The Daily Courier

Eating your way through terrific Taipei

From street food to casual dumplings to gourmet dining, the bustling capital of Taiwan has it all

- By STEVE MACNAULL

Pilgrimage-worthy dumplings, hot-as-hell devil chicken, stinky tofu, elegant Peking duck, lobster in yellow sauce, oyster omelette, fish eggs fried rice, stir-fried cuttlefish, barbecued pork and cool mango ice.

Even with just 72-hours in Taipei, my wife and I manage to devour it all in a high-brow-lowbrow culinary romp through the city.

Getting to the buzzy Taiwanese capital to dig into all these Asian delicacies is so much easier now, with Air Canada’s new non-stop flights between Vancouver and Taipei on the fast-and-comfortabl­e Dreamliner 787-9.

Anxious to get to Taipei and its cuisine, we book the inaugural Vancouver-Taipei jaunt on June 8. There’s a big party at the gate to send us off with Taiwanese folk dancers, and, of course, a taste of the island’s foods, from chicken bites and pepper cakes to pineapple cake and bubble tea.

Once in Taipei, our first stop has to be the dumpling emporium Din Tai Fung.

After all, The New York Times named the humble Din Tai Fung one of 10 restaurant­s around the world that are pilgrimage-worthy in a 1993 article.

Hungry travellers did indeed pilgrimage, and Din Tai Fung has rode the popularity, growing from a single location to 136 outposts, mostly in Asia, but some in Australia and the U.S. as well.

We hone in on the chain’s flagship 365-seat location at the base of Taipei 101, the 101-storey office building which used to be the world’s tallest building.

We’d been told to arrive early for lunch, otherwise we’d have to wait an hour for a table.

So we’re there at 11:20 a.m., with bells on, and only have to wait 10 minutes.

At the centre of the vast eatery is the glassed-in kitchen where dozens of white-clad chefs are doing all the measuring, rolling, stuffing and steaming needed to churn out 15,000 dumplings a day.

We’d also been told to order the signature xiaolongba­o dumplings, which are made precisely with five grams of dough folded around a 16gram filling of minced spiced pork and pinched closed with exactly 18 tiny folds.

When steamed, such exactitude results in a perfect little thin and delicate dumpling.

It tastes simply divine when dipped in equal parts soy sauce, rice wine vinegar and shredded ginger and washed down with some frosty Gold Medal Taiwan beer.

Since we’re already there, after lunch we zoom up to the 89th floor observator­y of bamboo-shaped Taipei 101 for the dizzying views of the sprawling city, Keelung River and leafy Elephant Mountain.

When Saturday rolls around, the in thing to do for dinner in Taipei is arrive hungry at the Shilin Night Market for an evening of street food and shopping.

With 539 food stalls, small shops and restaurant­s crammed into alleyways attracting a crowd that can only be assembled in Asia, this market is a spectacle of humanity, neon and odoriferou­s cooking.

The devil chicken sounds dangerous, but cook Jason assures us it’s delicious for Caucasians, too, if ordered mild.

We order it so, and it is indeed delicious, until even-the-mild, hotas-hell spice kicks in and turns our lips into rings of fire.

 ?? STEVE MACNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend ?? A small army of chefs makes about 15,000 dumplings a day at the flagship Din Tai Fung restaurant.
STEVE MACNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend A small army of chefs makes about 15,000 dumplings a day at the flagship Din Tai Fung restaurant.

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