In Bora Bora, it’s 85 degrees, with a light northwest breeze. In
Seattle, the low on this day is 29, with a predicted high of a balmy
38. At the bar at the Luau, near Green Lake, everyone’s talking about
black ice. It’s mid-afternoon, and the treachery is still out there.
“It’s the angle of the sun,” someone says; parts of city streets
are being held captive in freezing-cold shadow all day long.

Inside, however, some early Bob Marley is playing, and there’s
the sweet sound of the blender, and then you’ve got a
piรฑa colada. It’s served in a ceramic coconut shell, and it’s
got a little paper umbrella with an orange and a cherry impaled on it.
Because it’s happy hourโ€”and the Luau’s weekend Hula Happy Hour is
the world’s longest, from noon to 6:00 p.m. (3:00 to 6:00 p.m.
weekdays)โ€”it costs $5. You’d prefer a mai tai, all
tropical-bright in a tall glass shaped like a fat stick of bamboo? It’s
also $5, and it also has a paper umbrella. It’s made with Myers’s dark
rum, guava, pineapple, and more, including “the Kaha secret.”
Kaha means “over there,” among other things, in Hawaiian; the
bartender won’t say what the secret is. Not secret: The guava
and pineapple juice come from a can. These aren’t craft cocktails, but
the taste puts you poolside.

The Luau’s pulled pork sandwich is all rightโ€”while the meat
could use more seasoning, the portion’s unstingy and the Macrina roll
is fresh. The island-style creamy macaroni salad is better than most,
with a slight spicy heat and a ton of paprika on top. There’s a
traditional Hawaiian plate lunch, too, with a Spam option available.
What’s extra-super-delicious at the Luau: the house-made potato
chips
, not too greasy, some slightly thicker than others. You could
eat a mountain of them.

The thermostat at the Luau is set to 75. Over in one corner, under
the fronds of a woven palapa roof, a few stools wait in the afternoon
sun that’s slanting valiantly through the window. Don’t look
outsideโ€”where the bereft, barren patio sends chilling signals to
your brainโ€”just drink through your straw. The carved tiki
gods
are watching you. The Luau’s carpet is leopard-print, the bar
has a bamboo railing around it, and paintings on black velvet show
Polynesian lovelies coyly hiding their bare bosoms. Part of one wall is
a shrine to Luau-style fun: Memorabilia includes a recent Jimmy Buffett
ticket stub and a Qwest Field Fan Code of Conduct Violation ticket
issued for smoking at a November 8 game. Above one booth is an Elvis
reliquary, with Elvis photos and an Elvis snow globe bedecked in
plastic leis. Through a doorway, the marlin on the wall of the
Bora Bora Room shines. recommended

Luau, 2253 N 56th St, 633-5828

5 replies on “Bar Exam”

  1. Their Pupu platter is so delicious, and I’m happy to see their main dishes come with sides again. Last time I was there (a good year or so ago) you had to order them separately.

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