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Honolulu, Hawaiʻi Just Changed First Class Forever Hawaiian Airlines’ New Executive Chef Could Make Your Next Flight Unreasonably Delicious

3 Mar

Honolulu, Hawaiʻi Just Changed First Class Forever Hawaiian Airlines’ New Executive Chef Could Make Your Next Flight Unreasonably Delicious

Honolulu, Hawaiʻi Just Changed First Class Forever Hawaiian Airlines’ New Executive Chef Could Make Your Next Flight Unreasonably Delicious

There’s a certain kind of welcome you only feel in the Islands: unhurried, sincere, and quietly proud of where it comes from. Now, Hawaiian Airlines is trying to bottle that feeling and serve it at 35,000 feet, naming Hawaiʻi-born chef and restaurateur Dell Valdez as its new Executive Chef and signaling a fresh push to make First Class dining feel more intentional, more local, and more memorable.

The airline says Valdez will lead its First Class dining direction while continuing oversight of the carrier’s Featured Chef Series—an onboard program that spotlights local culinary voices and helps translate Hawaiʻi’s food culture into the inflight setting. Hawaiian Airlines also tied the appointment to a broader set of guest-experience upgrades it says are underway, from cabin enhancements to dining improvements aimed at greater comfort, choice, and authenticity.

A chef shaped by Hawaiʻi, now cooking for the cabin

Hawaiian Airlines describes Dell Valdez as an ingredient-driven chef with deep respect for local food culture, known for a modern expression of Hawaiʻi’s diverse culinary identity. The airline also notes that his approach is meant to feel both “rooted and refined,” reflecting the Pacific, Asian, and U.S. continental influences that shape local cuisine.

In the announcement, Hawaiian Airlines positioned Valdez not as an outsider brought in to “fix” something, but as a familiar presence stepping into a larger role—saying he has been part of its culinary ‘ohana since 2021. That detail matters in a state where visitors often search for “authentic” experiences, and residents quickly recognize when a brand’s version of Hawaiʻi feels more like marketing than meaning.

What’s changing in premium cabins—and when

Hawaiian Airlines said Valdez’s menus for international Business Class guests would begin debuting immediately, with domestic First Class menu updates scheduled to follow later this year. The carrier highlighted sample Business Class dishes for flights between Honolulu and Japan/Oceania, including braised short rib with scallion-ginger risotto, roasted chicken with shiso beurre blanc, and herb-roasted pork loin paired with soy kabocha squash purée.

While airlines often talk about food as an amenity, Hawaiian’s statement emphasizes a more emotional promise: that meals can help deliver “Hawaiian hospitality” even in a highly standardized environment like inflight service. For travelers—especially those choosing premium cabins for comfort—food is one of the few moments where an airline can still surprise you, and Hawaiian appears to be leaning into that opportunity with a chef-led identity.

A major step: First Class meal pre-orders begin in May

Alongside the chef appointment, Hawaiian Airlines announced it will launch a First Class pre-order program beginning in May. The airline said First Class guests will be able to select meals through the Hawaiian Airlines app or via hawaiianairlines.com from two weeks to 20 hours before departure, expanding choice while also improving the odds that travelers receive the meal they actually want.

Hawaiian framed pre-ordering as a technology upgrade as much as a dining upgrade—part of making the experience more intuitive and guest-controlled. In practical terms, pre-ordering can reduce uncertainty for travelers (especially on routes where meal preferences can run out) and can also improve planning and provisioning behind the scenes—an operational benefit airlines increasingly value when costs and supply chains stay unpredictable.

A leadership handoff after a milestone er

Hawaiian Airlines said Valdez succeeds its first-ever executive chef duo, Wade and Michelle Ueoka of Honolulu’s MW Restaurant, who have led the airline’s culinary program since 2021. The carrier also publicly thanked the Ueokas for their culinary leadership and the role they played in shaping the inflight dining experience.

This kind of transition is worth noting because airline dining programs typically evolve in cycles—new leaders bring new priorities, but continuity matters for brand identity. Hawaiian’s messaging suggests it wants both: a visible “next chapter” for premium dining without severing its recent culinary foundation.

The broader context: Hawaiʻi’s visitor economy and “sense of place”

For Hawaiʻi, travel is never just about transportation; it’s tied to the lived realities of communities, jobs, culture, and the environment. The Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority (HTA)—a state agency—describes its role as protecting the Hawaiian Islands’ brand, perpetuating Hawaiian culture, preserving natural resources, and strengthening communities by managing tourism in ways that improve quality of life for residents.

That context helps explain why “local” isn’t a throwaway word in an inflight dining press release—especially for Hawaiʻi-based brands that benefit from a visitor-driven economy. When an airline says it wants to prioritize “authenticity,” it’s speaking to a growing expectation that travel experiences should connect visitors to place and culture more respectfully, not just entertain the

Part of a larger Hawaiian Airlines investment push

In its chef announcement, Hawaiian Airlines connected Valdez’s appointment to what it calls the Kahu‘ewai Hawai‘i Investment Plan, described as a multi-year effort to enhance the guest experience across the journey. In a separate company announcement, Hawaiian said the plan totals more than $600 million over five years and covers initiatives such as airport spaces, technology, and aircraft interior upgrades.

For travelers, that matters because food rarely changes in isolation—dining upgrades tend to arrive alongside broader product shifts, from cabin improvements to service flow. Hawaiian’s message is that “elevated dining” is one strand of a bigger strategy: to make the brand feel more premium, more consistent, and more future-ready while still rooted in island identity.

Why this could resonate with travelers right now

Premium travel is increasingly about personalization—less “one menu fits all,” more control over small moments that shape the journey. Hawaiian’s pre-order window (two weeks to 20 hours) points toward that trend and positions First Class dining as something you can plan, anticipate, and tailor rather than simply accept onboard.

And Chef Dell Valdez’s appointment speaks to another reality: travelers often remember meals when they remember a trip. If Hawaiian can make First Class feel like it begins with a warm, local plate—rather than an anonymous airline tray—it may strengthen the emotional connection people already have with Hawaiʻi as a destination, not just a route map.

Honolulu, Hawaiʻi has always had a way of turning ordinary moments into stories—through food, through welcome, through the pride of place. Hawaiian Airlines is betting that the same spirit can live in the cabin aisle: a thoughtful menu, chosen ahead of time, served with intention, and tied to the islands rather than imported from elsewhere. For travelers who want their flight to feel like the first chapter of their Hawaiʻi journey—not just the commute to it—this is the kind of change that can actually be tasted

The post Honolulu, Hawaiʻi Just Changed First Class Forever Hawaiian Airlines’ New Executive Chef Could Make Your Next Flight Unreasonably Delicious appeared first on Travel And Tour World.

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