Saturday, July 31, 2004

Ice Tea Conspiracy, English School and stuff...

Well its been a pretty busy week.

So far the bad news, I lost my 64mb memory card due to a hole in my knapsack :( I also lost my transit subway card, which still had $12 of money left on it, and dropped my digital camera in some really bad soup :(

Luckily, the camera started working a few hours later, as before the LCD screen just stayed blank. Unfortunately, I think the cable outlet is too dirty on the camera, so can no longer download pics off the camera. I will get a xD card reader to download pics off the camera in the future.
Now the good news, I got an english job, and it keeps me really busy, just teaching adults is not so tough, but takes a lot of confidence I think. I spent a lot of time training this week, and it kept me quite busy. I also taught about 2 days this week. Coupled with my quasi-mandarin lessons my week was pretty packed.

This week will be even more packed as I gotta go to the hospital for a health check and a host of other places. I ate yellow watermelon today, apparently in Taiwn, there is yellow watermelon, it looks and tastes just like the normal red variety, but its yellow....strange.

There is this weird Ice Tea conspiracy, where the 1.5L bottles are really cheap at certain grocery stores, but they ran out and than I had to by from the expensive ones. The conspiracy is the fact they all ran out at the same time and didn't refill it for a week, forcing ppl to buy the smaller size of 600mL. Its weird, the 1.5L bottles sell for like $1.20, but the 600mL ones sell for 80 cents, why would ppl buy the 600mL bottles?! I don't know how long the sale of Ice Tea will last, the 1.5L bottles have just recently dropped in price to $1.08, I'm gonna try stocking up, currently I bought 6, will try for more later. Ice tea is much cheaper than coke here, coke is about $1.50-$2 for a 2L bottle. I think the opposite of Canada, as Ice Tea in Canada really expensive.

I think the best meals here is breakfast, as Dambi and other meals for breakfast are fast, convenient , cheap and delicious. Unfortunately, the breakfast stores close by 12 so one really should wake up earlier :P . My pet peeve about street vendors is that some are really good, but they keep changing their location, so you cannot plan it out, like say gee I really want that, lemme go to that street corner and buy some because that truck/vendor stand may not be there that day which can be quite frustrating unlike the stores where you can be sure the food will be available that day.

Nothing much else to report, saw I-Robot, reminded me a lot of the other robot movie by Steven Spielberg. Although I haven't mentioned it, the bugs here are still the biggest issue with living in Taiwan, just absolutely gross, and they really are not afraid of humans whatsoever.

Saturday, July 24, 2004

Shrimp Massacre and more Chinese skule

Well...this week as pretty uneventful.  Fri. was my last day at YWCA, I had a farewell lunch.  The chinese classes are in full gear now, I attend everyday, as my attendance record is required for visa extension.  I may start writing future blogs in chinese so I can get practice :P, otherwise hard to motivate myself to learn, its hard because the language is spoken in reverse like Yoda in Starwars, but similar to Hindhi, instead of saying something like What do you want , you would say you want to eat what?  or instead of saying how much is a pen and 2 books, you would say one book, 2 pens how much is it?  So it can be sometimes somewhat confusing, as I have to think what I will say before I say it. I also don't feel like learning the strokes and how to read them, as I don't have quite the motivation to learn the writing system.  I have the language somewhat down, now I need to learn more of the vocabulary which is a trial and error process, the tone system makes it tough though to speak and understand.  Since many words are similar, but just spoken in a different tone, one must really listen carefully, and speak carefully to convey the correct tones, otherwise the wrong meaning might be inferred.

 I had a few interviews this week for teaching english, which went quite good I think.  They were not very long, seeing as how I have no actual teaching experience, so not much to talk about :P.

On thursday, my friend asked me to go to this pool place with fish tanks, I thought it was like a bar with nice pool tables and some fish tanks to watch, but actually, there are these giant pools, and the people just sit around it and "fish" for food.  No joke, its a restaurant, and the workers through shrimp in the pool, and people just sit around and catch shrimp and than have it cooked.  Since people can't do actual fishing since the water around Taipei too polluted, and most people don't have boats, this restaurant type is actually quite popular.

It was really quite sad though, the shrimp were literally being tortured before being eaten.  When they were caught, they would fling their arms and try to get away, but couldn't as they would be flung out of the water and dangled on the ground.  The people would than rip off their arms, and it must've been very painful, as even after the arms were ripped off and thrown off of the body, the arms would keep moving which was really really gross.  The shrimp were than thrown in a pile, still alive, albeit now missing their arms and legs.  They still had their attenaes and the rest of their body parts.  After about 2 hour, people had amassed a sizeable armada of shrimp, probably several families worth (20) or so and had them cooked.  When the shrimp came back after being cooked, their bodies were still mostly intact, I assume they were just deep-fried alive, which must have been extremely painful.  The people than just broke the shrimp with their fingers and sucked out their internal body parts, it was really gross watching them suck out the head, cause the shrimp eyes were still eerily looking forward.  I had unfortunately neglected to bring my camera....as a picture would probably be more appropriate...or perhaps inappropriate.  By the end of the "dinner" a.k.a massacre, shrimp body parts littered the table, discarded heads, torsos and antennas... really don't see how it was fun for anyone, but everyone else seemed to really be enjoying it.

When I played badminton on Monday, I found out the school has a swimming pool on the first floor, it is quite large.  The school must be quite rich to afford so many luxuries... the school is quite large, I will try to take pics of it tomorrow night when I go to play again. 

One thing I find strange here is that Ice Tea is cheaper than coke, which is good because I drink a lot of Ice tea.  Yesterday I drank almost 3 L....granted it was really hot though.  Lately, my computer has been crashing, as the cpu overheats, I may buy a bigger heatsink in September if I am still here...

 

Sunday, July 18, 2004

I went to Kaosching and Tinan and met the oracle.

Well I went to mandarin class again on Friday and met some more Canadians, now 5 Canadians in our class, and a genuine Indian from India who invited me to a vegetarian dinner at a yoga school he instructs on saturday.

Unfortunately, on Saturday I went to Kaosching and Tinan and was unable to attend the vege indian dinner. Tinan and Kaosching are cities on the otherside (southern end) of taiwan. Basically like going from Toronto to Ottawa, Kasoching is 4 hours from Taipei, and Tinan is 1 hour north of Kaosching (closer to Taipei). I left at 3 on the train for Tinan, but the train was soo ghetto, it cost me about $25 for the one way train trip, decent but the thing is they had no seats left. Unlike Canada, when a train is sold out, they still keep selling tickets and you just stand for the duration of the trip in the aisle!! no j/k, and this train was completely filled, defenitely a fire hazard. People were standing in the aisles, and between cars and on the floor outside the bathrooms, defenitely really ghetto.

The train food card did have a decent selection of food, and it was priced relatively decently, but going around the food cart when standing in the aisle was defenitely a hazard. I uploaded a picture of the aisles of the train, check out the picture update section. As the train made stops in various cities on the way to Tinan (my first destination) people got off and on, so I kept switching seats as they became available. I was pretty pissed at first, that I didn't get a seat reserved for me for the 3 hour train trip, even though I paid the same price as other passengers, and my friend told me that she didn't tell me before we boarded the train otherwise I wouldn't have gone with her....she was right, hahahaha.

I practiced my mandarin on the train, getting some odd stares from passengers, as what i thought was hard was naturally childs play for the natives. Imagine someone practicing english on the GO train...

In Tinan, I met the Oracle. Anyone seen the matrix? In the movie there is an Oracle who can see the future. Well my friend Alisa met up with her friends in Tinan and we all went to see the Oracle in Tinan, I couldn't take any pictures as she lived in a sacred budhist house. After performing some budhist rituals burning incense, each one of Alisa's friends as well as Alisa took turns talking to the Oracle about their problems. They wrote the problems on some paper and than after getting advice on the future outcomes, their paper was burned. Apparently this oracle is really good, they talked to the oracle about their job and carreer possibilities, whether to get married, change jobs or move somewhere else. After getting advice from the oracle, we left and went for dinner and dessert. Check out my online pics for pics of the train, city and dinner place. Tinan is really small and bascially like a rural city, even by Canadian standards it was pretty quiet, defenitely a big change from Taipei, most places were closed by 9. After dinner we took a train to Kaosching ($8) and got there at about 12 midnight. Alisa and I visited a nightmarket in that area, everyone else basically went home as they lived in Kaosching and went to sleep.

The night market in Kaosching was pretty big, but not as big or as good as the one at Shilin in Taipei I think. Koasching is pretty small as well, but it is the 2nd biggest city in Taiwan. There was even some talk of moving the capital there. The food in the nightmarket was not that good, but I took pics of it, so you can see it.

Around 1:30 a.m. we left the night market and took a bus back for Taipei which left at 2 a.m. and got to Taipei at 6 a.m. The bus was excellent, even had a stewardess that brought blankets and lemon biscuits and water or tea. Each seat in the bus had its own LCD t.v. and i could play Nintendo games (classics like Tank wars :) as well as other old skule games. Much better than the train I think, and the cost was the same as well $25 for the trip back to Taipei, cheaper if you consider from Kaosching to Taipei farther than Tainan to Taipei.

Well, the trip to Kaosching and Tinan was pretty fun, a lot fewer foreigners in Tainan and Kaosching, and the natives were not used to seeing foreigners so far south. I guess outside of Taipei, foreigners would only show up at english schools, as most international companies only keep offices in Taipei (the country's capital). I got back to Taipei at about 6:30 a.m., got some Dambi for breakfast and chilled at my friend's house until the afternoon. Got some lunch/dinner and practiced my chinese.

I went to a grocery store, and found that prices for most things there cost more than in Toronto. No wonder everyone eats out, it really is cheaper than eating at home.



Tomorrow should be busy, I have chinese class, than YWCA volunteering and badminton afterwards...

Wednesday, July 14, 2004

Mandarin School anyone?

Due to my visa expiring, I had to enrol in Mandarin school, they don't tell you this in Canada, but to extend the visa you need to go to chinese skule here. I found a really cheap one that basically exists just to extend foreigner's visas but they also teach you mandarin (they even have the word visa in their site name http://www.clivisa.com.tw/). I had my first class today, they went so fast, it was really quite a bit stressful actually because of the rapid pace they set.

July is really hot, especially in Taiwan. The temperature difference between the shade and the open air is huge, like at least 10 degrees, U can really feel it heating up your body. Its currently watermelon season so I have been drinking quite a bit of watermelon juice, its actually cheaper than water during this season. Speaking of water and drinks, in my previous documentary, I neglected to mention drinks are quite expensive. They cost a lot more than in Canada, about twice as much. I assume it is because there is not as much water here as in Canada, even Coke and other standard drinks costs more.

I will probably start touring more of Taiwan in later months, probably in September, really July and August too hot to be outside during the day.

Sunday, July 04, 2004

Haircut, the beach and more movies~!

Well yesterday I got a haircut and went to the beach, as well as hit up some restaurants yesterday and today. Please checkout da pics section for updates.

I got a haircut for $20 canadian, at this really beautiful hair salon, the place was really well done. This one person washed my hair, and the chair vibrates to soothe my back, while the person massages the neck and washes the hair. Afterwards, while I was waiting in my haircut chair for the cut, the previous girl brought me some hot tea and i had a flat screen t.v. (each person gets one :) with full cable, earphones and a remote control) to keep me occupied in my chair. When the stylist finally came, I got a few magazines where I could choose the haircut I wanted which was pretty neat. After the haitcut, I got another wash and my hairstlist than geled and blowdryed my hair, it was really professional. Today I got a text message from the haircut place asking if I enjoyed my haircut, and if not I can come in and get it fixed for free, VERY Impressed.

Last night I went to the beach, it was great. IT was in Sue-Shin, ok I have no idea what the name of the city is, but its about an hour west of Taipei by car and it was very beautiful. Quite rural, not crowded at all, just like being in the countryside in Canada. The sand and water was great, very warm, truly amazing. You could get completely wet and not feel cold at all, even the wind was warm, which was nice. Its like being in a tropical paradise, but than...Taiwan is in the tropics...

Today I went to some nice beautiful restaurants and slept in mostly, as I was quite tired from the beach last night.

I hope I get some good news tomorrow as I sure would love to start working la...
check da pics section for ...pics :P

p.s. I finally finished watching the Infernal Affairs Trilogy, rented all three from blockbuster, wow, great series, so sad but just like the godfather series, very interesting...

Thursday, July 01, 2004

Food and Eating in Taipei

I still have not been able to start working, so people have asked me how I can afford to still eat :) So I decided to outline in this entry how one can eat quite well on $10 canadian /day.

There are three kinds of food here, street vendor (about fast food quality in Canada) , Food Court (Higher -level food quality than in Canada, about same level as a restaurant in Canada), and than the restaurant where the food "should be" restaruant quality food as in Canada.

Varying price points:

1. Street Food ($1-$3) typically.

2. Food Court ($3-6) typically.

3. Restaurants ($5-10+) typically. +-> naturally can be much higher


Street Vendor food is sold in a bag and usually you get chop sticks or a stick to eat it with, or sometimes just the bag itself to use to eat the food with. Street Vendor food costs anywhere from $1-3 and can usually replace a complete meal, and is sold naturally from a "street vendor" which is usually not a permanent store, but perhaps the back of a truck or a "vendor on wheels". Unlike Canada, they don't need permits to work on a specific street, and as such even if you find a vendor whose food you really like, don't expect it to be there the next day, trust me it won't be, maybe a few blocks away, or on another street. A word of caution, these aren't exactly licensed establishments, so eat the food at your own risk, but usually these people know what they are doing, and since the food is quite fresh (cooked in front of you) and served hot its fairly safe to eat. When choosing between several food vendors (as is the case in a night market) choose the one with the longest line-up, there is a reason people are buying from a specific vendor, because they one offers better value and is tastier (although usually the food is sold for the same prices everywhere). Street food can be steamed buns/dumplings, boiled meat and vegetables served in a cup of soup, fried vegetables/meat or BBQ vegetables or meat. Except for the steamed buns/dumplings, one usually picks up a basket from the seller and chooses from a table an assortment of vegetables, tofus and meats. Once done, the basket is given to the vendor who proceeds to cut up the chosen items and than either boiled for the soup, fried for the fried variety or BBQed. Now a vendor only does one, he either boils the food and serves it in a cup, or BBQs or fries it and gives it in a bag. One vendor will not fry some stuff and BBQ others, as they usually "specialize", granted these are not chefs flown in directly from France. During the course of cooking the food, the vendor will apply some sort of sauce, mild/hot/satay etc. and than put the food in a bag/cup and serve it to you. Other items exist as well such as onion pancake, italian sausage, stinky tofu, where one does not get to choose what they want, and once again each vendor specializes , so the person selling the onion egg pancake does not sell the sausages, they sell only that one thing.

One establishment, which I am categorizing under the street vendor heading are the breakfast stores, I have rarely seen these places as they are closed by about 10 or 12 a.m. (since I wake up at 7 a.m. but meditate until 11 a.m. :P ). These stores open at about 5 a.m. and sell yummy eggs (Dambi) with cheese or bacon etc., egg sanwhiches, McMuffin clones, as well as soya milk or watermlon juice. These are small legit stores, but since they serve a very niche market and only do takeout (granted there will be some tables and chairs outside on the sidewalk), I feel they are similar to street vendors. One thing about Taiwan is they all do have breakfast, naturally its easy here since the breakfast here is incredibly convenient and tasty, along with these stores there are breakfast street vendors too.


Food Courts

Food courts in Taiwan are somewhat rare I think outside of Taipei and other major cities, since they are mostly located in the basement of major department stores. These food courts usually have a similar makeup to the North American one, but will be a bit cleaner and have some sort of visual aspect, Usually GIANT t.v.s for people to watch with ads of upcoming english and chinese movies. These t.v.s are really cool, they are actually completely circular, so the image is actually bent around a cylinder. The food in food courts is quite good, since quality as high as a restaurant, and the food is prepared fresh. There is a wide-array of choices, and the utensils and dishes served in are real (as in glass cups and dishes, real silverware etc. etc.) not the paper stuff one might be accustomed to seeing in N. America. One can even get hotpot, which is really cool, as you get this tray with a gas bunsen burner at the bottom burning away actually heating your food, and depending on what you order, might even get an authentic steam basket or pot. Naturally you don't take this stuff with you or throw it out, but leave it on the table and it gets recycled (washed). For about $3-6 the food is excellent. The standard price is about $4.25 to $6, but for vegetarian food its a bit cheaper. Once again I must add, the food in the food court is much better than what you would find in N. America, about the same quality as found in a restaurant. Food court does not necessarily mean fast food, and just like street vendor food, you will have to wait for them to cook your food, unless its pre-made (street vendors who sell only one specific dish) and even than you may have to wait.

Restaurants

There are varying levels of restaurants in Taipei. Some are plain gross, others are superb. The prices all vary as well, some places range for $5-10 dinner, and others can be $15/plate! One strange thing to note is that price may sometimes not be related to quality of the restaurant food or decor. So unfortunately, restaurant dining can be a trial and error experience, although one can naturally refer to online reviews or friends' recommendations. You can find just about any type of food in restaurants, Thai, Indian, French, Italian, American and naturally Chinese. I can't say much else about restaurants here, they are defenitely cheaper than in Canada but the service and quality is similar. An interesting item to note is that they are priced similarly to food courts, so perhaps that is a reason food court food needs to be so good otherwise one could just eat at a restaurant and be paying the same price for better ambience (although restaurants in Taiwan generally do not have the decor one would usually find in Canada).


One thing to note is whatever has been mentioned previously, is the price you pay, there is no added tax or tipping done, no 15% GST+PST or Tipping, if a restaurant has tipping, they will mention it on the menu that there is a 10% service charge and it automatically gets added to the bill. Almost everywhere you eat, no matter what price-point, you are almost guaranteed to enjoy the food here. Taiwan is quite famous for its food. When people first found out I was going, especially my Asian friends, they told me they were jealous for one reason mainly, the food. Taiwan really has some great food, even for vegetarians and its really a big part of their culture here.

Typical menu might be as follows:

Breakfast: Dambi egg pancake (80 cents) with drink ($1.50 total)

Lunch: Steamed Buns/dumplings (Chai Bow for the giant buns), 3 buns (40 cents each) $1.20

Dinner: Pasta at a restaurant ($5-6)

Bubble tea or juice during the day $1.

Total Price: $9.70

Check my picture section for picture of dambi, and picture of the vegetable buns, Pasta, bubble tea, or fried food etc.

Another possible day:

Breakfast: Dambi or perhaps a sandwhich and a drink ($1.50).

Lunch: BBQ vegetables and tofu. ($2)

Dinner: Vegetarian Buffet ($2.80)

Bubble tea or juice during the day $1.

Total Price: $7.30

Another possiblity

Skip Breakfast :) or Mango Ice ($2).

Lunch: Stinky Tofu from street vendor ($1-2)

Dinner: Veges and tofu in a cup $3.

Bubble tea or juice during the day $1.

Late night gourmet sandwhich from 7-11 $1.

Total Price: $8-9.

There are many different possiblities and combinations, and once you throw in the possiblity of visiting a night market where there is even MORE variety the permutations grow exponentially :P.

I will try to take photographs and post as many different foods as possible.