Let’s Talk Food: Dinner at the Meridia

It is nice to go out to eat at different restaurants to see how other chefs present their dishes. One such is Meridia at the Hapuna Westin Hotel. Chef de Cuisine Junior Ulep tries very diligently to make dishes using 95 percent Big Island products, whether it is sourced from OTEC, a Kona coffee farmer, a farmer like Raymond Kawamata from Kawamata Farms or even in the garden in the back of the restaurant.

Ways to use rotisserie chicken for your next easy dinner

Much as I love to cook, I am unwilling to feel as though I am working inside the oven while trying to get dinner on the table. I’m all about keeping the cooking to a minimum but still prefer to make my meals at home rather than eating out during the work week. My solution is this compromise: rotisserie chicken.

Volcano Watch: Using remote acoustic monitoring to distinguish volcanic styles

Volcanic eruptive activity may take many forms, from gently erupting basaltic fissures in Hawaii to intense explosive eruptions like those of Mount St. Helens. Volcano observatory scientists are keenly interested in understanding such events and their implications for hazards. Two types of eruptions have been the focus of recent studies at Stromboli in Italy.

Hawaii Island Girl Scouts host visitors at Camp Kilohana

Girl Scouts of Hawaii leaders and troops hosted nearly 90 guests for a Distinguished Visitors Day on Aug. 17 to showcase the Innovative Readiness Training project team’s repairs to the Girl Scouts of Hawaii’s Camp Kilohana on Hawaii Island.

Haili Moe exhibit exploring how history informs culture opens Friday at EHCC

A new exhibition, Haili Moe, opens at 6 p.m. on Friday at the East Hawaii Cultural Center. It presents art by six indigenous Hawaiian women that contributes to a conversation about how history informs present and future Hawaiian culture. It also takes a look at how that culture has had to adapt to the forces of colonialism.

Volcano Watch: Aloha to the University of Hawaii’s newest geology professor

Dr. Lis Gallant has spent the last two and a half years at the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) as a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow studying the lava and cinder cones from the 2018 eruption of Kilauea. She is making a short move up the hill this week to join the department of geology at the University of Hawaii Hilo (UHH) as an assistant professor.