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In 1990, the Big Island village of Kaimu, Hawaii, got famous when the Kilauea volcano buried most of it beneath more than 50 feet of lava.

What remains of the community where the road ends has re-energized with a weekly night market that draws lines of cars to fill a parking lot ($3 a car) edging a sprawling black field of lava rock that is younger than Taylor Swift.

Officially known as the Wednesday Night Ho'olaule'a Market, it's a big tent with a wide ethnic mix of Hawaiian-style food vendors, a few craft booths, and a stage where you can hear live music while you sip a cold beer.

On a recent Wednesday, I wandered beneath the tent, sniffing the aroma of good foods, and faced a tough choice for dinner. Among options:

• Mom & Pop's Kau Kau Corner, with rib-eye steak and garlic shrimp, $19.

• Big Island Flatbread, with $8 gyros.

• Stickman Hawaii, with vegan black bean soup, $4.

• A no-name lumpia stand, offering the Filipino crispy roll filled with beef, pork, banana or sweet potato, three for $5.

• Healani's Kitchen, offering Broke da Mouth Hawaiian Pastele Stew, made with pork and banana dumplings, $10.

• Bananarama Bakery, with Lilikoi (Hawaiian passion fruit) Cream Pie, $5.

I popped for Aloha Lehua Cafe's Hawaiian Nacho Plate, $10, with kalua pig, tomato-laden lomi-lomi salmon, and slatherings of a secret sauce piled high on homemade tortilla chips. Rich and salty, probably unhealthful — and really delicious when washed down with a Big Wave golden ale from Kona Brewing.

It was the perfect thing to gobble while listening to local musicians calling themselves the Kingdom of Hawaii — three guitarists, a ukulele player and a drummer, on a stage draped with green, red and yellow flags of the Hawaiian sovereignty movement.

If you go

Ho'olaule'a Market: 5-9 p.m. every Wed. at the south end of Hwy. 137 in Kaimu, on the big island of Hawaii.