled with pecans, chocolate bits and
unidentifiable “good stuff” ... you’d have to have a will of iron to
resist this beautiful selection.
Duke’s, named for Duke Kahanamoku, a Waikiki beach boy who became
a surfing legend and Olympic medalist, is a perfect fit for “Surf
City,” where annual surfing contests attract worldwide attention.
* MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, call (562) 493-5062 or send e-mail to
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