There’s a moment, about three bites into a loco moco, where the runny egg yolk breaks and flows down over the hamburger patty, mixes with the brown gravy, and soaks into the rice below. Everything merges into this rich, savory, deeply comforting slurry and you realize — this is it. This is the single most satisfying breakfast in Hawaii, maybe in the world, and you’ll never look at eggs and toast the same way again.

Loco moco is Hawaiian comfort food at its most unapologetic. A bed of hot white rice, topped with a hamburger patty, smothered in brown gravy, crowned with a fried egg. It’s heavy, it’s rich, it’s everything your cardiologist would frown at, and it’s one of the most beloved dishes in the islands. Every plate lunch spot, every diner, every hotel breakfast buffet in Hawaii serves some version of loco moco. And most locals have a strong opinion about who makes the best one.

Born in Hilo

The loco moco was born in 1949 at Cafe 100 in Hilo, on the Big Island. The story goes that a group of local teenagers — members of the Lincoln Wreckers sports club — asked the restaurant’s owner, Richard Inouye, for something cheap, filling, and different from the standard American sandwich. Inouye put rice in a bowl, added a hamburger patty and gravy, and the loco moco was born. The fried egg came later, added by another Hilo restaurant, but the basic format was set: rice, meat, gravy, egg.

The name “loco moco” supposedly came from the teenagers themselves. “Loco” was the nickname of one of the boys (some say it was from the Spanish word for “crazy”), and “moco” was added because it rhymed and sounded funny. There’s no deep meaning — just kids naming a dish, the way kids do.

Cafe 100 in Hilo still serves loco moco today, in dozens of variations. They’ve expanded the concept far beyond the original — you can get a teriyaki loco, a spam loco, a fish loco, a chili loco. But the original, with its simple hamburger patty and brown gravy, remains the one to order. As mentioned in our Talk Story on the Plate Lunch, loco moco is essentially a plate lunch within a plate lunch — the ultimate expression of Hawaiian comfort food logic.

What Makes a Great Loco Moco

The loco moco is four simple components, and each one needs to be right:

  • The rice: Hot, freshly cooked short-grain white rice. This is the foundation. It needs to be hot enough to keep everything warm and sticky enough to absorb the gravy. Cold or crunchy rice kills a loco moco.
  • The patty: A well-seasoned hamburger patty, cooked through but still juicy. Not a frozen hockey puck — a proper handmade patty with good beef flavor. Some places use a thicker, diner-style patty; others go thinner with crispy edges. Both work.
  • The gravy: Rich, savory, brown gravy. This is where a lot of home versions fail. Packet gravy won’t cut it. You need real gravy made from the pan drippings of the burger, built with stock and thickened properly. The gravy ties everything together — it’s the glue of the dish.
  • The egg: A fried egg with a runny yolk. This is non-negotiable. The yolk is the sauce, the finishing element, the thing that makes the first bite different from the last. A hard yolk on a loco moco is a tragedy.

For the Hamburger Patties

For the Brown Gravy

For Assembly

Make the Patties

Make the Gravy

Fry the Eggs

Assemble the Loco Moco

Variations

  • Spam loco moco: Replace the hamburger patty with a thick slice of fried Spam. Surprisingly great.
  • Kalua pig loco moco: Sub in kalua pig for the patty. Smoky and incredible.
  • Teriyaki loco moco: Glaze the patty with teriyaki sauce before adding the gravy.
  • Fried rice loco moco: Replace the plain rice with fried rice for a next-level version.
  • Double down: Two patties, two eggs, extra gravy. This exists at several plate lunch spots in Hawaii. It’s exactly as excessive as it sounds and worth it at least once.

The Loco Moco Experience

The beauty of loco moco is that it meets you where you are. It’s breakfast at 7 AM after a surf session. It’s lunch at a plate lunch counter on your break. It’s dinner at 10 PM when nothing else will satisfy the craving. It’s hangover food, celebration food, comfort food, and everyday food all at once. The fact that it was invented by teenagers asking for something cheap and filling, and it became one of Hawaii’s most iconic dishes — that’s the most local story there is.

Prep Time: 15 minutes | Cook Time: 20 minutes | Serves: 4