Saturday, September 17, 2011
Observations in Taipei, Taiwan
A couple of weeks ago I went to Taipei, Taiwan and had a chance to enjoy the city and the people while visiting our office. Posted a pic on facebook of a cool bookstore, but had a chance to go to a night market and really see the local action. and that led me to the discovery of ...
Stinky Tofu! when you are the city, and you want to truly experience a local custom, you must must must try this. The number of people who asked me to try it made me think this was a trick played on most visitors, but it is truly considered a delicacy, so if you want local flavor, then start achompin'. Given some of the other things I've seen eaten, this one didn't seem so bad.
More on "The Stink" in a sec ... first a comment on food at the night market. Mostly it resembles what you might get at a state fair or carnival in the US. Lots of fried and double-fried foods, bold colors, et al. Even though blue is not a food color that occurs in nature, it does occur at the aforementioned state fairs, carnivals and Taipei. Eat at your own risk, but it is pretty fun. I had a bottle of fresh squeezed sugar cane juice and no illness descended upon me. But do treat as a religious mantra "do not drink the tap water."
Back to Stinky Tofu - according to what I was told, given the amount of tofu produced in Taiwan, there are times when production surpasses consumption. I didn't realize this, but tofu can go bad. At this point, it normally gets discarded. However, where some people see waste and loss, one guy saw an opportunity. He took the risk to try deep frying the curdled curd and then serving it with a sauce on something like a piece of flat bread or on a stick (state-fair certified!). It had a distinctive wang, but a few adventurous folks took a nibble, liked it and a local culinary treat was born. To me, it had a flavor a little bit like blue cheese. So if you have the opportunity (and the stomach for it), give it a try. Bon appetit!
Sunday, September 4, 2011
5 Reasons to live in Shenzhen, China

Some thoughts after living in Shenzhen, China for a little over a month - walking the streets, taking the Metro and enjoying the overall vibe. Here are the 5, in no particular order:
Safety - It's easy to forget this is a city of about 17 million people ... I was out the other night as the University Games were ending and kids were riding back on the subways with their friends. I've trekked through many neighborhoods and it certainly feels safer than a number of places I've been in the US. On other note ... I've seen about four traffic accidents since I've been here. they've all been minor fender benders, mainly because people don't speed. There are tons of cars on the road, and they don't always (or often) follow the painted lines, but they keep the speed down and use their horn to let other drivers stay aware. It is pretty amazing in a city of this size.
- Food (and value for the price) - I can eat a well-balanced vegetarian lunch in Shenzhen for about $3.50 US. Four courses with a beverage (purple sweet potato juice - yummy!). If I want to go out for a nice Western-style dinner (for those nights when nothing but a burrito (or the Chinese version of it) will do) and have a beer, it will cost about $15 US. Compared to other places in China, Shenzhen is considered quite expensive, but it is still less than Hong Kong and the variety is nice. I can eat tapas, Indian, Thai, Italian, Mexican, as well as many varieties of regional Chinese cuisine.
- Hong Kong - just an hour away, by train or by ferry (and I recommend the ferry, even though it costs more). HK is perhaps the most exciting city I've been to in the world and has a great vibe - like Manhattan, NY on a perpetual endorphin drip. Shopping, dining, both high and low end right next to each other and a mish mash of cultures that might be unparalleled (although I haven't been to Singapore). Prices are expensive there, but just over the border you're back in a less expensive Shenzhen.
- Metro (subway) - new and modern with six lines (four of which just opened in June of 2011 for the University Games. You can go almost anywhere for one or two dollars US. On most lines its not too crowded, although I think there is a game played by the Shenzhenians in trying to see how many of them can fit into a metro car. I think the slogan of the game is "there's always room for one more." The same game seems to apply to elevators, as well, although there is a buzzer that sends an alert when the max is surpassed on the elevator, and then everyone seems to understand that one of the last people on gets off, one at a time, until the buzzing stops. Very orderly. No such limit applies to a subway car ... the game stops when the doors close and everything can become quite intimate.
- People - it's a young city with young people who are surprisingly friendly for a place this populated. It's not difficult to stop someone to ask for directions and there seems to be an enthusiasm for things West, so a lot of curiosity. Aside from the children staring at me because of my size, I've had people come up just to try out their English and so I regale them with the little Mandarin I know. If they want an even more hilarious experience, I try out a little Cantonese, as well. I talk like a two year old ... thank you, hello, good morning, puppy, coconut, coconut juice, correct, incorrect. Most of the time I point at things I know the word for and say it. I'd be cuter if I tottered on my legs and had pudgy little arms.
If you have a chance to travel here, I recommend it, especially if you can stay for a week or two.
Monday, August 22, 2011
Hong Kong!

Monday, August 15, 2011
Beijing - Day 1

As I sit in a Pizza Hut in Beijing, I weep for the future of the Chinese children. After a lunch in the outskirts of Beijing that was extraordinarily healthy with crisply cooked vegetables, sticky white rice and green tea, what China's youth is being introduced to (at least in the major metro areas) can do nothing but train their taste buds to want the things that are exactly contrary to good health and proper nutrition.
Having said that ... I never thought I'd see escargot on a Pizza Hut menu, or any number of other things. I ate a large garden vegetable pizza (green peppers, mushrooms, corn and pineapple), drank a red bean smoothie, a 7-Up, and then topped it all off with a slice of Green Tea ice cream cake (kind of like an Asian tiramisu). Yummo!
I chowed like a hound because it was my first chance to eat some serious calories in about three days and I tried to take advantage of it. My tour tomorrow ends late in the day, depending on Beijing traffic, so want to be sure I have Carbo-loaded. Today I found the challenge of a lifetime (for someone else, not me) as I visited The Great Wall. Words can't express how awesome it is. You have to see it and walk on it to believe it. It is a wonder of the ancient and modern world. It stretches about 6,000 miles and took over 1000 years to build. Designed to keep out the Mongol hordes (and other minorities) from the Han people, it is now serviced by a ski lift going up and a toboggan ride going down (think a luge on wheels going down a stainless steel track - really fun and not necessarily something you can do in a country with stricter safety laws).
I hiked (and it was a serious, sweat-inducing-wring-your-shirt-out-at-the-end climb) from tower 6 through tower 14 and saw beautiful lands. If I were to go back, I would have taken the lift to tower 16, walked over to tower 20 (which seemed to be the highest nearby) and then walked back to tower 6. However, this structure is awesome. I have a friend who hiked the Appalachian Trail in the US, which is something like 2,172 miles ... I have a new challenge for him. Our guide told us that Olivia Newton John hiked 220 kilometers of The Great Wall as a Climb for Cancer fundraiser in the mid-2000s. She hiked about 10 k a day and I thought, before going onto the wall, that it was not a bad achievement for someone a little older than me, but probably no big deal for someone younger. Holy Misunderestimation, Batman. I'd be lucky to make 10k the first day and I'd sure not make it hte second. If you ever have the chance to go to it, make the time - it is worth it. Also, go to the Mitianyu section and not the Badaling section (which is closer to Beijing). The Badaling section is the one that is most crowded and the pictures you take will not be as good. It's worth it to go about 50 miles out of town (although still in the pollution!) and enjoy a more relaxing time.
Tomorrow four more treats are lined up: Tienanmen Square, Forbidden City, Temple of Heaven and Summer Palace
Monday, August 8, 2011
Here comes the rain ...
#1. How much more I pay attention when I'm not in a familiar environment. Even this will change as I get used to my daily route from She Kou to the office, but for right now I notice buildings, colors, smells, sounds as a constant frame of reference. I know, for example, that in the morning when I smell garlic, I am about two blocks from the subway station. Happens every day in the same place. I also know that the highest number of people I've seen packed into an elevator (that I was also in) is sixteen. Fortunately, none of them weighed nearly as much as me or we would have been exploring floor -3 instead of going up.
#2. How much rain improves the smell of the city. We had gone a little more than a week without a good shower and the smells of thirteen million people were starting to get a little pronounced. But today I could smell flowers, trees, cologne/perfume, and even baked goods. (Which smell a lot better when not mixed with the smell of fermenting trashpiles.) Even the streets looked better with all of the dust cleared off. I think Shenzhen employs a huge number of people to go around with brooms to sweep up debris as I see them everywhere. They pick up leaves, spare bits of trash and wear uniforms. Even with all of these people, an hour of rain does quite a bit more effective work than this (probably) several hundred thousand people workforce.
Nature is powerful.
Off to one of our factories tomorrow and then heading to Beijing for the four-day weekend!
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Two weeks in ...
A slow start to a Sunday, but with some big plans. Laundry day! I had to saunter up to WalMart today to pick up some launcry detergent and some other items. I learned that one of the great things in living in the city and walkin geverywhere, is that it limits how much you purchase. You can only buy what you can carry and it may only seem like a short walk when you are going, but it can feel like an epic journey when returning, depending on how much stuff you are carrying. I've learned my limit ... I can successfully carry a medium-sized rice cooker, 5kg white rice, 4L water, 10-pack of toilet paper, small bag of snack-sized Snickers (luxury item) and two plastic containers for luncher. Doesn't seem like much, but I wasn awkward-lookin gmess by hte time I arrived back at my apartment.
Now that I'm back, equipped with Tidd, I've fired up the washer/dryer. It's a two-in-one unit and I had to estimate the amount of soap I should add, as the machine is smaller than our jumbo-sized unit at home. If I had to guess, I'd say I was a little generous as the front-load window is full of white suds. Might have to do an extra rinse cycle on this one.
No big plans for today ... will likely head down to a nearby restaurant district called Sea World and check it out. Very touristy and designed for expats, so not a place I'll frequent very much, but they do have a Dunkin Donuts! I'm actually dining on crackers and white rice for a couple of days to sooth an upset stomache I acquired a couple of days ago. I anticipate being back on full feed in a day or two, which will be good because I'm now down about ten pounds since arriving.
My workmates took me to a great vegetarian restaurant for lunch on Friday and that was a great treat. Mushrooms, tofu, chilli oil, rice and watermelon juide ... felt great after eating such healthy fair and I'm even getting better with chop sticks. No pieces went flying onto my clothes and I was even able to secure the most slippery edibles. I'm hoping to look at least like a ten year old with chopsticks by the time my assignment is done.
Tomorrow it is back to work, but it's a short week as we are required to be off on Thursday and Friday for the University Games that are taking place in Shenzhen. I haven't yet secured tickets, but I'm excited to have a four day weekend for more exploring!
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Coco Park, Shenzhen China



