It was once a dish well documented by many non-Hawaiians as an everyday dish,[6][7] or as a dessert found at ʻahaʻaina (or lūʻau) found alongside kūlolo,[8][9] and was noted by Robert Louis Stevenson during his visits in the late 1800s.[10][11]
History
Sweet potato is one of the most earliest, cultivated crop carried into the central Pacific Islands by Austronesian peoples around 1300 AD, where they became a staple crop of Polynesians.[12]
Although associated as a root vegetable, all parts of the sweet potato was utilized.[13][14] However, sweet potatoes were considered inferior and less valuable than taro, or kōʻele―a rare term used for "less desirable portions of meat or fish,"[15] but it was able to flourish in unfavorable growing conditions.[16]
Preparation
Traditional kōʻelepālau recipes call for sweet potatoes roasted over coals or kālua (cooked in an imu or earth oven). In modern recipes, any method to cook sweet potatoes can be used such as steaming or boiling.[17] The sweet potatoes are usually removed of its skin then thoroughly mashed.[18] Coconut milk, or milk substitute,[19] is then mixed to the desired consistency. Optionally, additional sugar can be added or garnished with shredded coconut.[20]
^Pālau is the abbreviated name for kōʻelepālau as well as the ancient Mauidialect term for sweet potato.[1] The common Native Hawaiian term for sweet potato is ʻuala (or ʻuwala).[2]
^"kōʻelepālau". Wehewiki Hawaiian Language Dictionaries. University of Hawaii at Hilo - Ka Haka ʻUla O Keʻelikōlani College of Hawaiian Language. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
^"Recipes". Kaʻiwakīloumoku - Hawaiian Cultural Center. Kamehameha Schools. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
^"Piele". Wehewiki Hawaiian Language Dictionaries. University of Hawaii at Hilo - Ka Haka ʻUla O Keʻelikōlani College of Hawaiian Language. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
^Brickwood (1896). Hawaiian Cook Book (4th ed.). Honolulu, Hawaii: Hawaiian Gazette Company. p. 132. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
^Kaufman, Jessie (1912). A Jewel of the Seas. Philadelphia, US: J.B. Lippincott Company. p. 130. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
^M.D.; Goodhue, E. S. (1917). Ford, Alexander Hume; Mellen, George (eds.). The Man in the Malo (1 ed.). Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii: Volume XIII. Mid-Pacific Magazine. p. 391.
^Denham, Tim (October 2011). "Early Agriculture and Plant Domestication in New Guinea and Island Southeast Asia". Current Anthropology. 52 (S4): S379–S395. doi:10.1086/658682. hdl:1885/75070. S2CID36818517.
^Winnicki, Elizabeth; Kagawa-Viviani, Aurora; Perez, Kauahi; Radovich, Theodore; Kantar, Michael (2021). "Characterizing the Diversity of Hawai'i Sweet Potatoes (Ipomoea batatas [L.] Lam.)". Economic Botany. 75: 48–62. doi:10.1007/s12231-020-09511-2. S2CID234165494.
^Yen, Douglas E. (1961). Sweet-potato variation and its relation to human migration in the Pacific. Pacific Science Association.