This way for Smoke Meat!

Every Sunday, cardboard signs with hand-lettered arrows and SMOKE MEAT on them appear around our neighborhood.  I find these signs both interesting and confusing.

    As a writer, I’m especially irritated by the missing “D,” and in general I’m just very curious. The signs raised more questions than they answered, such as:

    What kind of meat is it?

    Is it for sale, or is this just a statement?

    Where is the “D” in Smoked Meat?

    Finally one day I said, “I gotta know more about Smoke Meat. Follow the signs!”

    Our quest (following the arrows) ended at a little cinderblock house.

    The hubby pulled up in the driveway and said, “Have fun with this.” I could not get him to come as backup. Somewhat trepidatious, I went to the door, smelling—you guessed it—the distinctive smell of meat smoking.

    A very large Hawaiian man who really should have been wearing a shirt answered the door and ushered me (protesting) into the kitchen, where virtually every surface was covered with bowls of soaking Smoke Meat, vats of bubbling Smoke Meat, or cutting boards laden with soon to be Smoke Meat.

    “Smells great,” I said, and he insisted on cutting me a sample and cooking it on the stove. This handily led to my most burning question:

    “What kind of meat is it?”

    “Any kine, but today stay pokebut.”

    “Pokebut?”

    “Pork butt,” he enunciated carefully. A button-eyed toddler peeked out from behind his legs, a surly teenager worked the cleaver and the frazzled looking daughter (mother of toddler) stirred the vat while Grandpa fried my sample.

    “So do you hunt for the pork, or raise it yourself?” Pig hunting is serious sport here in Hawaii (see previous blog entry, the State Animal of Hawaii is…Pig)

    “Get da kine at Costco. Good quality pokebut.”

    I ate my sample off a bamboo skewer, burning my lips, and it was indeed delicious. When I told him so he became expansive and took me on a tour of the cooking/smoking operation. The cooking was done on a series of gas grills in the back yard, turned down low and belching kiawe wood smoke.

    I bought a Ziploc baggie of Smoke Meat for the exorbitant price of $10.00, feeling as naughty as if I was buying a dime bag of weed on the corner or something.

    “Come by any time, even when we no get the sign out,” he said. “My name Squeeky.”

    “Squeeky?” I repeated, thinking this must be one of those Pidgin English ‘lost in translation’ moments.

    “Squeeky,” he confirmed. I narrowly avoided a hug as he headed in my direction. I would have been okay with it if he’d had a shirt on, but as it was I reeked when I got back in the car with the hubby.

    “You smell like Smoke Meat,” he said. “Delicious!”

    It must be a man thing.

    Turns out that baggie of Smoke Meat went a long way. Just a little in an omelet, or with some beans, or on a cracker is super flavorful. So if you’re ever in upcountry Maui, go see Squeeky for some awesome Smoke Meat.

    I never did find out about that missing “D” and have decided it’s not really necessary.

    Join My Email Book List

    Receive not one but two welcome gift ebooks! For crime thriller and mystery lovers, you can download book 2 in the award winning Lei Crime series FREE.
    If you love romance, join my romance list and receive book one in the Somewhere Series, Somewhere on St. Thomas. Join now and stay up to date on sales, new releases, freebies, and giveaways!

    You have Successfully Subscribed!

    Sign up for my romance newsletter and I'll send you a link to download Somewhere on St. Thomas as a FREE welcome gift!

    You have Successfully Subscribed!

    Sign up for my newsletter and I'll send you a link to download Torch Ginger as a FREE welcome gift

    You have Successfully Subscribed!

    Author Coaching

    Join Toby's author coaching newsletter for tips and news for your writing journey!

    You have Successfully Subscribed!