Kōʻelepālau

Kōelepālau ( anglicized as koelepalau), or pālau, is a Hawaiian pudding made primarily with cooked sweet potatoes mixed with coconut cream. It is similar to other Native Hawaiian puddings like kūlolo and piele.

It was once a dish well documented by many non-Hawaiians as an everyday dish, or as a dessert found at ahaaina (or lūʻau) found alongside kūlolo,  and was noted by Robert Louis Stevenson during his visits in the late 1800s.

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. Although associated as a root vegetable, all parts of the sweet potato was utilized. However, sweet potatoes were considered inferior and less valuable than taro, or kōele―a rare term used for "less desirable portions of meat or fish," but it was able to flourish in unfavorable growing conditions.

Preparation
Traditional kōelepālau 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. The sweet potatoes are usually removed of its skin then thoroughly mashed. Coconut milk, or milk substitute, is then mixed to the desired consistency. Optionally, additional sugar can be added or garnished with shredded coconut.