eatchicago wrote:Santander wrote:It's countrywide, and pineapple juice makes it Hawaiian (colors and sweetens).
I think that used to be the case. Today it's just sugar, corn syrup, and beta carotene for color.
Wow, is that sad but true. This is just sobering:
http://www.kingshawaiian.com/products/p ... dients.phpEvery other recipe I can find out there for Hawaiian bread calls for pineapple juice, and certainly loaves made in the islands must still use it - I had some fresh from a bakery in Kauai that also had a lovely ginger flavor, and my favorite
Puka Dogs are served on pineapple-sweetened buns. Must not travel well. The current King's Hawaiian product is still quite tasty and my go-to for little sandwiches of many types.
Standard Portuguese sweet bread doesn't call for pineapple juice, so perhaps KH is just honoring the original recipe, but I'd say pineapple (the local sweetener in Brazil and eventually Hawaii, by the early 1800s) is certainly preferable to HFCS.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_sweet_breadAnyone familiar with how it's made in the Northeast US, please enlighten us (are there any non-commercial bakeries that have this on hand? For that matter, any bakeries in Chicago make Portuguese sweet bread?)