February 9, 2010 2

Da Shan Wu Jia 大山無價 (Taipei: Xindian)

//// By in 10: Taipei, Favorite Food Entries

Finally down to the last entry of my eating report in Taipei, and it’s ending with a bang. Taipei has abundant of cheap good eats, but what about gourmet fine dining? While I was doing research on Taipei dining from blogs I read about this very special place called DaShan WuJia 大山無價. It’s a gourmet Taiwan/Japanese fusion restaurant located way up in the hills on the south side of Taipei.

大山無價

大山無價DaShan WuJia means the Priceless big mountain. It’s reservation only and the menu is prix fix: 10 courses for 1100 NT which is about US $ 34. I called to make the reservation about 2 days ahead. From central Taipei, we had to take the MTR to the last stop toward south to the Xindian station and then ride taxi to go up to the mountain for about 15-20 minutes. The trip took about 45 mintues. The restaurant is inside a beautiful renovated old Japanese style house, surrounded by scenic mountains.

大山無價

The interior was absolutely gorgeous. It’s Japanese style with the tatami but also felt Chinese at the same time. We got a table right by the window.

大山無價Dashan Wujia 4

amuse-bouche: Red wine jelly. Very good!

Dashan Wujia 5

Course no.1:
Peanut tofu with goji berry, pine nut, wasabi and Plum rice with ikura and shredded egg
Both were really good. I especially like the Plum rice cake.

Dashan Wujia 6

Course no. 2: Scallop Soup.
The broth was fantastic. Lots of depth, very light but flavorful at the same time. One of the strongest dishes of the set.

Dashan Wujia 8

Course No. 3: sashimi + salad .
The sashimi were prawn, salmon, tuna, squid and fish roe. There’re pieces of lilies in the salad which gave a subtle sweetness.

Dashan Wujia 9

intermezzo: fruit vingear

Dashan Wujia 10Dashan Wujia 11

Course No. 4:
Chicken and mushrooms in soy milk and Corn in salty soy milk

The fruit vinegar cooled me down a bit too much so I was glad these two dishes were hearty and warming.

Dashan Wujia 12

Course No. 5: Fried tofu in veggie puree

大山無價

Course No. 6: baked shrimp, fried yam and green beans, pumpkin and eggplane
The baked shrmip reminded me of district 9.

大山無價

intermezzo: fruit vingear

Course No. 7: Lotus flower tea.

Dashan Wujia 14

Course No. 8: Fried rice with mullet roe.
The orange thing on top is the mullet roe, which is considered a delicacy in Taiwan. It tasted a little bit like a cross between bacon and dried egg yolk. It’s very tasty.

Dashan Wujia 15
Dashan Wujia 16
Course No. 9: Lotus flower soup
I was actually a little bit disappointed that the final dish was a soup (especially right after drinking a lot of tea). But it was indeed very good. Healthy tasting but also very flavorful. There’re chicken, lotus root, lotus seed, Ginkgo nut and mushroom in the soup. I was warmed up and filled up by the end of it.

大山無價Dashan Wujia 17
Course No. 10: molasses and taro, fruit plate

It was not captured in the pictures but each course was beautifully presented and decorated with flowers. Beautiful place, beautiful plating, top notch cooking, DaShan WuJia is definitely a one of the kind place in Taipei. $34 per person was a great value and truly worths it. Just make sure you have at least 3 hours to spare because that’s how long our meal lasted. I saw on the map that the beautiful aboriginal hotspring town Wulai is actually quite near at where the restaurant is (perhaps 30-45 minutes bus ride away?). So it would be a good day trip to visit both.

Forget Din Tai fung, this is THE must go dining experience and the best hidden secret in Taipei.

Da Shan Wu Jia 大山無價
No. 62 Sec. 3, Beiyi Road, Xindian City, Taipei County.
+886 2 2217 8891

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February 8, 2010 5

Street food part 2

//// By in 10: Taipei

More street food!
Cart wheel cake
Cart wheel cakeCart wheel cake
This is called Cart Wheel cake, it was inspired from Japanese’s Imagawayaki which is round waffle with sweet red bean paste filling. Cart Wheel has similar waffle shell but has other types of fillings: custard and shredded turnip (the one with leaf on it). Both were very delicious!

Shilin Street Food 1Shilin Street Food 3

Not sure how to translate this in English, perhaps green onion teared pancake? It’s different from regular green onion pancake as the flour was constantly teared and pulled while it’s cooking. The texture was light and puffy. Very delicious! Highly recommended. They have other flavors too, like yam and sweet potato.

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February 5, 2010 2

Spot-Taipei film house: Cafe Lumiere + Le Ballon Rouge (Taipei: Zhongshan)

//// By in 10: Taipei, Favorite Food Entries

The Spot

I mentioned before that I really like the Zhongshan area a lot. Another big reason is Spot-Taipei film house. It is mainly a theatre that shows indie and foreign films, but it also has a gift shop that sell local design stuffs, a coffee shop and a bar on the 2nd floor. Located in the former American embassy, it was founded by Hou Hsiao Hsien and is now the center of film culture in Taipei. Jon and I love movies and are fans of Taiwan cinema (i.e. Edward Yang, Hou Hsiao Hsien, Tsai ming Liang, Ang Lee) so we instantly love this place! The gift shop sells DVD of these great filmmakers’ films (as well as a lot of foreign films) so we picked up a bunch that we couldn’t find here in the US.

Taipei spot
Cafe Lumiere 2cafe spot

Cafe Lumiere locates on the first floor. It’s also the name of a Hou Hsiao Hsien film from 2003. I like the ceiling to floor windows so you can see the surrounding garden. Though the chairs were a little uncomfortable, a bit too form over function.

Cafe Lumiere 3Cafe Lumiere

The coffee and cakes were good. In fact a lot better than many other “real cafes” in Taipei.  We went back several time, we particularly like the cheesecake.

The Spotle ballon rougeLe Ballon RougeLe Ballon Rouge 6
After all the hustle and bustle of the night market, we wanted to go some place that’s quiet for a drink. Le Ballon rouge, the bar on the 2nd floor is exactly what we wanted. The name Red Balloon (in English) is of course a reference to the classic French film by Albert Lamorisse, which Hou Hsiao Hsien made a tribute film to in 2006 (The Flight of the Red Balloon).

Le Ballon Rouge 5

They have an interesting drink list and they’re named after films.  A lot of the drink features absinthe. I got the Reflections (a Taiwanse film from 05), which is white wine + cassis (a blood-red, sweet, blackcurrant flavored liqueur). I like it a lot. Jon got straight up whiskey.

Both places are easily on my list of favorite places to hang out in Taipei.

Spot-Taipei film house:
Cafe Lumiere (Cafe)
Le Ballon Rouge (bar)

18, Sec. 2, Zhongshan N. Road, Taipei

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February 5, 2010 4

Shilin Night market (Taipei)

//// By in 10: Taipei, Travel

Shilin night market
Shilin night market Even though I had gotten a little tired of Taiwanese food at that point I still wanted to check out Shilin Night Market, the largest and most well known night market in Taipei.  It’s a short walking distance from the MTR station (though it’s not at the Shilin station…it’s 2 or 3 stops before it), there’re two sections to it. The first part is inside a marketplace. As you can see in the picture, the marketplace was completely dense with food stalls and signages. It’s a crazy visually overloaded place!

Shilin night market
Shilin night marketShilin Night Market 18

the 2nd part of the night market is the surrounding outdoor area. Just blocks and blocks of nonstop street food stalls and small shops selling cheap clothes and other junk. Some shops would set up stalls right in the middle of the street until the cops come.

Generally the food inside the marketplace seems to be better and many stalls have sitting area.

Shilin Night Market Food 2
Shilin Night Market Food 3Shilin Night Market Food 1
Sausages and Oyster omelet

Shilin Night Market Food 4Shilin Night Market Food 6

A popular stall of grill meat on sticks, we got the Pork blood cake (pork blood with rice).

Shilin Night Market Food 5

With all the bold flavors, fried and greasy food in the night market, fresh fruit juices are very essential. Places that sell fresh fruit juices were abundant, I noticed that Bitter melon juice (the white fruit with lumps) is very popular in Taiwan. We got one to try, it’s blended with honey so it’s not bitter at all. I like it a lot, it’s very cooling for sure.

Shilin Night Market Food 7Shilin Night Market Food

Lots of dessert stalls as well. Most of them are Taiwanese slush ice (pix on the left are the different toppings you can add) and mango ice. The pix on the right is Lemon aiyu jelly, one of my favorite Taiwanese drink.

There’re many many more food there, like fried chicken, stinky tofu, grill steak (yes there’re couple stalls sell grill steak!), oyster vermicelli…etc etc.  However the night market in the marketplace could get quite overwhelming as the food vendors were very aggressive. They would keep pestering you to buy their food and wouldn’t stop until you do. In fact it was kind of annoying that I prefer the outdoor part a little bit better.

Shilin Night market
Take the metro Danshui Line, exit Jiantan Station.

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February 4, 2010 Off

Green leaf Taiwanese cuisine 青葉餐廳 (Taipei: Zhongshan)

//// By in 10: Taipei

aobaaoba
It had been 5 days in Taipei and we realized we hadn’t gone to a nice proper traditional Taiwanese restaurant for dinner. So we decided to check out Green Leaf, a famous Taiwanese restaurant that’s been around for years.  For some reason the entire restaurant was filled with Japanese tourists and business men.

aoba

Looks like a burrito, this is 潤餅 Yuen bin, or Taiwanese spring roll, a Taiwanese specialty that was originated from Fujian. The skin of the roll is very thin but it’s not rice paper, the texture was a little bit like Tortilla but taste very different. The fillings were chopped carrot, bamboo shoot, soy bean, dry tofu, pork, squid, egg, shrimp and many other stuffs. Multiple flavors in a bite, there’s a subtle sweetness to it, I like this a lot.

aoba
Braised Pork in soy sauce
Delicious! The pork was very tender, the fatty part did not feel greasy.

aobaaoba

Jellyfish with cucumber and pan fried vegetables.

aoba

Salt and spice prawn
The prawn were well seasoned, not too salty.

All the dishes were refine tasting. The meal (+ beer) round up to about $40 for us which is reaonsable. There’re other fancy and pricey dishes (i.e. grilled mullet roe, crab) on the menu so this place could get pricey depend on what you get. I am curious now at their other branches in Taipei that’s call Aoba (Green leaf in Japanese) which suppose to have a more creative and “contemporary” menu.

Green Leaf 青葉餐廳
No. 10, Lane 105, ZhongShan North Road, Sec. 1 Taipei

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