Star Noodle

Star Noodle on Front Street occupies the casual, community-facing end of West Maui dining, where Hawaiian-inflected noodle dishes draw a loyal local crowd alongside visitors. Ranked in Opinionated About Dining's North American Cheap Eats list for three consecutive years — reaching #54 in 2024 — it sits in a tier defined more by cultural honesty than ceremony. Chef Sheldon Simeon's fingerprints are visible throughout a menu that treats plate lunch traditions with the same seriousness given to fine dining elsewhere.

Front Street in Lahaina runs along the water with the easy confidence of a strip that knows its role. Tourists move through it at a different pace than locals, and the restaurants that succeed here over the long term tend to be the ones that hold both audiences without compromising for either. Star Noodle, at 1287 Front St, occupies that position with less ceremony than most. The room does not announce itself. What draws people back is on the menu: a focused collection of noodle-forward dishes that sit at the intersection of Hawaiian plate lunch culture and something more compositionally intentional.
Where Star Noodle Sits in West Maui Dining
West Maui's restaurant scene has a clear hierarchy. At one end, you have destination dining tied to resort infrastructure — places like Cane & Canoe, with its Polynesian fusion positioning, or Merriman's Maui, which carries the weight of the farm-to-table Hawaii Regional Cuisine movement. At the other, you have the plate lunch counters and food trucks that serve working Maui. Star Noodle operates in a third space that doesn't fit neatly into either category. It is accessible on price and casual in atmosphere, but the menu reflects a level of culinary thinking that places it above the transactional end of cheap eats. Opinionated About Dining, the data-driven critic publication, has ranked it in its North American Cheap Eats list in three consecutive years: #56 in 2023, #54 in 2024, and #65 in 2025. That sustained recognition across multiple years signals a consistency that one-off buzz rarely achieves.
For context on how this fits the broader Lahaina dining picture, see our full Lahaina restaurants guide.
How the Menu Is Built
The editorial logic of Star Noodle's menu is worth paying attention to, because it tells you something about how Hawaiian casual dining has evolved in the post-plantation era. The noodle is not treated as a single ethnic tradition here. Instead, the menu draws from the layered immigrant food history of Hawaii — Japanese ramen broths, Filipino pancit influences, Chinese saimin roots , and places them alongside dishes that reflect the archipelago's broader pantry: local proteins, Pacific-adjacent seasonings, the kind of pork-forward richness that recurs across Hawaii's many plate lunch traditions.
This is a menu architecture that rewards repeat visits. Individual dishes work as entry points, but the overall structure reveals more when you eat across categories rather than ordering a single bowl and leaving. The noodle dishes form the spine, but the supporting menu around them , small plates, sides, dishes that read more like sharing food , functions as the editorial context for what the kitchen is actually doing. In that sense, it mirrors how the more ambitious casual restaurants in Honolulu, such as Side Street Inn, have built loyal followings: not by chasing trends, but by executing a clearly defined local food identity with discipline.
Hawaiian cuisine at this price point often suffers from one of two problems: it either flattens into a generic tourist-facing version of itself, or it becomes so locally insider-coded that it alienates anyone without prior knowledge. Star Noodle avoids both failures. The menu communicates clearly to the curious visitor while remaining coherent to the Maui diner who grew up eating variations of these dishes. That is harder to achieve than it looks. For comparison, Helena Hawaiian Foods in Honolulu occupies a similarly respected position in the traditional Hawaiian canon, but with a narrower, more preservation-focused menu logic. Star Noodle's approach is more eclectic, reflecting Maui's particular immigrant food history.
Chef Sheldon Simeon and What the Credentials Mean for the Room
Chef Sheldon Simeon's name is attached to Star Noodle, and that credential matters in a specific way. Simeon has a profile that extends well beyond Maui , he is recognized nationally as a voice for Hawaii's food culture, with James Beard Award nominations and television visibility that would position him comfortably in the ambitious fine dining circuit. The fact that his association is with a noodle spot that ranks in a cheap eats list rather than a Michelin guide is itself an editorial statement about what kind of cooking he considers worth his attention. Nationally, this mirrors a broader pattern: serious American chefs who could operate at the price tier of Le Bernardin, Alinea, or The French Laundry choosing instead to build restaurants around accessibility and cultural specificity. It is a different ambition, not a lesser one.
Eating Here: What to Know Before You Go
Star Noodle opens Wednesday through Sunday, with service from 4:30 to 9 pm each of those evenings. Monday and Tuesday are closed. That five-day evening schedule positions it clearly as a dinner-focused operation, not a daytime noodle counter, and the limited week means planning ahead is worth the effort, particularly during peak West Maui travel periods. With a Google rating of 4.4 across more than 3,600 reviews, it carries one of the more credible crowd-sourced track records in Lahaina , 3,600 reviews over time represents a sustained pattern of satisfaction rather than a spike driven by novelty.
The address at 1287 Front St places it in the central stretch of Lahaina's waterfront, which means parking and foot traffic considerations typical of that corridor apply. For those planning a broader Lahaina evening, the area around Front Street also puts you within range of the Banyan Tree and Monkeypod Kitchen, which operate at different price points and with different menu orientations. For visitors building a full trip around West Maui, our Lahaina hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide round out the planning picture. The Old Lahaina Luau remains the area's dominant cultural dining event for first-time visitors, occupying a completely different format. Star Noodle is the counter to that , no performance, no ceremony, just the food itself.
How It Compares to the Hawaiian Casual Dining Field Nationally
Within the national cheap eats conversation, Hawaiian cuisine occupies a position that is both well-represented and frequently misunderstood. The OAD Cheap Eats list, which ranked Star Noodle consistently between 2023 and 2025, draws from a serious pool of informed eaters and carries different signal weight than mainstream aggregator rankings. Placement in that list alongside restaurants from New York, San Francisco, and New Orleans , cities with far denser critical coverage , says something specific about the kitchen's output. For reference, the San Francisco restaurant scene that produced Lazy Bear and the Healdsburg model of Single Thread Farm represents one trajectory of serious American cooking. The OAD Cheap Eats list tracks a parallel but distinct trajectory , restaurants where the ambition is expressed through price accessibility and cultural specificity rather than tasting menu architecture. Star Noodle is operating in that second current, and doing it with enough consistency to hold a ranked position across three consecutive years. That is not a small achievement in a category where lists turn over quickly. Similarly, the food culture that sustains Emeril's in New Orleans rests on a deep regional food identity; Star Noodle draws from an equally specific but less widely documented culinary tradition, and the menu makes a case for taking Hawaiian casual dining as seriously as any other American regional cuisine. Also see our Lahaina wineries guide for those exploring the broader West Maui food and drink scene.
FAQ
What's the must-try dish at Star Noodle?
The venue database does not include confirmed dish names, so naming a specific plate without verification would be irresponsible. What the menu structure suggests , given the restaurant's noodle-forward identity, its Hawaiian-inflected approach, and the culinary background of Chef Sheldon Simeon , is that the noodle dishes are the core of the offer, not supporting players. Simeon's cooking, as documented in his published work and public record, draws heavily on the pork-rich, umami-forward flavors that run through Hawaii's multi-ethnic plate lunch tradition. That culinary logic, applied to a noodle-centered menu, points toward dishes built around broth depth, local protein, and the kind of textural contrast that comes from cooking within that tradition seriously. The OAD Cheap Eats recognition across three years, combined with a 4.4-star average across 3,600 Google reviews, indicates that the kitchen delivers that promise with consistency. Arriving without a fixed agenda and ordering across the menu rather than anchoring to a single dish is the approach most likely to reflect what the kitchen actually does well.
City Peers
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Star Noodle | Hawaiian | This venue | |
| Yakitori Hachibei | Yakitori | Yakitori | |
| Monkeypod Kitchen | New American | New American | |
| Cane & Canoe | Polynesian Fusion | Polynesian Fusion | |
| Merriman's – Maui | |||
| Banyan Tree |
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