food

Alishan National Scenic Area

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

My friends and I decided just last week to go to Alishan, which is a mountain region famous for its sunrises because of its altitude, high up above the clouds. I've discovered that Taiwan doesn't make it easy to travel to its "must see" destinations like the U.S. does ... to get to Alishan from Taipei, you have a couple of options, all of which include some type of train ride (ranging from 1.5 hours to 5 hours), followed by a winding (and often queasy) 2.5 hour bus ride up the mountain.

Everyone warned me to bring all my heaviest winter clothing because it would be COLD up in the mountains. So, armed with a wool sweater, tights, lots of socks, sucking candy and Coke, I nervously boarded the 4-hour regional train (about $20) headed to Chiayi (or Jiayi), where I would board a bus ($7.50) up to Alishan.

I really liked Chiayi, from what I saw of it. I'd been told that there is nothing of note to do there, but I found the city to be really clean and airy, completely unlike Taipei in many ways. The biggest difference I noticed was the lack of crowds on the streets. During our wait for our bus, we had a light lunch of turkey rice, which is a Chiayi specialty. For just $1, we had this delicious dish:

The yellow thing is pickled radish, and the orange-brown bits are fried shallots

And the bus ride up was not at all bad. After I asked the bus driver if we could sit up front (they had earlier sat us further in the back), the driver became very friendly and even offered us the seat next to his. There were originally 5 people on board the bus, but as it was a local bus, after a few stops, just us three girls remained for the long ride to Alishan. He gave us lots of tips on what to do while up there, and told us that it hadn't rained in weeks and weeks, but guess what? It was raining, and we'd probably brought it with us from Taipei.

Not sure how old this ad on the bus was, but the guy looks like a member of Kris Kross with a rat tail!

When we finally arrived at Alishan, it was completely and utterly misty and we were exhausted. But we decided to make use of the afternoon and walk one of the trails anyway. Here are some photos from that misty afternoon:

How the comforters in the hotel room were presented to us ... bizarre.

... this was at the transit museum at the Alishan train station. 
Not quite sure what it is.

Outside the Alishan train station/museum

The famous red trains




food

Cozymels

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

I've been hanging onto this entry for so long that it almost doesn't have any meaning anymore! It's about my last big meal with friends before leaving New York.

Two of my high school friends and I had been having monthly dinners for about a year, and for my last meal before leaving for Taiwan, they wanted me to pick a cuisine I knew I wouldn't be able to have here. Immediately, I knew I wanted Mexican food, but I wanted it to be a fun place, and preferably one in Long Island so we could make one last Target run together (another tradition we began tacking onto our dinners).

I found Cozymels, which is a chain restaurant, so it's definitely not anything unique ... but that doesn't mean it wasn't fun! I loved the atmosphere, which had all the typical skeevy colorful string lights which made it look like a place that should have had the word "tequila" somewhere in its name, and probably the word "sunset" or "rain" somewhere in there too.

While discussing what we would order, we started out conservatively, but over time, I think the mentality became, "to hell with it, it's our last meal together for a long while," so we ordered more food than I knew we could finish.

We started out with guacamole ($10) (warning: all of these photos will be on the greenish side because the lighting in the restaurant was pretty much limited to those colored string lights I mentioned, so we had to get creative and use the light of one smartphone to make everything photo-ready). This was good, made better after we squeezed in the lime juice from our margarita sampler. Not the best guacamole I've ever had (that would be at Toloache in Manhattan and also maybe Rosa Mexicano), but very good nonetheless.


My friend David wanted to try the chile con queso ($5.50), thinking no one else would want to share. We all dipped in anyway. It was very runny, but had a nice kick to it. I think we all gave up on scooping it out of the bowl after a while.

(Trust me, it was yellow in person.)

Then our margarita sampler ($10) arrived. While sitting in the waiting area, we spotted a number of machines mixing colorful slushy margaritas. We had fun trying to figure out what flavors the five were.


We concluded that they were regular, peach, some sort of berry, mango and watermelon. The website says they are actually: Primo, Mango, Raz Rita, Blue Peach and Clásico. This was well worth the $10, as each shot glass was actually the size of two shot glasses in one.

Then, our entrees:

Carnitas tacos ($12) ... SO delicious. The relish was great, 
the pork was well-marinated ... mmm.

The Guajillo Chicken tacos ($12)

I think this is the Pork Rostisado ($14)

And after all of that (and doggy bags, of course), we decided to get dessert.

The Margarita Cheesecake ($7? $8? $9?)
This had the texture of a mousse or pudding instead of cheesecake, and it tasted 
basically like key lime pie. It wasn't bad, but it wasn't anything spectacular.

I think the most interesting part of the night was the after-dinner green and white mints in the bowl near the host's stand. They looked like your run-of-the-mill spearmints, but they were the oddest flavor. Lime-cinnamon? Jalapeno-lime? We couldn't figure it out.

There is very little Mexican food here in Taipei, and what little there is is more Southwestern cuisine or Mexican of the Chipotle type. Though I did find a Chipotle-like place near my school which I plan on trying TONIGHT, so that's exciting news. If that doesn't cut it, I might have to attempt to make my own Mexican food if (more like WHEN) I get desperate.

food

Taipei's Night Markets

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Taipei is famous for its night markets, especially ShiDa Night Market, which is right across the street from one of the country's best universities. To me, the ShiDa Night Market is odd in that it doesn't seem to take advantage of daylight hours when students have time to kill ... the majority of the stores open after 3pm, some after 5pm.

I don't live too far from the Tong Hua Night Market, which I visited with my cousin and her cousin my first week here.


There are standalone stores here that are open at night as well as during the day, but there are also plenty of stalls that open only at night. Some sold iPhone cases, some sold black tights (which seems to have stores devoted to just that ... black tights!), some sold dried fruit, some sold costume jewelry. Others stalls were devoted to food like fried chicken, bubble tea, seafood, and stinky tofu. 

I haven't had stinky tofu yet during this trip, but it's basically squares of fermented tofu either steamed or fried. And yes, it stinks! But it tastes really good (or did the last time I had it), and in the case of stinky tofu, the stinkier it is, the better it actually tastes.

Here is what a typical street in Taipei looks like, during the day:


At the night market, we went to one of the dessert shops which serves a typical Taiwanese dessert of "chua bing," or shaved ice. The shaved ice here is very different from shaved ice back in the United States, as the toppings aren't just limited to flavored syrups. 

My cousin ordered mine for me -- it contains red beans, sweet rice balls/tangyuan (the light purple and orange balls), "boba" balls (the black balls) and either "grass" or "tortoise" jelly/Guilinggao (I can't remember). Neither jellies are made of the things that they're named after -- well, the "grass jelly" is made from the stalks of a plant in the mint family, and commercially-made "tortoise jelly" (which has a sweet but slightly medicinal flavor) is made from some sort of herb. According to Wikipedia, though, traditionally it is made from powdered tortoise shell (and from an extremely endangered tortoise, at that!) and herbs. And under all of this, somewhere, is ice. 


It's very filling and not exactly what I would call my ideal dessert, but it seems relatively healthy and not overly sweet.

My cousin's cousin ordered something similar, but with a soft tofu base (I guess it's known as "tofu pudding") instead of ice:


This "tofu pudding" is sold in the Chinese neighborhoods of New York City, too. When I was a child, it was a treat to get a tub of the stuff, which came with a ginger syrup that could be poured over the pudding to sweeten it and give it flavor. It can be eaten with savory ingredients, too.

And according to my cousin, the place we went to was the most popular one of its kind in Taipei, and frequented by celebrities. She pointed out this wall which was covered in signatures (or autographs, I suppose):


I probably wouldn't recognize an Asian celebrity if my life depended on it! I wonder if any American celebs have visited this place ... there seems to be some English mixed in with all the Chinese names ...

Backstreet Boys

A song by the first band you heard in concert

Monday, December 05, 2011

source: backstreetboys-multimedia.blogspot.com
Black & Blue Tour, 2001
15-year-old me would be happy to tell you that the first band I ever heard in concert was the Backstreet Boys. My first official concert was Diana Ross at Madison Square Garden, but that wasn't the question. :)

It was February 4, 2001, a Sunday night, exactly a week following Nick Carter's 21st birthday. It was the Black & Blue Tour, and it was at Nassau Coliseum in Long Island. I still remember what I wore -- flares, chunky-heeled black boots and a pink t-shirt that said "It's all good," a phrase Nick commonly used. Our seats were horrible. It was partial-view, and second to last row. The girls who sat behind us in the last row, however, were much more enthusiastic about the concert than most of the girls sitting ahead of them. But it really didn't matter, because it was the first concert I'd bought tickets to, and it was the Backstreet Boys, who I'd probably spent every free moment thinking about over the past 3 years.

I feared, before going into the concert, that seeing them in person would ruin the fantasy for me. Because seeing Diana Ross -- though she was never an object of any of my fantasies -- had killed the illusion of the "superstar." At Madison Square Garden, the intimate audience (the tickets had been a Christmas gift from my father's company) sat at a great distance from the stage, and it was Diana alone in a sparkling red hot number. But even so, she was still only one person and a little one, at that.

The Black and Blue tour did not kill the illusion of the Backstreet Boys for me. There were 5 of them then, and oodles of back-up dancers. The costumes were otherworldly, the lighting dramatic, and the pyro monstrous. I snuck my tape recorder in with me and taped the entire thing, but the screaming was so loud that even I felt stupid trying to listen to the tape more than twice.

The moment that sticks out to me the greatest from this concert was the performance of "I Promise You (With Everything I Am)," which was my favorite song off of "Black & Blue." I've already written about this, but I was so excited (and surprised) that they were singing this song that the moment I realized it, my concert companion (it was her idea, even though she was barely a Backstreet Boys fan) and I ran down the stairs through an entire section to get closer to the stage. Throughout the concert, we'd noticed that the house was not entirely full and there were rows that were empty. Our plan had been to "upgrade" at some point, but we got so caught up in the concert that we forgot. But during "I Promise You," we ran down until we could run no further without taking our eyes off of the guys, and that was to the railing.

For this tour, they had two stages: an end stage and a round one in the middle of the audience which was, of course, closer to us than the end stage. For "I Promise You," they used the round stage, so I watched for a few moments as they sang outwards and occasionally upwards towards the audience, feeling that this would be the closest I might ever be to the Backstreet Boys. And then the security guard shooed us away. To pour salt on the wound, before they got to my favorite part of the song (Nick's part), they transitioned into another song.

(Begins at 1:39)

It was during this tour that A.J.'s substance abuse problems were first made public, and they had to halt the tour for a little bit that summer so A.J. could go to rehab. I've since been to 3 more Backstreet Boys concerts and one with the New Kids On The Block (so that brings my total to ... 5?). I scored floor seats (15th? 18th? row) to my second BSB concert at Radio City Music Hall thanks to my internship that summer, and it was then that I was enlightened to the wonder that is floor seats (and the interactions that may or may not accompany said floor seats). With each concert, I've feared it would be the last I'd ever see of them together, but I've been wrong every time. Once in a while, I'll think, "I can't believe they never stopped."

In the years since, I've met many of my favorite artists (mostly through serendipity), but I still haven't met any of the Backstreet Boys ... although I once had the opportunity to speak to Nick. But all that came out of my mouth was a flurry of uncouth words (luckily he was still far enough away not to have heard me, and if he did, maybe he pretended he didn't). Maybe someday I will fulfill that long-ago dream.

food

Katz's Deli and dessert (times 3)

Friday, December 02, 2011

I have a couple of New York City posts still up my sleeve, including this one. I got together with two friends from college a week before I left, and they asked what kind of restaurant I wanted to go to. I said I really didn't care, but I wanted "the quintessential NYC experience." So we decided on the famous Katz's Deli, where they filmed that famous scene from When Harry Met Sally:


Aw, they cut out the part when the older lady says, "I'll have what she's having."

Believe it or not, this was my very first time at Katz's (205 East Houston Street). I'd always been too intimidated to go alone, and while deli food can be great, it's not something I ever really crave.

Since I wasn't all that hungry, we three girls decided to go with a full pastrami sandwich and a half-corned beef, matzo/h ball soup order. You can't go to this kind of restaurant and not order a matzo/h ball soup!


The soup was a little too salty for my taste, but it was still very heartwarming and brothy and the matzo/h ball was fluffy as it should've been.

The corned beef sandwich was a letdown. It was dry, and possibly too salty as well, but I can't really remember. I would just recommend NOT ordering it. The pastrami sandwich, however, was a delight. It's not the best pastrami sandwich I've ever had ... well, maybe it is. (But the pastrami BURGER at Crown Burgers in Salt Lake City is the best pastrami dish I've ever had, mmm.) 

To top this meal off, we ordered a Dr. Brown's Black Cherry Soda. Dr. Brown's, I think, is a predominantly New York soda brand, and I grew up drinking its cream soda. In the past few years, however, I discovered its Black Cherry soda, which tastes almost revolutionary if you just add a couple twists of lime juice to each glass!

The dishes also came with your typical delicatessen pickles. I prefer the sour type, but delis usually carry the crisper, greener type. We got both kinds and I wasn't impressed.



Katz's, from Il Laboratorio del Gelato
So all in all, not exactly all that it's cracked up to be, but the pastrami sandwich really is pretty good. The atmosphere is kind of what I'd imagine a canteen to be like; it's one L-shaped room. There is a bathroom, but it's literally a telephone booth-sized box in the middle of the smaller end of the "L." It looked like the "chokey" from the outside, the room that poor little Matilda was made to sit inside for hours as punishment in Roald Dahl's novel.

After this, we went for dessert across the street at Il Laboratario del Gelato (95 Orchard Street), which I went to this past summer. Last time I ordered honey lavender gelato and coconut sorbet. The friends I visited with this time were a little more adventurous -- I ordered the Mexican cinnamon while another ordered basil and the last ordered Guinness. Odd mixture, but I liked the basil best. It was really clean and refreshing. The Mexican cinnamon was what you'd think it was (Christmas! In my mouth! And a little spicy.), and the Guinness I didn't care for at all. It had a terribly bitter aftertaste though it started out with dark chocolate or coffee notes and all of that.


... and when I am with certain friends, get-togethers turn into epic eating marathons. After gelato, we went to a speakeasy where we all ordered herb-flavored drinks. And then after that, we spotted the Dessert Truck near Astor Place, where we decided on the chocolate bread pudding. I don't like bread puddings and I'd had this one before, but not with the bacon crème fraîche. I'm definitely not one of those people who thinks pork reigns supreme and that bacon should have its own deity and all of that. It was interesting -- a nice balance of sweet and salty, but that's as much as my appreciation for the whole dish went. It was a little too rich for my taste, overall. Secretly, I wish we'd seen the Wafels & Dinges truck instead ... Belgian waffles -- now that would've been the perfect send-off dessert!

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