{{Short description|Quintessentially Hawaiian meal}} [[File:Rainbow Drive-In mix plate lunch (2194653288).jpg|thumb|Mixed plate lunch served at the Rainbow Drive-In in Honolulu]] {{Meals}} {{Use mdy dates|date=October 2024}}
The '''plate lunch''' ({{langx|haw|pā mea ʻai}}) is a Hawaiian meal, roughly analogous to the Southern U.S. meat-and-three or Japanese bento box. The combination of Polynesian, North American and East Asian cuisine arose naturally in Hawaii, and has spread beyond it.
Standard plate lunches consist of one or two scoops of white rice, macaroni salad (in an American style), and an entrée (usually in a Japanese style such as chicken katsu or teriyaki).<ref name="khnl">{{cite web|url= http://www.khnl.com/Global/story.asp?S=1030393|title= Origins of Plate Lunch|access-date= 2008-11-12|date= 2002-11-27|publisher= KHNL|location= Honolulu, Hawaii|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080105101527/http://khnl.com/Global/story.asp?S=1030393|archive-date= 2008-01-05|url-status= dead}}</ref> A plate lunch with more than one entrée is often called a "mixed plate".
== Origins == {{see also|Okazuya}} Although the exact origin of the Hawaiian plate lunch is disputed,<ref name="khnl" /> according to Professor Jon Okamura of the University of Hawaiʻi, the plate lunch likely grew out of the Japanese bento, because "bentos were take away kinds of eating and certainly the plate lunch continues that tradition".<ref name="khnl" /> Its appearance in Hawaii in recognizable form goes back to the 1880s when plantation workers were in high demand by the fruit and sugar companies on the islands.<ref name="Carbo-Loading" /> Laborers were brought to Hawaii from around the world, including from China, Japan, Portugal, and the Philippines. Kaui Philpotts, former food editor of the ''Honolulu Advertiser'', notes that the laborers "didn't eat sandwiches or things like that; it was leftover rice and a lot of things like canned meat or teriyaki or cold meat or maybe scrambled eggs or pickles, and almost no salad or vegetable."<ref name="Carbo-Loading"> {{Citation | last = Steinhauer | first = Jennifer | title = Carbo-Loading, Hawaiian Style | newspaper = The New York Times | publication-place = New York, NY | date = November 12, 2008 | page = D1 New York edition | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/12/dining/12plate.html | access-date = 2009-11-01 }}</ref> Later on, macaroni salad was added to the plates, as it seemed to bridge national tastes and also mixed well with gravy-covered slabs of meat.<ref name="Carbo-Loading" /> Some locations also include the traditional Korean side dish ''kimchi''.
As the days of the plantations came to an end, plate lunches began to be served on-site by lunch wagons to construction workers and day laborers. Later, local hole-in-the-wall restaurants and other stand-alone plate lunch restaurants began popping up,<ref name="Carbo-Loading" /> then plate lunch franchises. Eventually, these made their way to the U.S. mainland such as the former L&L Drive-Inn chain in California in 1999.<ref name="L&L"> {{cite web |title = L&L Hawaiian Barbecue · L&L Drive-Inn - About Us |location = Honolulu, HI |url = http://www.hawaiianbarbecue.com/about.html |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20040807171036/http://www.hawaiianbarbecue.com/about.html |url-status = dead |archive-date = 2004-08-07 |access-date = 2009-11-01 }}</ref> L&L founder Eddie Flores rebranded it "L&L Hawaiian Barbecue", explaining that "When we went to the mainland, the name 'Hawaiian' is a draw, because everyone just fantasized, everyone wants to come to Hawaii."<ref name="L&L" />
== Popular entrées == Popular plate lunch entrées reflect Polynesian, North American and East Asian influence.
Japanese entrées include chicken ''katsu'' (fried boneless chicken breaded with panko) and beef ''teriyaki''.
Korean entrées include ''kalbi'' and meat ''jun''.
Other Asian ethnic contributions include Chinese-influenced ''char siu'' pork, the Okinawan shoyu pork (Okinawan: ''rafute''), and Filipino chicken ''adobo'' and ''longanisa'' (a traditional Spanish sausage). Western European dishes include ''linguiça'', a traditional Portuguese sausage.
Entrées of Hawaiian origin include ''kālua puaʻa'' (roast pork) and ''laulau'' (pork or other meat or fish wrapped in a taro leaf). Some Hawaiian side dishes are lomi-lomi salmon (salmon salad) and ''haupia'' (a coconut dessert).
The traditional mayonnaise-based macaroni salad is an American contribution. Another notably American element is the hamburger steak, a ground beef patty smothered with brown gravy served atop rice; adding a sunny-side-up egg makes it a loco moco.
Other common side dishes with plate lunches include fried noodles, often ''chow mein'', ''chow fun'' or ''saimin''; the Hawaiian ''taegu'', a dish made of shredded codfish; and Korean ''kongnamul muchim'', a dish made of seasoned soybean sprouts.
<gallery class="center" widths="200" heights="170" caption="Plate lunches"> File:Wardsplatelunch.jpg|Traditional Hawaiian plate lunch. Clockwise, from bottom left: two scoops of white rice, ''ahi poke'', lomi-lomi salmon, ''haupia'' dessert, ''kālua puaʻa'' (roast pork), and pork ''laulau''. File:Lukoki Hawaiian BBQ, Mt. View seafood & kalua pork combo.JPG|Kālua pork combination plate lunch </gallery>
==See also== {{portal|Food|Hawaii}} *{{annotated link|Cuisine of Hawaii}} *{{annotated link|Okazuya}}
== References == {{reflist}}
==External links== *[https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/12/dining/12plate.html?fta=y History of the Hawaiian Plate Lunch] (''New York Times'', 2008) *[http://alohaworld.com/platelunch/ Southern California Plate Lunch Connection]{{dead link|date=February 2026}} *[http://khnl.com/Global/story.asp?S=1030393 Origins of the plate lunch] story from KHNL{{dead link|date=February 2026}} *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYdGyf3V3gc&t=40s "What's in a Hawaiian Plate Lunch?"] (video) *[http://www.janm.org/mediaarts/projects/lunch.html Politics of the Plate Lunch]{{dead link|date=February 2026}}, 1997 exhibition at the Japanese American National Museum
{{Meals_navbox}}
Category:Food combinations Category:Hawaiian fusion cuisine Category:Japanese fusion cuisine Category:Canadian cuisine Category:Lunch dishes Category:Restaurant terminology Category:Serving and dining