Luxe Beat Magazine OCTOBER 2015 | Page 36

their succulent soup dumplings accompanied by assorted veggies, pot stickers, salads and eightflavored sticky rice. At the popular Taipei 101 basement location you can watch the cooks masterfully folding whisper-thin wrappers around the juicy pork meatballs to create these quality XiaoLongBao, which explains the one to two hour wait. Inside tip: Put your name in, get your number, and then cross the hall to the fried chicken stand for some appetizers. Their flavorful fried popcorn chicken niblets, liberally sprinkled with salt, pepper and basil, kick Colonel Sanders butt! Best oasis of calm Din Tai Fung’s XiaoLongBao Tea snacks at Wistaria Tea House the yin/yang of the crunchy exterior and silken inside and sweet and sour flavor profile can be highly addictive. Stinky tofu can be found at most any night market stand or you can try over 20 different vegan varieties at Jiaziyuan Restaurant in New Taipei City. Insider tip: There’s almost nothing worse than stinky tofu breath. One helpful breath freshener, “Watering KissMint” chewing gum, can be bought at any of Taiwan’s 5,000+, 7-Eleven stores. These convenience stores sell everything Pick your own fresh seafood at Addiction Aquatic Development The best oyster omelet maker from hot dinner and concert tickets, to a bottle of Johnny Walker, and they’ll even mail your packages. Best work of art veggie alternative Vegetarians will have an easy time in Taiwan with its 6,000 vegetarianfriendly restaurants. But even the most ardent meat eater will be tempted to turn veg-head after trying the vegetarian Kaiseki haute cuisine at the elegant Yu Shan Ge. No matter which set menu you order you are in for a creative culinary experience that is seldom seen in vegetarian dining. The artistically presented meaty hedgehog mushroom was as satisfying as any Wagyu steak, and the stylized platter of cold appetizers had some sort of pink agar that I would have sworn was cured salmon. Plates were artistically garnished with living plants, mini-rock gardens or candles nestled inside cutout oranges. Worst kept secret: XiaoLongBao Shilin Night Market 36 Din Tai Fung’s renown culinary empire (two of its Hong Kong stores have been awarded a Michelin Star) got off to a slow start as a cooking oil shop in Taiwan in 1958. When sales began to dwindle owner Yang Bingy and his wife started selling XiaoLongBao, steamed soup dumplings on the side and the rest is history. Now no trip to Taipei is complete without slurping down Wistaria Tea House is a traditional wooden tea house that was originally a Japanese naval dormitory built in 1920. It was designated a historic monument by the Taipei government in 1997. Opt for one of the serene tatami rooms to experience the ultimate Taiwanese tea ceremony. Wistaria uses water (the most important ingredient in making tea) from the Wu Lai Mountain Spring, which is poured into a glass pot and heated on a kerosene boiler. They offer a wide variety quality teas (try their special Pu’ehr tea from Yunnan, China) with wonderfully poetic names, accompanied by sweet and savory snacks. Freshest seafood meal that lives up to its name Addiction Aquatic Development is made up of a cluster of seafood eateries located next to the Taipei Fish Market serving pick-your-ownfrom-the-happily-swimming-in-thetank-fresh fish, scallops, geoducks, prawns, abalone and king crab, etc. Pay for your selection and then they will either run it over to one of the restaurants where they will cook it to your specifications or you can bring it home to cook yourself. Visitors can join the crowds at the supermarket area which is stocked with shelves of pre-packaged, fresh sushi, sashimi, salads and side dishes, as well as a nice selection of wine and beer. Then scurry outside to nab yourself a spot at one of the standing only tables. For the ultimate hunter/gatherer types you can head to Shillin Night Market, where you can rent baby fishing poles to catch your own shrimp, not as easy as you would think! Afterwards, they will grill your catch on a tiny hibachi at the back of the stand.