Showing posts with label Taipei. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taipei. Show all posts

Monday, 5 March 2012

Restaurant Review:-- Night market snacks, Taipei City

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Visiting Ningxia night market (寧夏夜市; off Minsheng Rd. west of Chengde Rd.) used to be like a trip back to Táng dynasty China.

Considering that a steady stream of motorbikes and occasional car attempted to navigate this semi-blocked-off street, this is hard to explain, but really, that was my impression. 

Then the vendors, or their rent-taking district council, got greedy, and seeing the hoardes of evening diners making their way to the more famous nigh markets of Shilin to the north, Raohe to the east and Shida to the south, Ningxia rebranded itself as the Ningxia Environmental Protection Toursit Night Market, repositioning itself firmly in the 21st century. Oh well, such is the price of progress.

The choice of foods is typical of these other night markets, and similarly narrow for vegetarians, but at least some meat-free fare is on offer while all around are gorging on pigs’ feet, ducks’ necks, ox entrails and goodness knows what else. The baked potato stall has some vegetarian but not vegan toppings, but at Stall No.86 there is an entirely vegetarian outlet.

That both the “dry noodles” and “boiled leafy greens” ordered by NOMM contained fake meat suggest it too is targeting a traditional taste.
 
The noodles were fresh (light and chewy), which implies a good turnover, and indeed there did seem a steady stream of visitors to the dozen or so seats crammed in behind the cooking wagon.

At night markets such as this it is typical for groups of diners to each buy their favoured dishes at divergent stalls and then congregate at an agreed location. Since it is best not to take meat dishes into a vegetarian area, many, like NOMM, buy to go”, which means eating out of plastic bags.

Open ca. 6pm till late.


 
Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2012

Tuesday, 17 January 2012

News Brief: DOH investigation finds illegal New Year foodstuffs


With lunar new year about to arrive, Taipei City Dept of Health (台北市衛生局) Jan 16th released its final survey of new year foodstuffs which checked up on a total of 167 items, of which 11 failed to meet standards, The Broadcasting Corporation of China (中國廣播公司) reported yesterday. 

Worst offenders were processed nut products followed by wet rice products and processed bean products. One sample of preserved broad beans (蠶豆) sold at Guting market (古亭市場) had sulphur dioxide residues that were six times permitted levels, and general provisions stores in Datong and Neihu districts selling red beans (紅豆) and calligonum beans (豆棗) with seven times the permitted level of the preservative benzoic acid (苯甲酸). 

The article (full Chinese-language piece here) carries a full list of the vendors’ names and the companies supplying them with illegal produce see the

Unfortunately no information is available (yet?) on the TCG DOH English-language website (http://english.doh.taipei.gov.tw/MP_109002.html)



Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2012

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Feature: Finding a vegetarian restaurant/store (part I)

YJH sends the following list (Chinese-language postings):

vegetarian stores
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15295
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=13636&prev=13691&l=f&fid=44

other vegetarian stores in Taipei
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16556
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=18247&next=18225&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=18153&prev=18225&next=17930&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=17750&prev=17837&next=17708&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=17708&prev=17750&next=17616&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=17178&next=16840&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16840&prev=17178&next=16805&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16805&prev=16840&next=16454&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16074&prev=16098&next=15932&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15932&prev=16074&next=15730&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15730&prev=15932&next=15599&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15599&prev=15730&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15479&next=15295&l=f&fid=44
http://www.sankansoubo.com.tw/index.php?cPath=2
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=6144&prev=8216&next=6070&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=6070&prev=6144&next=4850&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=4850&prev=6070&next=2681&l=f&fid=44
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=2681&prev=4850&l=f&fid=44

vegetarian stores in other cities
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16776&prev=16783&next=16754&l=f&fid=45
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=15596&prev=15979&next=15436&l=f&fid=45
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=11578&next=9995&l=f&fid=45
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=17123&prev=17734&next=16988&l=f&fid=46
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16802&prev=16988&next=16795&l=f&fid=46
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16598&prev=16629&l=f&fid=46

http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=16629&prev=16702&next=16598&l=f&fid=46


Taitung
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=9524&prev=15342&next=9357&l=f&fid=47
http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/happy-6688/article?mid=9357&prev=9524&l=f&fid=47





Sunday, 13 November 2011

News Brief: "Confucian Cuisine" is nonsense -- Councilor


Taipei councilor says that the city’s promotion of Confucian cuisine (儒家菜) is ridiculous since it even includes Italian spaghetti, the Liberty Times reports today (Chinese-language article here). 

The concept dates back to June this year when Taipei City Mayor Hau Lung-bin promoted a Confucian soap opera and Confucian-themed dishes in an attempt to attract Chinese tourists deprived of traditional culture in their home country (July Taipei Times article here).

But councilor Wu Si-yao (吳思瑤) complained about the budget of NT$5.7 million (ca. US$180,000) given to restaurateurs in the Dalongtong (大龍峒) area near the city’s Confucius Temple (孔廟), and said that calling such items as “noodle stall pig liver” (麵攤的豬肝連), “meat from beside the snout” (嘴邊肉), “pink sausage” (粉腸) [traditional Taiwanese dishes], spicy hot pot (麻辣火鍋), and even Italian spaghetti (義大利麵) as “Confucian cuisine” was a case of “Greater China ideology tyrannizing Taiwan’s food and beverage culture”.





                                                               Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011

Friday, 11 November 2011

News Brief: What the heck is New Row Mian?

Taipei councilors yesterday asked why the city’s latest “international festival” about to kick off has the Chinese “牛肉麵” transliterated as “new row mian”*  rather than being translated as “beef noodles”, Formosa TV reports today (full Chinese-language article here).

Taipei City Government explained that food expert Han Liang-lu (韓良露) suggested it previously, on the basis that Taiwan’s food culture should have distinctive names.

*[NOMM notes: this is not according to any Romanization system ever used, the city’s adoption of China’s system would produce niu rou mian, for example]





Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011

Monday, 31 October 2011

News Brief: Preservatives in rice products could seriously damage liver, kidneys

Spot checks by Taipei City’s Department of Health of stewed snacks (滷味; lu-wei), noodle dishes, sliced fruit and other food products  found excessive levels of E. coli, TVBS reported today (Chinese-language article here).

Whether the bacteria found in sliced fruit sold in the HiLife convenience store (萊爾富) Xindong branch (信東店), and stewed duck wings (滷鴨翅) sold in A.mart’s (愛買) Jingmei store (景美店) were due to production and packaging processes or to workers’ sanitary conditions requires further investigation, it said.

In addition, rice flour noodles (米粉 and 粄條 ban-tiao) bought in a traditional market in Sanshui Street (三水街) in Taipei’s Wanhua (萬華) District were found to have illegal addition of benzoic acid (苯甲酸) preservatives. Although they looked like any other similar product, on opening the packet, the noodles gave off was a strong chemical odour, and were found to contain 5.19g of benzoic acid preservative per kilogram, meaning that eating just one bowl of noodles would exceed the maximum daily allowance. 

Contravention of the “Act Governing Food Sanitation” (食品衛生管理法) is punishable by fines of between NT$30,000 and NT$150,000 (ca. US$1-5,000).

Similarly, illegal addition of dehydroacetic acid (DHA; 去水醋酸) preservative was found in two samples of ban-tiao and one sample of gui-a-tiao  noodles (粿仔條). 

Longterm ingestion of preservatives can lead to reduced appetite, growth retardation and even serious damage to liver and kidneys, the DOH said, reminding citizens to carefully inspect external appearance and odour when purchasing foods for immediate consumption.


                                     Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011

News Brief: Online sales of breast milk unsafe, illegal --DOH


Two Taipei City councilors held a press conference yesterday at which they announced the results of checks undertaken on mother’s milk bought online. Hsu Shu-hua (許淑華) and Li Jian-chang (李建昌) said the four packets of milk sent to the Taipei City Hospital (臺北市立聯合醫院) had not complied with the hospital’s own standards, and they called on the city's Department of Health (衛生局) to ban such website trade and called on those dealing in breast milk to withdraw their products from sale, the Liberty Times reported (full Chinese-language article here)

Hsu said that the “health check” certificates posted on the internet auction sites with offers for 200cc bags of mother’s milk from as little as NT$40 to suggest the product is safe were, in fact, worthless. The equipment used, facilities and environment could all create conditions in which germs could breed, she said.

Hsu said she bought four bags of milk from someone online on October 19th, two bags that had been freshly collected that day and two from October 17th that had been frozen. She also froze the milk within 5 minutes of receiving it, and then sent them to the hospital for examination.

Announcing the results yesterday, Hsu and Li said all four bags of milk failed to meet standards as they contained gram-negative bacteria (革蘭氏陰性菌). Taipei’s Department of Health said gram-negative bacteria can ruin baby food, cause septicemia, and even lead to infant death.

Li said that the US Centers for Disease Control had issued a statement saying mother’s milk should be viewed as a form of body fluid. If babies drank milk that was not from their own mother or had not been screened, they could be infected by diseases, medicinal drugs or even narcotics in the milk. 

Department of Health (衛生署) Vice Minister Hsiao Mei-ling (蕭美玲) said that breast milk was of a special nature and was therefore different from general types of food products. The central government was still considering whether it should be regulated under the “Act Governing Food Sanitation” (用食品衛生管理法). For the time being it would be controlled by the Consumer Protection Act” (消保法), which required dealers to remove products from Internet auction sites. Sites should also take down webpages displaying breast milk for sale, otherwise the consumer protection authorities could use these laws to impose fines up to NT$300,000 (ca. US$10,000). 




                                                             Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011

Sunday, 30 October 2011

Restaurant Review: Stinky Tofu (Maokong)

The Maokong (貓空) tea-plantation district on Taipei City's southern border above Muzha (木柵) is famous for its teahouses.




Vegetarian food options are limited, despite the many temples, the Yiguandao TienEnGong 天恩宮 in particular. Nevertheless, the MaoLan MeiShi Cheng (貓纜美食城; no English name, lit. "Maokong Cable Car Fine Foods City") about 50m east of Maokong Gondola Station has a six-item vegetarian section (素食類):









tea-oil [flavoured] noodles (茶油麵)
tea-oil [flavoured] rice noodles (茶油米粉)
tea-oil [flavoured] thin noodles (茶油麵線)
vegetarian Angelica sinensis (Chinese-herb) soup (素食當歸湯)
vegetarian crispy stinky tofu (素食脆皮臭豆腐)
boiled leafy greens (燙青菜)

NOMM tried the tofu, which was very good, and only slightly more expensive than back at sea level.






                                                                     Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011

Sunday, 23 October 2011

Restaurant Review: Dumplings and Pot-Stickers (Taipei)


In the shadow of Taipei 101—the ultimate icon of the modern capital—is Wuxing Street (吳興街). With its daytime vegetable market, grain stores and general victualers, not to mention its thriving nighttime snack stalls, this ancient thoroughfare—now slightly off the main east-west and north-south routes—represents a throwback to former times as well as being an epicurean hunting ground.
        Among the area’s innumerable food outlets, there are at least half a dozen vegetarian establishments. These range from a stall selling “red-bean cakes (紅豆餅; which despite the name, also specializes in “custard cakes” 奶油餅 and “radish cakes” 蔡脯餅), and a shop offering meatless stuffed buns (包子), to a family-run eatery selling noodles and soups, and a typical buffet restaurant providing a wide range of cooked vegetables, tofus and fake meats sold by weight.
Despite the TV, Kelaiyuan is fairly quiet.
        This week’s review, however, is of a popular vegetarian restaurant in Zhuangjing Road (莊敬路), one block north of Wuxing Street. The Kelaiyuan Su Fang (客來源素坊; literally “Customer Source Vegetarian Shop” but no English sign) at No. 268 has a variety of soups and noodles. Most customers also order a least one portion (a maximum of 6 portions is the house rule) of pot-stickers (鍋貼) and dumplings (水餃), however, the house specialty. These snacks, originating in northern China, are usually filled with pork and either cabbage (高麗菜) or Chinese leeks (韭菜). Local diners who have converted to vegetarianism often mourn the absence of these items from their diets and, to be honest, some of the meatless variety found in the city can be pretty bland.
        Not so Kelaiyuan’s version, which are crisp where they should be crisp and chewy where they should be chewy (pot-stickers are first fried on the bottom and then steamed on the top). Proprietor Chang Wen-yi (張文議) says he sells about 600-700 every day, at NT$50 for a portion of 8.
Kelaiyuan pot-stickers: chewy and  crispy
        Dumplings are 10 for NT$50, and dumplings in miso, hongshao (soy sauce), spicy, curried or Thai sour-and-spicy soup (湯餃) cost NT$75 per bowl. Soups of the same flavors are NT$45, and corresponding noodle dishes cost NT$60. Side dishes are too numerous to list but include tofus, dried beancurd, seaweed and various boiled leafy greens which, at NT$25 per portion, are among the cheapest in town.
        Kelaiyuan has two other establishments in Taipei—one on Bade Road, the other on Nanchang Road—which have almost identical menus. Chang started his branch in Muzha six years ago before moving to the current Xinyi District location three years later. Like most of Taipei’s vegetarian restaurant owners he is a member of the Yiguandao (一貫道) religion but, also like most, does not proselytize his faith.
        He is evidently sensitive to environmental and health concerns too, as he has already replaced the melamine-resin bowls with metal ones for the hottest dishes, well in advance of the government’s year-end deadline, and ahead of most of his Wuxing Street neighbors too.

Opening hours: 11:00~14:30, 17:00~20:00; Monday ~ Saturday
No. of seats: 30
NOMM fake meat/processed food index: 3/10
Typical meal price: NT$75~125 per person
Address: 268 Zhuangjing Road, Xinyi District, Taipei City
Tel: (02) 2758 5138





                                                                                                                      Text and photos © Jiyue Publications 2011