Taiwanese_cuisine Taiwanese_cuisine

Taiwanese cuisine - Definition and Overview

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the series:
Cuisine of China
Eight Great Traditions
Shandong cuisine
Szechuan cuisine
Cantonese cuisine
Fujian cuisine
Jiangsu cuisine
Zhejiang cuisine
Hunan cuisine
Anhui cuisine
Others
Huaiyang cuisine
Yunnan cuisine
Mandarin cuisine
Shanghai cuisine
Taiwanese cuisine
Hakka cuisine
Chiuchow cuisine
Chinese Buddhist cuisine
Chinese Islamic cuisine
American Chinese cuisine
Hong Kong-style western cuisine
Macanese cuisine
Historical Chinese cuisine
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There are several cuisines in Taiwan. In addition to the following representative dishes from the Ho-lo ethnicity (see Taiwanese language), there are also aboriginal, Hakka, and local derivatives of Chinese cuisines (one famous example of the last is beef noodle soup = 牛肉麵 = niúròu miàn = gû-bah mī).

Contents

Ingredients and culture

Pork, rice, soy are very common ingredients. Beef is far less common, and some Taiwanese still refrain from eating it. This is in part due to a traditional reluctance to slaughtering precious cattle needed for agriculture, and an emotional attachment to such beasts of labour.

Famous dishes and snacks in each of the main cities

Dasi

Dasi dried tofu (大溪豆干), a snack

Taichung

Suncake is the most noted snack in Taichung.

Tainan

Pork feet (ti-kha-bah, 豬腳), tann-ah noodle (tàⁿ-á-mī, 台南擔仔麵), and shrimp cookies are among the most notable local dishes.

Exemplar dishes

Oyster omelet.
Enlarge
Oyster omelet.
  • jiû-hî keⁿ (Chinese: 魷魚羹, pinyin: yóu yú gēng) - thickened soup with cuttlefish wrapped in fish paste.
  • ô-á-chian (蚵仔煎, ké zǎi jiān) - omelet made with tiny oysters.
  • ô-á mī-sòaⁿ (蚵仔麵線, ké zǎi miàn xiàn), or oyster vermicelli
  • o· bí-ko (黑米糕, hēi mǐ gāo) - rice in blood curd.
  • ló·-bah-pn̄g (魯肉飯, lǔ ròu fàn) - a piece of fatty pork served on rice.
  • tōa-tn̂g pau sió-tn̂g (大腸包小腸), or small intestine in large intestine

Desserts

  • bubble tea, aka boba milk tea
  • sian-chháu (仙草, xiān cǎo) - Mesona procumbens Hemsley (also known as Grass Jelly)
  • ò-giô-peng (愛玉冰, ài yù bīng) - a gelatinous dessert made from the seeds of a fig-like fruit, probably Ficus pumila L. var. awkeotsang. Served on ice.
  • ō-á-peng (芋冰, yù bīng) - a dessert made of frozen taro root paste.

Many of the non-dessert dishes are usually considered snacks, not entrees; that is, they have a similar status to the Cantonese dim sum or the Spanish tapas. Such dishes are usually only slightly salted, with lots of vegetables along with the main meat (or seafood) item.

Vegetarian restaurants are commonplace with a wide variety of dishes.

There is a type of out-door Bar-BQ called khòng-iâu (焢窯). To barbecue in this manner, first build a hollow pyramid with up dirt clods. Next, burn some charcoal or wood inside until the internal temperature inside the pyramid is very high (the dirt clods should be glowing red). Finally, place some taros, yam, or chicken in cans in the pyramid and topple the pyramid over the food. Keep the items under the hot dirt clods until they are thoroughly cooked.

Taiwanese people also eat a lot of fruit, both local and imported.

Night market dishes

Taiwan's best-known snacks are present in the night markets. Stinky tofu (臭豆腐, chòu dòu fǔ) is one example; stinky tofu is intimidating at first but can be an acquired taste. In these markets, one can also find delicious fried and steamed meat-filled buns, oyster-filled omelets, refreshing fruit ices, and much more.

See also

External links


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