[食記] CNN熱推40個不能錯過的台灣小吃
CNN熱推40個不能錯過的台灣小吃
感激 網友 伊媚兒
肉圓、鳳梨酥、臭豆腐、豬血糕 上榜
台灣美食小吃越來越在國外發光,美國有線電視新聞網CNN的CNN GO網站十三日刊文推薦
台灣熱門的四十大小吃,許多經典小吃皆紛紛列入名單內,這也讓遊客覺得在台灣一天吃
三餐不滿足!
CNN GO網站指出,光是台北市就有20多條夜市街,台灣人對於小吃的重視,甚至可以用「
追求美好的生活」來形容;文章也介紹,台灣小吃結合了許多特色的文化,其中有閩南、
客家及潮州等料理,甚至還因為曾經是日本殖民地,融入了許多東洋味。
該報導的小吃範圍幾乎涵蓋了全台灣,從基隆的鼎邊銼(Ding bian cuo)及淡水的阿給
(Agei)、鐵蛋(iron egg),到台南的棺材板(coffin bread),以及最近在歐美相當
熱門的珍珠奶茶(bubble tea)、香氣四溢的滷肉飯、外國人又愛又恨的臭豆腐、酸酸甜
甜的芒果冰及Q彈有勁的肉圓等,也都被列入了名單內。
對此,韓國網友一天4萬人點閱認為看了此文章後,覺得台灣小吃看起來非常美味,有想
要立即造訪台灣的衝動,也有網友覺得台灣的美食非常多,該網站遺漏了一堆。此外,更
有在異鄉的台灣遊子直呼:「看到小吃圖片就好想家。」
CNN GO網站介紹,台灣小吃融合多元料理,包括閩南、潮州風味,由於曾為日本殖民地,
小吃也少不了東洋味。文章更打趣,雖是三餐之外的小吃(small eat),從有如一座座
小山般的「刨冰山(shaved ice mountain)」到大如人臉的「豪大大雞排(large
fried chicken)」,台灣人的吃可是越來越「大」。
另有影片透過歌手盧廣仲等名人介紹誠品、夜市等台灣熱門景點。觀光局國際組長林坤源
表示,台灣觀光及美食越來越獲國際媒體肯定及推薦,觀光局日前邀請有五千萬會員的美
國汽車旅遊協會資深經理尼可拉斯(Nicholas)來台踩線,他吃過士林夜市大雞排後就念
念不忘,說「在美國想到都要流口水。」
這篇報導全文刊登於:
40個不能錯過的台灣食物 40 Taiwanese foods we can't live without - CNNGo
1. Braised pork rice (滷肉飯)
2. Beef noodle (牛肉麵)
3. Oyster omelet (蚵仔煎)
4. Bubble tea (珍珠奶茶)
5. Coffin bread (棺材板)
6. Slack Season danzai noodles (擔仔麵)
7. Pan-fried bun (生煎包)
8. Gua bao (割包)
9. Iron egg (鐵蛋)
10. Pineapple cake (鳳梨酥)
11. Tian bu la (甜不辣)
12. Ba wan (肉圓)
13. Fried chicken (鹽酥雞)
14. Flaky scallion pancake (蔥抓餅)
15. Oyster vermicelli (蚵仔米線)
16. Stinky tofu (臭豆腐)
17. Sweet potato (地瓜)
18. Shaved ice mountain (刨冰山)
19. Pepper cakes (胡椒餅)
20. Din Tai Fung Dumpling House (鼎泰豐小籠包)
21. Fish ball soup (魚丸湯)
22. Ribs stewed in medicinal herbs (藥燉排骨)
23. Goose (鵝肉)
24. Ding bian cuo (邊趖)
25. Taiwanese sausage with sticky rice (大腸包小腸)
26. Mochi (麻糬)
27. Lantern soy sauce braised food (燈籠滷味)
28. Sun cakes (太陽餅)
29. Tube rice pudding (筒仔米糕)
30. Taiwanese breakfast(燒餅油條)
31. Pig’s blood rice pudding (豬血米糕)
32. Three-cup chicken (三杯雞)
33. Tamsui Agei (阿給)
34. Fen yuan (粉圓)
35. Hot-star Large Fried Chicken (豪大大雞扒)
36. Anything with cuttlefish(烤魷魚)
37. Aiyu jelly (愛玉冰)
38. Ke le bing (可樂餅)
39. Steamed spring roll (潤餅)
40. Spicy hotpot (麻辣火鍋)
Food: it's serious, it's respected, it's all excellent in Taiwan.
Taiwanese food
Not to be underestimated: braised fatty pork with rice.
1. Braised pork rice (滷肉飯)
A Taiwanese saying goes, "Where there is a wisp of smoke from the kitchen
chimney, there will be lurou fan" (braised pork with rice). The popularity of
this humble dish cannot be overstated.
"Lurou fan" is synonymous with Taiwan.
The Taipei city government launched a "braised pork rice is ours" campaign
last year after Michelin’s Green Guide Taiwan claimed that the dish is from
Shandong Province in mainland China.
A good bowl of lurou fan has finely chopped, not quite minced, pork belly,
slow-cooked in aromatic soy sauce with five spices. There should be an ample
amount of fattiness, in which lies the magic.
The meat is spooned over hot rice.
A little sweet, a little salty, the braised pork rice is comfort food
perfected.
Jin Feng Lu Rou Fan (金峰滷肉飯), 10 Roosevelt Road, Section 1, Jhongjheng
District, Taipei City; +886 2 2396 0808 +886 2 2396 0808
Taiwanese food
Nothing like a good debate about beef noodles.
2. Beef noodle (牛肉麵)
You know it's an obsession when it gets its own festival.
Beef noodle soup is a dish that inspires competitiveness and innovation in
chefs. Everyone wants to claim the title of beef noodle king.
From visiting Niu Ba Ba for one of the most expensive bowls of beef noodle
soup in the world (TW$10,000, or US$334) to a serendipitous duck into the
first makeshift noodle shack that you spot, it's almost impossible to have a
bad beef noodle experience in Taiwan.
Lin Dong Fang's beef shanks with al dente noodles in a herbal soup are a
perennial favorite. The streetside eatery’s secret weapon is the dollop of
homemade chili-butter added last.
Lin Dong Fang (林東芳), 274 Bade Road, Section 2, Jhongshan District, Taipei
City; +886 2 2752 2556 +886 2 2752 2556 ; Niu Ba Ba (牛爸爸), No. 16, Alley
27, Lane 216, Section 4 Zhongxiao Donglu, Da'an District, Taipei City; +886 2
2778 3075/ +886 2 8771 5358 +886 2 8771 5358
Taiwanese food
The oyster omelet: the island's snack.
3. Oyster omelet (蚵仔煎)
Here's a snack that really showcases the fat of the land of Taiwan. You've
got something from the sea and something from the soil.
The eggs are the perfect foil for the little oysters easily found around the
island, while sweet potato starch is added to give the whole thing a gooey
chewiness -- a signature Taiwan food texture.
No wonder it was voted best snack to represent the island in a poll of 1,000
Taiwanese by Global Views Monthly in 2007.
Lai's Egg Oyster Omelet (賴記雞蛋蚵仔煎), Ningxia Road Night Market; +886 2
2558 6177 +886 2 2558 6177
Taiwanese food
Better than beer: bubble tea is a drink and a snack.
4. Bubble tea (珍珠奶茶)
Bubble tea is representative of the "QQ" food texture that Taiwanese love.
The cute-sounding phrase refers to something that is very chewy, just like
the tapioca balls that are the "bubbles" in bubble tea.
It is said that this unique drink was invented out of boredom. Liu Han-Chieh
threw some sweetened tapioca pudding into her iced Assam tea on a fateful day
in 1988 and one of the greatest Taiwanese exports was born.
Huge variations on the theme have since emerged, including taro-flavored tea,
jasmine tea or coffee, served cold or hot.
Chun Shui Tang teahouse (春水堂), 48 Yi-shu St., Longjing, Taichung County;
+886 4 2652 8288 +886 4 2652 8288
More on CNNGo: Is this the inventor of bubble tea?
Taiwanese food
If the Addams Family came to Taiwan.
5. Coffin bread (棺材板)
This Tainan specialty is a mutated offspring of French toast and chowder.
An extra thick piece of bread is hollowed out to resemble a flat bread bowl.
It is toasted to harden it and then filled with seafood chowder.
Legend says a Taiwanese chef who studied Western cooking invented this
bread-soup-bowl-with-corners.
One day an archeologist tried the toast and told the chef, “It looks just
like the coffin I am excavating now.”
Thus, the chowder soup took on its morbid Chinese name, which means "coffin
bread."
赤崁棺材板 (Chìkàn Guāncai Bǎn), No. 180, Kangle Market, West Central
District, Táinán; +886 6 224 0014 +886 6 224 0014 ; guan-tsai-ban.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Thankfully, we no longer have to wait for the slack season to eat this.
6. Slack Season danzai noodles (擔仔麵)
You've gotta love a place called Slack Season and it's the first pit stop on
any trip to Taiwan.
The iconic eatery originated in Tainan about a century ago. A fisherman sold
noodles during the slack season and the joint became so successful that he
quit fishing altogether.
The signature bowl of Slack Season noodles is served in shrimp soup with bean
sprouts, coriander, minced pork and fresh shrimps.
This bowl of comforting flavors is so addictive that a man from Tainan ate 18
bowls in a row, according to Slack Season.
Slack Season Tainan Main Store (度小月), 16 Jhongjheng Road, Tainan City;
+886 6 223 1744 +886 6 223 1744 , as well as various locations, see website
for more details: www.iddi.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Pan-fried buns, bigger and better in Taiwan.
7. Pan-fried bun (生煎包)
Do you like the fluffiness of cake as well as the crunchiness of potato
chips? The pan-fried bun gives you the best of both worlds.
These buns are made with spongy white Chinese bread that are pan-fried on the
bottom. Break them open to reveal the moist porky filling.
A Shanghainese staple, the Taiwanese version differs in two ways: it is
slightly bigger in size and it hits the pan upside-down.
Hsu Ji (許記), Shida Night Market, Taan District, Taipei City; +886 9 3085
9646 +886 9 3085 9646
Taiwanese food
Dear Gua Bao, you're the Big Mac of our eye.
8. Gua bao (割包)
It's a hamburger, Taiwan-style.
A steamed bun sandwiches a hearty filling of braised pork belly, pickled
Chinese cabbage and powdered peanuts.
The filling is chopped up into small pieces and mixed together so there's a
bit of everything in every bite. Consider doing this with Western hamburgers.
Take in a big mouthful and enjoy the salty, sour and sweet flavors and the
greasy pork swimming in your mouth.
Lan Jia Gua Bao (藍家割包), No. 3, Alley 8, Lane 316, Section 3, Roosevelt
Road, Taipei City; +886 2 2368 2060 +886 2 2368 2060
Taiwanese food
Urban legend says you can play ping-pong with iron eggs.
9. Iron egg (鐵蛋)
It's called the "iron egg" because this mini egg is tough as nails. With a
rubbery consistency these chewy eggs dyed black from long-braising in soy
sauce, are a highly addictive delicacy in Taiwan.
Often made from quails' eggs, the little balls are cooked for hours in soy
sauce then air-dried. The whole process is repeated over several days until
the protein becomes tough and acquires the desired amount of chew.
Seaside A-Po (海邊阿婆), 151-1, Jhongjheng Road, Tamshui; A-Po (阿婆), 135-1,
Jhongjheng Road, Tamshui
Pineapple cake
SunnyHill's traditional pineapple cake.
10. Pineapple cake (鳳梨酥)
This iconic Taiwanese pastry is one of the best souvenir options. These mini
pineapple pies are filled with candied pineapple.
If you want the best pineapple cake experience, try SunnyHills which uses
only local pineapple as filling. It yields a darker filling, rougher texture
and a more sour taste.
The traditional pies at other shops are filled with a mix of pineapple and
chewable bits of winter melon. They have a fruity sweetness and a golden
casing of crumbly buttery pastry.
Stores that replace pineapple completely with winter melon to cut costs are
committing a big no-no.
SunnyHills (微熱山丘), 1/F, No. 1, Alley 4, Lane 36, Section 5, Minsheng East
Riad, Songshan District, Taipei City; +886 49 229 2767 +886 49 229 2767 ;
www.sunnyhills.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Don't waste a single drop: water down the brown sauce and drink it up.
11. Tian bu la (甜不辣)
Tian bu la refers to fish paste that has been molded into various shapes and
sizes, deep-fried, then boiled in a broth. Before eating, the pieces of solid
fish paste are taken out of the broth and smothered in brown sauce.
Doesn't sound like much, but it delivers plenty of the sweet flavors and
chewy textures beloved by Taiwanese. Tian bu la is basically a Taiwan take on
Japanese oden, with more sugariness, tougher fish cakes and a signature sauce.
After finishing the pieces of fish cakes, there's more to come. Get some soup
from the vendor and add it to the remaining sauce in the bowl. Mix and drink
the flavor bomb.
Simon Tian Bu La (賽門甜不辣), 95 Xining South Road, Wanhua District, Taipei
City; +886 2 2331 2481
Taiwanese food
Ba wan: dumplings for giants.
12. Ba wan (肉圓)
The ba wan is Taiwan's mega dumpling.
Made with a dough of rice flour, corn starch and sweet potato starch, it
looks almost translucent after cooking. Pork, veggies and sometimes eggs are
stuffed inside and gravy is poured on top.
It is commonly believed that ba wan was invented during periods of scarcity.
The simple pork dumpling was then a luxurious snack enjoyed only during the
Lunar New Year festival.
Tonghua Bawan (通化肉圓), No. 7, Alley 39, Tonghua Street, Da'an District,
Taipei City; +886 2 2707 8562
Taiwanese food
Perfect street food: boneless and bite-sized.
13. Fried chicken (鹽酥雞)
In the fried chicken hall of fame, Taiwan deserves its own exhibit. Not only
has it made the giant fried chicken cutlet (No. 35 on this list) a cult
classic, but its popcorn chicken is dangerously addictive.
The chicken is chopped into bite-sized pieces, marinated, dipped in batter
and deep-fried. A generous sprinkling of salt and pepper complete the morish
morsels. It's a ubiquitous snack on the city streets.
Taiwan's First Popcorn Chicken Store(台灣第一家鹽酥雞創始總店), No. 530-1,
Bei'an Road, Zhongshan District, Taipei City
Taiwanese food
The flaky scallion pancake, Taiwan's food porn queen.
14. Flaky scallion pancake (蔥抓餅)
There is nothing more appetizing than the sight of a flaky scallion pancake
being slowly torn apart. Add cheese and egg fillings to maximize the visuals.
Devour this night market staple in a few bites to ensure it is steaming hot
and chewy.
Shida Night Market, Taipei City
Taiwanese food
Oyster vermicelli: taste of the sea.
15. Oyster vermicelli (蚵仔米線)
A bowl of great oyster vermicelli should have a thick, flavorful soup base
while the thin rice noodles and oysters should still retain their distinct
texture.
Some people will add chopped intestines for a funky dimension to the soup.
It is a gooey, slurpable dish, more soup than noodle, with an intense briny
taste.
Ay-Chung (阿宗), 8-1 Emei St., Wanhua District, Taipei City; +886 2 2620 9989
Taiwanese food
You need two hands to eat this, one to hold your nose.
16. Stinky tofu (臭豆腐)
This is the world's best love-it-or-hate-it snack and Taiwan does it just
right.
The "fragrant" cube of bean curd is deep-fried and draped with sweet and
spicy sauce. It you hold your nose, it looks and tastes just like a plain ol'
piece of fried tofu, with a crisp casing and soft center like pudding.
But what's the fun in eating that? Inhale deeply and relish the stench, the
smellier, the better.
Raohe night market, Taipei
Taiwanese food
"See, it has a perfect Taiwan shape."
17. Sweet potato (地瓜)
Leaving taste, smell and nutritional value aside, the sweet potato stands out
for one particular reason in Taiwan -- it is shaped like the island. For
this, the sweet potato occupies a very special place in every Taiwanese heart.
Taiwan-grown sweet potatoes are added to soup with ginger, or roasted by
street vendors in ovens converted from oil-drums, or ground to a flour and
added to other dishes to give texture, or fried into sweet potato chips.
As long as the beloved root vegetable is in it, Taiwanese love it.
Also on CNNGo: Be a Taipei Sweet Potato Mama for a day
Taiwanese food
Taiwan's summer blockbuster is the shaved ice mountain.
18. Shaved ice mountain (刨冰山)
One good thing about the hot, humid and stormy summers in Taiwan is the
excuse to eat shaved ice mountain.
An oversized pile of shaved ice is heaped with fresh fruit and flavorings,
such as mango pieces, juice and sweet condensed milk. It wins hands down just
by looks alone.
A more traditional take is a smaller option, less dramatic but with freshly
made mini rice balls.
Feast on mango shaved ice at Yong Kang 15 (永康15), 15 Yong-kang St., Taipei
City; +886 2 2321 3367 ; For classics go to Tai Yi Milk King (臺一牛奶大王),
82 Xin Sheng South Road, Section 3; +886 2 2363 4341
Taiwanese food
So good that we ate half of it before remembering to take a photo.
19. Pepper cakes (胡椒餅)
The must-have at Rao He night market, the pepper cake is a crispy pocket
filled with juicy pork that is infused with the aromatic bite of black
pepper. Baked on the wall of a clay oven, the pies are a delicious ode to the
pepper plant.
Make sure you get more than one, or risk the overwhelming sense of regret
when you have to wait again in the long queue for more.
Raohe night market, Taipei
Taiwanese food
Din Tai Fung: building an empire on a dollar-sized dumpling.
20. Din Tai Fung Dumpling House (鼎泰豐小籠包)
Xiaolongbao may be a Shanghainese delicacy, but some argue that the Taiwanese
perfected it. Taiwanese restaurant Din Tai Fung does its Shanghai comrades
proud with their succulent pork soup dumplings.
Din Tai Fung’s bite-sized xiaolongbao have a consistently high quality.
Their paper-thin wrappings hold rich hot broth and tender pork meatballs.
Gasps can be heard intermittently at Din Tai Fung as diners brave the
scalding hot soup that squirts out upon biting the dumpling.
Din Tai Fung Dumpling House, 192 Xinyi Road, Section 2, Taipei City; +886 2
2321 8929
Taiwanese food
Fishballs. Round things are just fun to eat.
21. Fish ball soup (魚丸湯)
What is better than fresh seafood? Why, fresh seafood made into balls, of
course.
Look for handmade fish balls in Taiwan as the process incorporates more air
into the ball thus allowing more broth to be soaked up. They also have a
bouncier chew.
Jiaxing is a popular purveyor in Taipei best known for its specialty shark
meat balls.
Jiaxing Fish Ball (佳興魚丸), No. 21, Lane 210, Section 2, Yanping North
Road, Datong District, Taipei City; +886 2 2553 6470
Taiwanese food
Medicinal herbs gives us an excuse to feast on ribs.
22. Ribs stewed in medicinal herbs (藥燉排骨)
This is Taiwan’s version of bak kut the, the Chinese meat soup that is also
popular in Singapore and Malaysia.
In Taiwan, the soup is slow-cooked in Chinese medicine, extracting the
essence from pork bones and more than 14 nutritious herbs, roots and dried
fruits. It's yum and good for you too, especially for keeping warm in winter.
There isn't much meat on these lean bones, but the point of the dish is the
soup. Don’t be shy to pick the bones up with your hands and suck the juices
off them. In fact, it’s odd not to do so.
Nanya Night Market, Taipei City
Taiwanese food
The whole goose and nothing but the goose on Taiwan's best tables.
23. Goose (鵝肉)
Geese, proudly bred on Taiwan farms, are never wasted. From the skin to the
blood, they are made into delicious dishes.
The salted or smoked geese in Hou Yi are revelatory. Every bite of the juicy
goose meat with slightly smoked goose skin is a celebration of poultry.
Or try one of Bistro Le Pont's bowls of steamed rice topped with goose, chili
oil and x.o. sauce. The grains of rice are a vehicle for goose fat and flavor.
Hou Yi (後驛鵝肉), No. 29, Lane 220, Changan West Road, Datong District,
Taipei City; +886 2 2555 0498 ; Bistro Le Pont (樂朋小館), 176 Chaozhou St.,
Taipei City; +886 2 2396 5677
Ding bian cuo
Painting the wok with rice slurry to make ding bian cuo.
24. Ding bian cuo (鐤邊趖)
Ding bian cuo is a bowl of slippery rice flour pasta.
Rice flour batter is poured along the side of a huge wok. It slides and
spreads along the heated wok and forms slices of rice flour noodles.
When dried, the sheets will be cut into smaller pieces that become the very
thin and very chewy noodles when cooked as ding bian cuo.
Wu Jia ding bian cuo is a century-old family business. Their ding bian cuo
are served with handmade pork cakes, shrimp cakes, cabbage, daylily and
bamboo shoots.
Wu Jia ding bian cuo (百年吳家鼎邊趖), Keelung Temple Street Night Market,
Taipei City
Taiwanese food
Taiwanese hot dogs are made with sticky rice buns and cured sausages.
25. Taiwanese sausage with sticky rice (大腸包小腸)
Taiwanese pork sausage alone is a superstar at night markets, but when served
as the snack "little sausage inside big sausage" it is unbeatable.
Basically, it's like a hot dog, but instead of a bun, sticky rice is stuffed
inside a sausage casing to make an oversized rice sausage. That rice sausage
is slit open to stuff in a pork sausage. So it's a little sausage inside a
big one. Get it?
Fengjia Night Market, Taichung County
Taiwanese food
Mobile mochi: get your chewy fix any time of the day.
26. Mochi (麻糬)
These glutinous rice balls are soft as marshmallows and filled with sweet or
salty things.
The most traditional mochi are filled with red bean paste and rolled in
peanut powder. But in recent years, strawberry jam, sesame paste, green tea
jam and peanut paste are some of the popular choices of filling.
You can learn how to make mochi by visiting the Royal Taiwan Mochi Museum
(around US$5 per person).
Remember to chew carefully before swallowing, the sticky mochi are
practically a choking hazard.
Royal Taiwan Mochi Museum(台灣麻糬主題館), No. 3, Tzu Qiang 3rd Road, Nantou
County; +886 49 225 7644 , see the class schedule at www.taiwanmochi.com.tw
(In Chinese only)
Taiwanese food
Lantern Lu Wei doesn't worry about your schedule, only good flavor.
27. Lantern soy sauce braised food (燈籠滷味)
No matter what you choose from the Lantern Lu Wei food stall, it will take on
the taste of the signature five-spice soy sauce. It's a little sweet, not too
salty and very aromatic with cloves, star anise, cinnamon and other spices.
Pick your preferred ingredients and the chef will cook it in the pot of
special sauce. This makes a perfect light meal before a big night out.
Expect to wait in line as the chef never rushes but takes his time to allow
the sauce to be well absorbed by the food.
Lantern Lu Wei (燈籠滷味), Shida Night Market, Taipei City
28. Sun cakes (太陽餅)
Originating in Taichung, the suncake is simply a flakey pastry filled with
maltose. And yet this sweet nothing has come to represent Taichung City and
is a souvenir sought out by all visitors.
Countless sun cake shops flourish in Taichung, all claiming to be the
original store, which none of them are.
But maybe it's time for them to shine. The one and only original sun cake
store Tai Yang Bakery closed down unexpectedly when the 68-year-old boss
decided to retire.
Along Tze Yo Street, Zhongzheng District, Taichung County
Taiwanese food
Sticky rice pudding the size of your stomach.
29. Tube rice pudding (筒仔米糕)
Sticky rice and Chinese mushrooms are fried with seasoning and stuffed into a
bamboo tube together with pork and egg. The tube of rice is steamed again to
further soften the texture until it becomes a cylindrical pudding.
Da Qiao Tou started making the rice pudding in a small stall under a bridge
more than four decades ago. The business has expanded since but the rice
pudding stays the same.
Be sure to add the homemade turnip-laced sweet spicy sauce to the pudding.
Da Qiao Tou (大橋頭老牌筒仔米糕), 41 Yanping North Road, Section 3, Datong
District, Taipei City; +886 2 2594 4685
Taiwanese breakfast
Nothing like fried bread wrapped with roast bread to fuel a morning
30. Taiwanese breakfast(燒餅油條)
Three elements to start a day right in Taiwan: sesame flat bread, deep-fried
Chinese donut and soymilk.
Blogger Joan H from A Hungry Girl’s Guide to Taipei says her favorite
breakfast is from Fu Hang.
“I love the thick sesame flat bread at Fu Hang because it has a slight
sweetness, a thin crispy layer and soft center from coming straight out of
the hot metal barrel. Many sesame flat breads are dry and flaky but Fu Hang's
shows why there is often a half-hour to hour wait on the weekends.”
Fu Hang Dou Jiang (阜杭豆漿), 2/F Hua Shan Market, 108 Zhongxiao East Road,
Section 1, Taipei City; +886 2 2392 2175 +886 2 2392 2175
31. Pig’s blood rice pudding (豬血米糕)
This pudding is a mix of pig's blood and sticky rice and stuck on the end of
a stick like a lollipop. For the final Taiwanese touch, the pudding is coated
in a sweet peanut powder.
Basketball star Jeremy Lin Shu-How endorsed pig’s blood rice cake as one of
his favorite snacks on his recent visit to Taiwan. If it is good enough for
Lin, it is good enough for us.
Xiao Li (小李), No. 1-3, Lane 136, Section 4, Roosevelt Road, Taipei City;
+886 2 2368 3417 +886 2 2368 3417
Three-cup chicken
Signature Taiwan: Three-cup chicken.
32. Three-cup chicken (三杯雞)
Three-cup chicken is cooked in a cup of rice wine, a cup of oil and a cup of
soy sauce. To this Taiwanese culinary triumvirate is added some fresh basil,
chilies and garlic for an irresistible combination.
Some kitchens have a different definition of three-cup chicken, such as a cup
of wine, a cup of sesame oil and a cup of sugar.
Old Taiwan (新台灣原味), 1 Mincheng 3rd Road, Gushan District, Kaohsiung;
+886 7 522 8852 +886 7 522 8852 , www.oldtaiwan.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Agei, an edible purse full of goodness.
33. Tamsui Agei (阿給)
Agei comes from the Japanese "aburaage" which are deep-fried tofu pockets.
These Taiwanese agei are stuffed with mung bean noodles and sealed off with
fish paste. A typical sweet-spicy sauce completes it.
The tofu soaks up the soup its cooked in so each bite bursts with broth.
Paired with a soy milk, the agei makes a great savory breakfast.
Zhenli Street, Tamshui
Taiwanese food
Fen yuan, like sweet sticky marbles.
34. Fen yuan (粉圓)
Fen yuan refers to all the chewy dough that Taiwanese like to add to their
dessert.
Sometimes they are made with sticky rice flour and various fillings. The
dough is slightly translucent when steamed, revealing the colorful insides --
red bean, green tea, egg custard. They are just so joyful to look at.
Fen yuan is more commonly made from tapioca without filling. And when black
sugar is added, it becomes the black pearls in bubble tea, called pearl fen
yuan.
Raohe Night Market, Taipei City
Taiwanese food
Almost as big as your face.
35. Hot-star Large Fried Chicken (豪大大雞扒)
According to a Taipei Times’ report in 2011, Taiwanese devour more than
250,000 fried chicken cutlets each day.
If piled atop each other, they would make a chicken cutlet tower 10 times as
tall as Taipei 101, the island’s tallest skyscraper at 508 meters.
Go to Hot-star for the original oversized chicken cutlet. The enormous slice
of meat is as big as your face and very moist with a crispy crust. A generous
coating of five-spice powder and pepper gives it a kick.
Starting as a small counter at Shilin night market, Hot-star is now a
franchise present in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore.
Hot-star Large Fried Chicken (豪大大雞扒), Shilin Night Market, see other
locations at www.hotstar.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Risotto in cuttlefish.
36. Anything with cuttlefish(烤魷魚)
Barbecued Taiwanese cuttlefish hits the spot every time. The island gets a
lot of great cuttlefish and grill stations covered in cuttlefish skewers can
be found everywhere in the southern tip.
Although a thick cuttlefish soup with herbs and veggies is a typical
Taiwanese winter-warmer, the best way to enjoy the mollusks is fresh out of
seawater, straight onto the charcoal grill.
Imagine the smoky aroma, dark grill marks, glistening furled edges and
dustings of salt and pepper.
Fengjia Night Market, Taichung County
37. Aiyu jelly (愛玉冰)
Very wobbly and hardly tasting of anything, the aiyu jelly takes on the
flavor of whatever it is eaten with.
Add it to lemonade and shaved ice for a refreshing summer drink. The jelly
gives the liquid a fun gloopy texture.
Shida Night Market, Taipei City
Taiwanese food
Tasty and super cute, the croquette enslaves amateur food photographers.
38. Ke le bing (可樂餅)
Inspired by the Japanese deep-fried patty, korokke, and the French croquette,
the ke le bing is now an indispensable snack in Taiwan.
Stuffed with mashed potato or minced meat, the disc-shaped croquette is
coated with flour, eggs and breadcrumbs.
You can choose deep-fried meat, vegetables, seafood and anything else edible
that can be molded into a disc shape. We love the pork and cheese combo the
most.
Koroke (肉丸餅), 49-10 Emei St., Wanhua District, Taipei City
39. Steamed spring roll (潤餅)
To describe it as the non-deep-fried version of a spring roll would be
unfair, as "run bing" (steamed spring roll) was invented before the spring
roll.
Every household has its own recipe for run bing. During festivals, families
will gather at the table to have a run bing wrapping party. Each person
chooses their own fillings from a buffet and rolls their own run bing.
Besides serving delicious run bing, Shin Yeh at Taipei 101 also offers an
incomparable view of city.
Shin Yeh (欣葉), 85/F, Taipei 101, 7 Xinyi Road, Section 5, Xinyi District,
Taipei City; +886 2 8101 0185 +886 2 8101 0185 , see other locations at
www.shinyeh.com.tw
Taiwanese food
Hot pot: best social activity.
40. Spicy hotpot (麻辣火鍋)
Taiwanese are mad for spicy hot pot.
And who wouldn't be? The bubbling pots of broth are filled with all sorts of
Chinese herbs and spices to create an incredibly rich flavor for all the raw,
fresh ingredients that diners will dip into it.
New hot pot places pop up in Taiwan every day, each with a gimmick to attract
insatiable hot pot diners.
There's all-you-can-eat hot pot and yakiniku served at the same table;
there's bubble tea hotpot for the jaded.
But it is spicy hot pot with quality ingredients that stands the test of
time. While Taiwan's spice-levels can't come close to Chongqing's, they're
pretty piquant.
攝影 請參閱:http://lindavidtw.blogspot.tw/2012/06/cnn40.html
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