When customers try Niu Soft Serve Parlourâs desserts for the first time, theyâre often surprised. The soft serve treats might be dairy free, but they boast a velvety, creamy texture thatâs similar to ice cream.
âThere is a coconut taste, but you canât tell in some of the flavors,â says Aikue Napoleon-Ahn, one of the business owners of Niu Soft Serve Parlour. âI would say the number one people tell us after theyâve eaten it is theyâre surprised by how good it is; they keep coming back for it. Itâs a good alternative, especially if theyâre lactose intolerant.â

Napoleon-Ahn explains how he grew up working in his familyâs ice cream business, and the idea for Niu stemmed from there.
âWeâre a family business; Niu is founded form our parentsâ original company,â he says. âWe have a background in soft serve equipment â weâre frozen dessert equipment specialists â and five years ago, we decided to make our own mix.
âIt just so happened that I was dabbling in veganism,â he adds. âWe thought, âLetâs make a mix that everybody would like and that everybody can eat.' It wasnât just about making dairy-free ice cream â it was about making something that is dairy free, but accessible to and palatable for everybody.â
The businessâs name comes from its coconut-based product according to Napoleon-Ahn. He says he and his siblings went to a Hawaiian immersion elementary school, and wanted the business name to have ties with their heritage.
âNiu is not commonly known to other people,â he says. âThey donât always know that âniuâ means coconut in Hawaiian. We wanted to make sure it (the name) was simple enough where people can say it without too many complications.â
That was just the beginning. Niu Soft Serve got started by selling their products at farmers markets, but then the Covid-19 pandemic happened. The business started to get popular â âWe did deliveries all over the island,â Napoleon-Ahn says â and they also were at âOhana Hale Marketplace in Kakaâako briefly before the marketplace closed.
Shortly after, business opened in their current location in MĆÊ»iliÊ»ili â across from Old Stadium Park â and itâs been there for nearly three years.
The shop usually has four soft serve flavors â niu (coconut) and ube (purple yam), along with two specials, which change every two weeks. Customers can currently enjoy Thai tea and Makaha mango; the latter might be extended, due to popular demand.
âThatâs actually a really good combination that I really love right now,â Napoleon-Ahn says. âA lot of our customers have something to look forward to every two weeks. Our coconut and ube pair well with a lot of our sundaes.â
The shopâs slushes are a newer dessert that have quickly become local favorites.
âWe do a rotation of flavors; right now, we have a pandan slush, and people are really loving that,â Napoleon-Ahn says. âIt goes really well with the mango soft serve. Unfortunately, we wonât have the mango indefinitely, but it goes well with coconut and ube, too.â Â


The shop is most famous for its hot kƫlolo sundae ($9), which tastes as good as it looks. It comprises your choice of soft serve with hot kƫlolo sauce and roasted mac nuts.
âIt started as an experiment to make kĆ«lolo ice cream,â Napoleon-Ahn says. âAt the time, everybody was trying to make kĆ«lolo ice cream. It ended as an experiment going wrong, and we just made kĆ«lolo in a different way than itâs traditionally made. We made kĆ«lolo from scratch â we get kalo from local farmers, we steam it, and we process it.
âWe actually spend way more time making kulolo than anything else, and weâre a soft serve shop!â he adds. âItâs our number one seller; it wasnât intentionally the main thing, but itâs become quite a big thing.â
Speaking of sundaes, one of Napoleon-Ahnâs personal favorites is the I Really LilikoÊ»i You sundae ($9).
âItâs a coconut sundae, our lilikoÊ»i sauce, macadamia nuts, whipped cream and fresh strawberries,â he says. âItâs something fun and a little extra, but itâs really good.â
Customers can also choose from the shopâs selection of malted shakes, which are made with dairy-free and gluten-free malt and oat milk. Flavors range from mocha peanut butta ($9.50) â a creamy blend of peanut butter, cocoa and coffee â and Youâre Too Matcha ($9.35) to cold brew ($9.35) and ube cookies and cream ($9.25).
âThe ube cookies and cream ($9.25) is the most popular,â Napoleon-Ahn says. âThe cookies ($4.50) are also going crazy; we started selling them about a year ago. It started small, but now itâs grown into a pretty good thing. We have chocolate chip cookies with sea salt on top, and our signature is our miso caramel cookie.â
The biz also just added a li hing sugar cookie, which is inspired by the li hing malasadas from Leonardâs Bakery.

While itâs listed on the businessâ specials board, Niuâs holoholo pie ($9) will soon be a regular dessert. Itâs inspired by the iconic dessert served at Dukeâs WaikÄ«kÄ«, according to Napoleon-Ahn.
âWe do a toasted coconut soft serve ice cream, graham cracker crust, hot fudge, mac nuts and whipped cream,â he says. âWeâve been doing pies ever since opened here, but I havenât been able to keep up with them. Lately, weâve been able to do them a lot more consistently.â
The parlourâs freezer section features a variety of grab-and-go treats, including soft serve pints, pies by the slice ($6.50) and whole pies ($22).

For the latest news of Hawaiâi, sign up here for our free Daily Edition newsletter.
CONTACT
Niu Soft Serve Parlour
2320 S. King St., Honolulu
808-436-3739
niusoftserve.com
Instagram: @niusoftserve
Open from 1-8 p.m. Sundays, Tuesdays-Thursdays, 1-9 p.m. Fridays-Saturdays, closed Mondays
Kelli Shiroma Braiotta can be reached at kelli@alohastatedaily.com.