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Leonard's Bakery is a Portuguese bakery in Honolulu, Hawaii, known for popularizing the malasada. The fried pastry, slightly crispier and chewier than a doughnut and with no hole, is known as a cuisine of Hawaii.
The bakery doesn't have enough workers to handle the Thanksgiving rush this year, which in the past has seen about 3, 000 pies sold in one day, according to an article in Honolulu magazine from 2019.
By the 1980s, Taira's company, King's Hawaiian Bakery, was grossing US$20 million annually. [4] In 1988 the company moved its headquarters to the mainland. [2] The Honolulu bakery closed in 1992. [3] In 2002, the company opened a new restaurant and bakery called The Local Place Bakery & Cafe in Torrance. [5]
Zippy's is open 24 hours and offers a wide variety of food combining American, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, and Hawaiian cuisine —that is, what people who live in Hawaii call "local" cuisine. [6] One of their signature dishes when they first opened was the Zip-min. [clarification needed] [7] Its signature food is their chili.
Kanemitsu Bakery in Kaunakakai on the Hawaiian island of Molokai is a bakery known for its baked goods and the "hot bread" served out of its back door at night.
Magnolia Bakery is a chain of bakeries founded in New York City. The first location opened in 1996 at 401 Bleecker Street, on the corner of West 11th Street in the West Village neighborhood of Manhattan.
Travels between Kalihi Transit Center and Kahala Mall via Middle, School, Chinatown, Downtown Honolulu, Waikiki, Campbell Avenue, and Diamond Head. Serves School Street, King Street, Campbell Avenue, and Kāhala Mall. Limited stop service from Kalihi Transit Center to Kapahulu Avenue. Operates 6AM-6PM weekdays.
In 1998, Honolulu Cookie Company introduced its first cookies to the wholesale market. [2] In 2001 the factory and retail store opened in Honolulu, Hawaii. Over the next few years, shops opened all over Oahu, with the Ward Warehouse store in 2002, a store in the Hilton Hawaiian Village in Waikiki in 2003, and a kiosk at Ala Moana Center in 2004.