At the height of the
tiki bar craze during the late 1950s and early 1960s, the
New York Herald Tribune published several articles concerning the opening and the ambiance of one of the first Hawaiian-themed restaurants in New York City, Luau 400, on East 57th Street. At the time of the restaurant's opening in 1957, pu pu platters were considered a part of the
luau feast. A typical platter at this establishment would have included baked clams,
rumaki, Shrimp Vela (battered fried shrimp with coconut), chicken wings, egg rolls, spare ribs, or Javanese sate (
satay) on skewers. The appetizers were served on "a
Lazy Susan made of
monkey pod wood and equipped with a little stove fired with charcoal briquettes." Always the showman, Trader Vic included a hibachi grill when presenting a pu pu platter at the table. No one can agree, but everyone else appeared to have copied the idea. By the twenty-first century, the tiki bars and the flaming pu pu platter had become a dying art. Some tiki bar aficionados have created lists of tiki bars in the United States in which a flaming pu pu can still be found. At one 21st-century tiki bar, the pu pu platter includes "Samoan deviled eggs, Chinese sausage and stick[y] rice
arancini, coconut shrimp and chilies stuffed with pork sausage." As bar food, a pu pu platter at a 21st-century New York City
brasserie could include French
escargot, grilled cubed tropical fruits (such as pineapple), fried
pierogi or American-style barbecued ribs and wings. ==In Italian restaurants==