Reveling in the real Taiwain - The
Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/reveling-in-the-real-taiwain/2011/03/25/AFqOAD2C_story.html
By Erin Meister, Friday,
April 8, 12:20 PM
At Taiwan¡¦s Taoyuan International Airport, a customs agent takes my passport and
eyes it suspiciously. He looks up at me, one eyebrow raised. ¡§Why have you come
to Taiwan?¡¨ he demands.
¡§I heard it was a beautiful place,¡¨ I reply nervously, and the official¡¦s gaze
suddenly softens. He clutches his hands to his heart and grins widely.
¡§We are so happy to have you here,¡¨ he says. ¡§I hope you find it beautiful, and
tell everyone where you are from how friendly we are.¡¨
Then he stamps my documents and waves me in, beaming long after I pass through
the airport doors.
Although it has something of an international reputation as ¡§China lite,¡¨ Taiwan
possesses a vibrant national identity and pride of its own. Despite (or perhaps
because of) lingering Chinese, Japanese and Dutch colonial influences, the
sweet-potato-shaped island has fought to express its cultural, economic and
political independence, and a strong youth culture combined with the marks of
more than a dozen aboriginal tribes lend it today a dynamic air of
self-rediscovery.
My delight in exploring the country¡¦s capital city, Taipei, comes after I shed
any lingering dreams of pagodas and rolling rice paddies; instead, I quickly
learn to love slipping through dark, dusty doorways into shops, restaurants and
seemingly secret cubbyholes where cool urban natives and hip travelers go to
find the real Taiwan.
That¡¦s what I¡¦m after on this trip: Local color in every shape and form.
Thanks to the country¡¦s rekindled pride, ¡§Made in Taiwan¡¨ no longer implies the
cheap production of plastic novelty items. Instead, it signifies a newfound
emphasis on the local designer, the unmistakably Taiwanese artisan.
Finding them, however, can be difficult. Some of Taipei¡¦s most adventuresome and
innovative producers are tucked into the city¡¦s claustrophobic back alleys. You
have to brave the many mopeds whizzing recklessly by to reach them. But the
peril¡¦s worth it.
I discover an undeniable diamond in the rough in Figure 21, a don¡¦t-blink sliver
of a leather-goods boutique hidden in one of the East District¡¦s many unassuming
corridors. Each piece here ¡X deliberately cockeyed change purses and
meticulously hand-stitched saddlebags ¡X has a personality of its own. The
buttery-warm smell of leather hangs in the air of the studio-like boutique,
where rough-and-ready briefcases rest casually alongside oddball knickknacks and
vintage books, as though absent-mindedly left behind on a living-room shelf.
Venturing northeast, near the Zhongshan MRT Station, I pop into another pair of
local-focused shops for a quick look around ¡X and end up losing much of an
afternoon. At the quirky, minimalist Booday, I score an armload of unique,
hipstery goodies, giddily browsing through stacks of chopsticks in hand-sewn
pouches, off-kilter canvas bags and playfully rough-hewn jewelry. Founded by a
group of friends as a design label in 2003, Booday not only produces its own
line of screen-printed notebooks that sell for about $6-$10, carry-alls
($50-$76) and T-shirts ($15-$30), it also stocks and promotes local art and
artists and publishes its own quarterly magazine. In the homey upstairs cafe, I
can¡¦t decide whether to munch a house-made sandwich or get lost among the stacks
of CDs by Taiwanese musicians. So naturally I find time for both.
Next door to Booday is Lovely Taiwan, a not-for-profit shop focusing on
aboriginal handicrafts and art from outlying villages ¡X from intricately
detailed animal statuettes (about $26) to hand-woven fabrics adorned with native
patterns (about $40). At first drawn to more banal goodies such as soaps
peppered with dried local herbs, I soon find myself puzzling over a set of
beautiful bottles of honey- and plum-infused drinking vinegar for about $12. A
sweet-and-sour favorite throughout East Asia, sipping vinegar is often served in
small cups between meal courses, purportedly to aid digestion and balance your
pH. Dozens of mass-produced varieties are sold in the island¡¦s labyrinthine
grocery stores, but I was pleased to find small-batch flasks to use as an
unusual cocktail mixer back home.
From mid-May, when the humidity skyrockets, sunbrella-toting locals forgo the
charm of the shopping alleys to duck from one mammoth air-conditioned department
store to the next. While Western designers are well represented here, most of
the better malls feature local producers as well; I happily skip past racks of
Calvin Klein jeans for hometown hoodies by T-shirt designer ¡¦0416.
At the Xinyi District¡¦s not-just-books flagship Eslite Bookstore, you can
meander through seven floors stocked with gorgeous tea sets, funky pillows,
hi-tech gadgets and unique stationery from Taipei-based craftspeople. Of course,
the books are notable, too: The stunning photographs in such regional tour books
as ¡§Taiwan Tribes Travel¡¨ by the local publisher Guide make them great souvenirs
even if you don¡¦t read Mandarin.
Department store food courts, meanwhile, offer some of Taipei¡¦s most delicious
and inexpensive bites: crave-worthy shaved ice topped with fresh fruit (tsua
bing), sizzling bibimbap (rice with vegetables), made-to-order sushi, fried
rice, barbecue and even the odd twist on Western food (cone-shaped pizza,
submarine sandwiches stuffed with sliced fruit). Staking out a table can be
stressful, but no one seems to mind my hungry hovering as I wait to pounce on a
seat.
Some malls boast fantastic sit-down eateries as well. The famous xiao long bao
(steamed soup dumplings) at venerable Shanghai-style chow house Din Tai Fung are
worth the long wait for a table on the basement level of the Fuxing District¡¦s
Pacific SOGO department store. Huge glass windows separate hungry patrons from
the dumplingistas in the kitchen, so you can watch them hand-rolling each
perfect little pouch.
Classic pork dumplings arrive screaming hot, and waiting for the morsels to cool
enough before sucking out the broth is a challenge. Despite the warnings on
every table about proper soup-dumpling technique, my tongue wags painfully after
the first bite. Once they¡¦re cool enough, though, the soft, salty snacks
disappear quickly.
Probably no comestible is as quintessentially Taiwanese as the xiaochi, or
¡§little eats,¡¨ found at Taipei City¡¦s night markets. Some of these nocturnal
haunts are meandering collections of stalls and food carts on streets lined with
clothing and record shops (such as the Times Square-like Ximending marketplace).
Others are more formal structures. The oldest of these is the covered food court
at Shilin, where diners have sampled the wares of more than 500 peddlers since
1910. Year-round, a crush of students, midnight noshers and hipsters fills the
pleasingly run-down enclosure lined with stalls hawking deep-fried milk, oyster
omelets and da chang bao xiao chang (literally ¡§big sausage wraps small sausage¡¨
¡X the little sausage is pork, stuffed inside a casing made from compressed
glutinous rice).
I brace myself for another culinary rite of passage: trying chou doufu (¡§stinky
tofu¡¨), fermented blocks of spongy bean curd often served deep-fried and topped
with pickled vegetables and a gooey, bittersweet sauce. The snack¡¦s stench
varies from vendor to vendor, but its bark can mercifully be worse than the
first bite. Pleasantly chewy, it has a slightly sour flavor with a pungent,
mustardlike kick.
In daylight, Taipei has a run-down quality that no one would blame you for
describing as dingy. Summer¡¦s extreme humidity leaves tracks of mold on many
facades. The modern, glass-fronted buildings surrounding the massive skyscraper
Taipei 101 in the Xinyi District suggest a shift toward cleaner, starker
development, but a trip to older parts of the city reveals hidden corners
untouched by modernity.
The oldest section, Wanhua, with its winding corridors and quiet decay, offers a
glimpse of the city¡¦s bygone days. At its bustling heart is the busy Longshan
Temple. I bump past a flurry of tourists, worshipers and monks selling prayer
beads outside the gates to reach the controlled chaos within, where hundreds of
faithful light incense and present offerings at myriad shrines to Buddha and
other deities.
Students in starched uniforms are a common sight here, coming to plead for high
marks on exams and good news at the end of the school term. Other visitors leave
gifts of remembrance or tokens meant to assist the unlucky in love.
In the temple¡¦s shadow is the claustrophobic artery known as Herb Alley, a hub
for Chinese-medicine vendors. Pushing past loosely bundled dried roots and dried
shark fins dangling from hooks, I peruse open bags of exotic dried mushrooms,
fragrant rose petals and pungent tangles of ginger and ginseng.
A short walk from Herb Alley is the city¡¦s wholesale fabric district. At its
nucleus stands a crumbling two-story building crammed with textile merchants
advertising silks, satins and variations on the most popular local pattern: a
vibrantly colored background splayed with peonies or other bright flowers, often
referred to simply as ¡§floral cloth.¡¨ After bargaining with a vendor selling the
stuff sewn into pillowcases, I snatch it up elsewhere by the yard to use as
eye-catching gift wrap.
Interested in more time travel, I take a leisurely day trip to the lush
tea-growing region of Maokong, which involves a breathtaking if vertigo-inducing
sky-gondola ride. The mountain¡¦s former fame as an oolong-producing region has
faded, but the gondola¡¦s slow, 25-minute climb gives you an incredible
bird¡¦s-eye view of tiny backyard vegetable gardens and temples snuggled in the
dense foliage below.
Once in hilly Maokong, I have some serious hiking to do before reaching the
strip of Zhinan, the main road flanked by teahouses. I settle on a teahouse high
atop a ledge for the fabled tea ceremony: a way of systematically brewing and
re-brewing the leaves to draw out their flavor.
There¡¦s often a little wistful local mysticism offered while the oolong unfurls
in its clay pot. ¡§I grew up here, and moved to the city as a young man,¡¨ the tea
merchant says quietly as he pours bitter green liquid into my cup. ¡§It gets so
dark here at night, some people are afraid. But I missed this place, and I came
back. I¡¦m not afraid of the mountain. It is my home; I am from here.¡¨
Just like the steaming cup of tea before me, he is very proudly made in Taiwan.
Meister is a New York-based writer, coffee professional and author of the blog
the Nervous Cook (www.thenervouscook.com).
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