Kailua Kona restaurants
Hanging Out at Jackie Rey’s Ohana Grill in Kona
Our server at Jackie Rey’s Ohana Grill in Kona has worked at that establishment for 4 years, and she was bursting with energy, smiles and helpfulness. It’s such a different vibe here than the reception you get as a Sacramento Realtor in a place like, say, Midtown Sacramento. There is little reserve or over-the-top formalities. Everything is casual.
Which is partly why I love Big Island. No dressing up. No makeup to wear. No brushing of hair. Nobody you need to impress. You can dress as a slob and be welcome just about anywhere, and let me tell you that sloppiness is my preferred style of dress. I would wear the same article of clothing over and over without laundering if I could get away with it.
We were searching for a place close to our new vacation house in Hawaii for dinner because my husband, for some reason, does not want to cook, even though we have a perfectly good kitchen in which to practice his art. I don’t care. We can go out. None of the restaurants we have frequented thus far are what I would call “fine dining,” but it’s fine all the same. Not memorable. Not bad.
The perfect way to start dinner at Jackie Rey’s is with a Hawaiian cocktail such as the Passion Flow, made with blended rum, pineapple juice, cream of coconut, lilikoi and a shot of orange juice, served in a li hing mui rimmed glass. Because I was driving the jeep, I nursed a glass of Stag’s Leap Napa Chardonnay.
We both ordered the Angie’s Salad, with greens, farro, apples, beets, macadamia nuts, blue cheese with a strawberry vinaigrette, but I added a lobster tail just because I could. My husband selected the New Yorker which, despite its name, was not a New York Strip. It was really more of a sirloin, so the name is a bit misleading. Asparagus and bacon-mashed potatoes rounded out the dish.
The open air dining was relaxing. We were lucky to have nabbed a booth all the way to the back of the restaurant, right by the window overlooking the parking lot. It was noisy but not so loud you couldn’t hear a person talk across the table. Plus they gave us crayons to draw on the paper table cloth, and that kept us busy for a while.
It was somewhat affordable at Jackie Rey’s but not two dollar signs as shown on Trip Advisor. Our dinner with tip was a little over $100. Two drinks were $21. It’s a restaurant I would return to, though. The ambiance and friendly staff perk it up. And when I picked up my cellphone to leave, it appeared our conversation ended up in a Siri search. I include it below. This is not what we were discussing by a long shot. Siri is somewhat poetic.