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Apr 06, 2024Apr 06, 2024

Have you been craving a panikeke or chop suey and rice, but don’t know where to go? We’ve narrowed down the best spots in Tāmaki Makaurau to get your Pacific soul food fix.

Pacific Island restaurants are popping up around Tāmaki Makaurau, which is great news for those of us who crave soul food from Sāmoa, Tonga, Cook Islands and more. But they are often not the easiest restaurants to find, unless you know someone who knows someone.

A lot of these takeaway restaurants are family-owned and run. There are also plenty of cafes run by Pasifika families offering classic western treats, but this is a guide for when you want a plate of taro, chop suey straight from the warmer and a tub of chilled raw fish. So take a break from cooking and head to one of these popular spots.

Oceania Food & Catering Ltd2C Archibald Road, Kelston (opposite Kelston Girls College)

The Apineru family has been running this business since 2015, selling a wide range of Sāmoan dishes like lamb curry (kale mamoe), falai pi (lamb flaps with beans), mamoe masima (lamb brisket preserved in brine), palusami (taro leaves, corned beef, diced onions and coconut milk) and more.

The suafa’i (banana and coconut cream dish), chop suey, panikeke (deep fried banana ball doughnut), turkey tails and keke mamoe (lamb buns) are popular items at this restaurant. “Tongans come here when they’re sick of eating lu sipi at home,” one of the workers jokes.

Oceania Food & Catering has plans to open another store in Māngere this month, for all their loyal customers who come out to their Kelston shop from various South Auckland suburbs.

Ulutoa and Sons1898 Great North Road, Avondale87 Māngere Road, Ōtāhuhu (opposite Ōtāhuhu College)

This is a well-established family business passed down from generation to generation within the Ulutoa family. The restaurant and store started in 2005 in Avondale, and the Ōtāhuhu branch opened in 2012.

Popular items include the chop suey and keke pua’a (pork buns), but Rejoice Toetuu, whose dad is one of the sons of the Ulutoa family, says she highly recommends the fried chicken, which she prefers to KFC.

Taste of Sāmoa3/24 Henderson Valley Road, Henderson (behind Caltex)

If you want to try mouthwatering, beautifully decorated paifala (pineapple pie), this is where you need to go. Taste of Sāmoa also does a tasty chop suey and their lamb buns were flying out the door when I arrived to browse the menu.

The family-owned business kicked off in 2018 and is proud to be serving traditional Sāmoan cuisine like fai’ai eleni (coconut baked fish), pig head and panipopo (coconut buns).

Polynesian Food Takeaway1891 Great North Road, Avondale

A lot of your favourite Sāmoan dishes and Chinese takeaway cuisine.

Tasu’s Takeout3 Mason Ave, Ōtāhuhu

A Cook Islands family business serving, in my opinion, Tāmaki Makaurau’s best steak and mushroom on rice, paired with their renowned mainese salad. When I visited they had stacks of banana poke, a traditional banana pudding from the Cook Islands, as well as pumpkin-flavoured poke, coconut buns and fresh Cook Islands doughnuts.

Tasu’s Takeout opened two days before the first nationwide lockdown and has been running since. Steak and mushroom is definitely a crowd favourite, which they also sell in loaded fries or as a roll.

When you place an order, instead of the traditional bell for service, Tasu’s Takeout incorporates their beautiful culture with a traditional pate or drum, featuring the words “beat me for service” carved in.

Hala Hihifo471 Great South Road, Ōtāhuhu

A Tongan-led business proudly supporting its national teams Ikale Tahi (rugby union) and Mate Ma’a Tonga (rugby league), at Hala Hihifo you’re greeted with Tongan flags and wallpaper-sized posters of popular sporting figures like NRL star Jason Taumalolo. Walking into the kitchen and grill restaurant, you feel as though you have been immediately transported to Nuku’alofa.

Hala Hihifo has all your Tongan classics like faikakai topai (caramel sauce with flour dumplings), meleni (watermelon) and mango ‘otai; plus lu sipi (taro leaves with lamb flaps), feke loloi (octopus pieces cooked in coconut cream) and ota ika (raw fish).

Helu Vilikikihi60 Atkinson Ave, Ōtāhuhu

Another Tongan restaurant offering plenty of keke ‘isite (fried ball doughnuts), sapasui moa or chicken chop suey, lu pulu masima (beef in brine and taro leaves) and talo Tonga or taro.

This place has a huge dining space which is great for families, and the friendly staff are ready to welcome you in.

Pinati’s Keke Pua’a19A Queen Street, Ōtāhuhu

One of the original Pacific Island spots in Tāmaki Makaurau, Pinati’s Keke Pua’a has been around for 23 years and is known for the keke pua’a (pork buns). Lamb buns are on offer too.

I enjoyed seeing their spin on the traditional panikeke, with custard and chocolate-filled keke both on offer, but you have to be quick as they sell out fast.

Evelina’s Polynesian Food459 Roscommon Road, Clendon Park2/143 Bairds Road, Ōtara

Evelina’s Polynesian Food has been serving the community for 25 years, offering a wide range of Sāmoan dishes including chop suey, surimi with coconut cream, paifala and fa’apapa (baked coconut bread).

They have mastered homemade Polynesian food on the go with their loyal customers piling through their doors, even on a wet winter day.

TANZ Kitchen1 Piako Street, Ōtara

This cosy takeaway spot is proudly run by a Cook Islands family. If you’re craving fresh, hot Cook Islands doughnuts, look no further. They also have mainese with steak and mushroom, chop suey and banana poke. If you want fish and chips to go with your mainese, that’s on offer too.

Viviane Cuisine123 Carruth Road, Papatoetoe

Viviane Cuisine offers Sāmoan soul food by the Viviane family, where you can get a comforting tub of koko alaisa, suafa’i, panikeke and pai penu (caramelised coconut pie). There are also hot food options that you can enjoy with cooked taro covered in coconut cream.

Their best-selling dish is the seafood boil, which comes in three tray sizes (regular, large and XL). The boil includes prawns, mussels, crab legs, corn (seasonal), sausages, eggs and potatoes.

Hunga Tonga & Ha’apai Diner351 Massey Road, Māngere East

This is a new Tongan eatery in the centre of Māngere East, offering finger-licking pork hock, lamb flaps and turkey tails as well as the classic lu sipi. Desserts such as puteni (pudding and custard) and mango ‘otai are made fresh each day – the perfect way to end a meaty meal.

Other Pacific food spots in South Auckland:

Parker’s Polynesian Food47 Imrie Ave, Māngere

Eight Roses13/225 Great South Road, Ōtāhuhu

Polynesian Taste285 Great South Road, Ōtāhuhu

Sanbells Kitchen and Catering139 Bairds Road, Ōtara

Lisa’s Kitchen201D Apirana Ave, Glen Innes (look at for the Pacific flags)

A brand new Tongan restaurant in the hustle and bustle of Glen Innes, producing delicious keke ‘isite, ota ika, corned silverside cabbage, pele sipi (lamb dish) and tukumisi (kina). Don’t forget to add a potato salad and crab salad to your meal.

Tasi Pasefika Café41 Farringdon Street, Glen Innes

Tasi means “one” in Sāmoan, and the name of this restaurant is an ode to the suburb Glen Innes: the owners of Tasi say the tight-knit community of GI hosts a diverse group of ethnicities, yet beats as one and acts as one village.

Sāmoan favourites found here include kale mamoe, fai’ai eleni, fa’alifu manioka (cassava in coconut cream), ulu tao (baked breadfruit) and more.

Plus if you are looking for siamu popo jam (coconut jam), Tasi has it stocked in store.

This is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

The Spinoff’s first-ever food newsletter is here! Written by Charlotte Muru-Lanning and produced in partnership with Boring Oat Milk, The Boil Up is your weekly catch-up on what’s happening in our diverse and ever-changing culinary landscape, covering the personal, the political and the plain old delicious. Enter your email below to subscribe.

Other Pacific food spots in South Auckland:The Spinoff’s first-ever food newsletter is here! Written by Charlotte Muru-Lanning and produced in partnership with Boring Oat Milk, The Boil Up is your weekly catch-up on what’s happening in our diverse and ever-changing culinary landscape, covering the personal, the political and the plain old delicious. Enter your email below to subscribe.