40 Taiwanese foods we can't live without
外國人喜歡的40種著名台灣小吃(1)
From mountains of shaved ice to
chicken cutlets as big as your face, Taiwanese eats all come with superlatives
Small
eats are the big thing in Taiwan where the philosophy is eat often and eat well.
Sure,
there's the internationally accepted three-meals-a-day format of dining, but
why be so limited when you can make like the Taiwanese and do some gourmet
snacking at
any time of the day, all day, every day?
The
capital Taipei has around 20 streets dedicated to snacking. Every time you
think you've found the best streetside bao, the most incredible stinky tofu
stand or mind-blowing beef noodle soup, there's always another one that
surpasses it.
Taiwanese
food is a mash-up of the cuisines of Min Nan(閩南),
Teochew (潮州)and Hokkien (福建)Chinese communities, as well as Japanese cuisine.
The
results of these culinary marriages are diversely delicious.
When
we asked some Taiwanese friends about the best food on their island, the
argument that ensued almost broke up life-long friendships. "We almost had a war -- we just have too many good eats," was the typical
reply.
Food:
it's serious, it's respected, it's all excellent in Taiwan
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.
2. Beef noodle (牛肉麵)
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 (牛爸爸)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.
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.
4. Bubble tea (珍珠/波霸奶茶)
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.
5. Coffin bread (台南棺材板)
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."
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.
7. Pan-fried bun (豬肉生煎包)
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.
8. Gua bao (割包)- 台灣風味的漢堡
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.
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.
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.
Justin Lai 編
04/23/2016
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