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Hawaii Smoked Pork Belly | Bacon Brisket | Kiawe BBQ on Oahu https://co2bbq.com/hawaii-smoked-pork-belly-bacon-brisket-kiawe-bbq-on-oahu/ Fri, 08 May 2026 11:58:05 +0000 https://co2bbq.com/?p=8142

Bunnibun, our mascot guinea pig, is crazy and fake, the pork belly is real

Kiawe Smoked Pork Belly – A Unique Oahu BBQ Specialty

Buttery, Smoky Twist on Traditional BBQ Pork Belly

Some BBQ recipes are passed down through generations.

This menu item?  Well, it was kind of an accident.

One day, my father saw a YouTube video on “bacon brisket” and told me that I should try my hand at it.  At the time, we were still cooking on our humble Oklahoma Joe smoker, long before we upgraded to our 500-gallon offset pit.  With nothing to lose, I agreed with my father and decided to give it a shot.  But I didn’t want to copy an influencer’s method, I wanted to pave my own road.   

So I did. 

I experimented.

Long story short, our first attempt – magic happened.

It worked.   That never happens.  Just to let you know, it hasn’t happened since.

Fast forward to the present, and it’s one of the most talked-about meats at The Carbon Footprint BBQ menu, and in Oahu.  A lot of customers tell us the same thing after the first bite:

“I’ve never had pork belly like this before.”

That’s probably because most pork belly gets cooked until it turns dry, chewy, or overly crispy. We learned early on that the real secret was balance. You want enough heat and smoke to build flavor and texture, but not so much that the meat loses what makes pork belly special in the first place.

The seasoning hits you from every direction at once. You get smoke, sweetness, salt, savory spice, and that deep wood-fired flavor from real kiawe smoke. It’s bold, but balanced.

And texture-wise?

This is where people really get surprised.

Instead of dry pork belly cubes or crunchy burnt ends, ours stays soft and tender inside with a rich, melt-in-your-mouth bite.  It goes so well with rice.  Now, some pieces develop a little more bark than others depending on the cook, but honestly, customers don’t seem to care. They just keep coming back for more.

That’s the funny thing about BBQ.  Sometimes the best recipes aren’t created in a laboratory or copied from the internet. Sometimes they happen because you tried something different, trusted your instincts, and accidentally created a dish that people can’t stop talking about.

That’s our Pork Belly Bacon Brisket.

And no… It’s not really bacon.

I say it’s better.

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Hawaii Pulled Pork Meets Kalua Pig | Kiawe Smoked BBQ on Oahu https://co2bbq.com/hawaii-pulled-pork-meets-kalua-pig-kiawe-smoked-bbq-on-oahu/ Thu, 07 May 2026 13:02:16 +0000 https://co2bbq.com/?p=8123

The pulled pork is real, the guinea pig and wheel barrel are not.

Southern Style Pulled Pork With a Hawaiian Kalua Pig Soul

Slow-smoked over kiawe wood on Oahu, where Texas barbecue techniques meet the spirit of traditional Hawaiian kalua pig.

At The Carbon Footprint BBQ in Kaneohe, Oahu, our pulled pork started with a simple question: What would happen if Southern barbecue and Hawaiian kalua pig ended up at the same cookout?

As it turned out, they got along pretty well.

Kalua literally means “to cook underground,” traditionally inside an imu, the famous Hawaiian earth oven. Kalua pig is tender, juicy, and salty. But unlike Texas or Southern style pulled pork, it’s not naturally smoky.  And, this is why many restaurants add liquid smoke after the pork is shredded.

This is where we decided to go a different direction, and we looked to our friends across the Pacific Ocean.

The result?  At The Carbon Footprint, we slow-smoke our pulled pork with real kiawe wood in a standard offset smoker, using low-and-slow barbecue techniques inspired by Texas smokehouses.  Our goal was to combine the best parts of both styles into one Hawaiian-style flavor bomb.

Now, we didn’t take everything from the mainland BBQ gods.  A lot of mainland BBQ, sauce drives a lot of their flavor. We love BBQ sauce too, but we wanted the pork and smoke to lead the conversation.   That’s why our pulled pork is designed to stand on its own before sauce even touches it. You can easily tease your taste buds by adding our Everything Sauce, and that’s when things start getting dangerous – haha.  We also pull our pork apart with our hands, we don’t shred it with bear claws, forks, or chop it up with butcher knives.   Traditional Kalua Pig is too stringy for us as well.  We like nice thick shreds of pork, so we have something to chew.  In that sense, we’re really different.

One of the best things about pulled pork is how versatile it is. Around Hawaii, pork somehow finds its way into everything, and honestly, our waistlines support this lifestyle completely.

Pile it over rice with brown gravy and suddenly you’re in local roast pork plate lunch territory. Stir fry it with cabbage and you’ve got Hawaiian-style kalua cabbage. Stuff it into tacos and Texas and Hawaii start feeling like backyard neighbors. Or stack it onto a soft King’s Hawaiian rolls with coleslaw and Everything Sauce for a proper pulled pork slider.

If you’re searching for pulled pork on Oahu, Hawaii BBQ in Kaneohe, kiawe-smoked barbecue, or a new take on Hawaiian-style smoked pulled pork, we’d love to be on your list.

Because Hawaii already knows how to cook pork.

We’re just adding a little extra smoke to the conversation.

 
 

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Hawaii Brisket BBQ in Kaneohe | Kiawe Smoked Brisket on Oahu https://co2bbq.com/hawaii-brisket-bbq-in-kaneohe-kiawe-smoked-brisket-on-oahu/ Thu, 07 May 2026 11:43:58 +0000 https://co2bbq.com/?p=8119

The brisket is the real deal, the guinea pig, Bunnibun is not.

This Ain’t Your Mainland Brisket

Slow-smoked over kiawe wood in Kaneohe, where Hawaii barbecue gets a little smoky, a little weird, and dangerously good.

A good brisket takes “a good minute” to cook, and a lot more if you count the rest. Around here, we believe great BBQ requires a careful balance of patience, obsession, and just enough insanity to make your neighbors question your life choices. At The Carbon Footprint BBQ in Kaneohe, Oahu, we treat brisket less like a menu item and more like a craft project that accidentally became a lifestyle. Somewhere between tending the fire, watching the smoke roll through the kiawe wood, and acting like mad scientists trying to hit the perfect texture at 2 a.m., we questioned whether or not we were trying to create something amazing, or were we just inventing an excuse to play with fire for 16 hours.

Thankfully  we didn’t end up becoming pyromaniacs.

We became pitmasters.

And, after years of testing, tweaking, smoking, resting, overthinking, and probably inhaling enough smoke to legally qualify as brisket ourselves, we finally landed exactly where we wanted to be – brisket nirvana.

Every brisket at The Carbon Footprint starts with a quality cut of beef, carefully trimmed and seasoned with a philosophy we take seriously: let the meat, smoke, and fire do the talking. In other words, we’re not trying to bury our brisket under a mountain of pepper, sugar, sauce, or whatever BBQ trend social media discovered last week. Our style of Kaneohe barbecue leans into balance, texture, and the unmistakable flavor of kiawe-smoked BBQ cooked low and slow right here on Oahu.

So whether you’re a local searching for great brisket in Kaneohe, a visitor hunting for authentic Hawaii BBQ on Oahu, or just someone who believes smoked meat is one of humanity’s better ideas, we’d be honored to make your brisket shortlist.

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