Nightmarket

People of the Night 12 (寧夏夜市)

This is my last post in my People of the Night series from Taipei's Ningxia Night Market (寧夏夜市) 

The night market is situated in Taipei's lovely Dadaocheng (大稻埕) district which is one of the oldest areas in the city and offers a nostalgic feeling when you visit as most of the buildings in the area have been around for a long, long time.  

The Ningxia Night Market is not a large night market, but it has some really great food and is probably most well-known for its Oyster Omelets (蚵仔煎) and other traditional Taiwanese dishes. The night market has been revitalized over the past few years and is really well organized and quality and sanitation are really important to all the vendors.

Admittedly, before starting this project, I had never been to this night market. Since then, I've made several visits over a period of a few weeks and quickly fell in love with this night market.

I have split up my shots from the night market into three posts. The first post will cover drinks and fruit and the two posts following it will be all about the food vendors.



1. Chicken Rolls (雞腿捲)

These Chicken Rolls are somewhat of a new thing at night markets around the country. It seems like they originated at Taichung's popular Fengjia University Nightmarket (逢甲夜市) and spread to night markets all over the country. Basically all it is is bits of chicken wrapped in chicken skin and then deep fried and grilled. When it's done, you can choose your flavour which includes curry, sour plum, wasabi, seaweed, lemon, spicy, cumin and pepper. Each roll is a little over a dollar and is a nice (unhealthy) snack. 

2. Small Intestine in Large Intestine (大腸包小腸)

In the history of all terrible translations, this might be one of the worst. Don't get me wrong, I love me some intestines. (Duck intestines and pork intestines being my favourite) But imagine a random fresh off the boat westerner walking through the night market and seeing this English. I can safely assume that 99.9% would avoid this stall. That's unfortunate because this special Taiwanese night market food isn't to be missed.

If you're not sure what it is, basically it's a sausage hot dog with the "bun" being replaced with a rice sausage (米腸) The vendor will slice a hole down the middle and and then place the sausage (small intestine) inside with some cilantro, soy bean paste and chili sauce.

The unfavourable translation comes from sausage and rice sausage being "香腸" (xiang chang) and "米腸" (mi chang) respectively while intestines are "腸" (chang) The term for sausage likely got its name in Taiwan because when it is linked together they look like intestines, so the meat version loosely translates as "smells good intestine" 

Anyway, this isn't a Mandarin lesson - in the shot you can see the vendors looking on because a popular TV show was filming at Ningxia that night and were making a lot of commotion at a neighbouring stall. The Rice Sausage is on the the right while the sausage is on the left. 

If you come to Taiwan, don't be fooled by the English and try this sausage-dog! 

3. Dongshan Ducks Head (東山鴨頭)

To tell the truth, these stalls have always somewhat scared me. I'm not actually sure why, because everything available I'd have no problem putting in my mouth. Maybe it's all the ducks heads staring at me, or maybe it's the dark color of all the food. I've yet to try this popular dish, but I will definitely eat it sometime. When you want to order you just take one of the red baskets and put what you want inside. When you're finished choosing you just hand it to the boss and he will fry it up for you and add some chili pepper if you want. The ducks heads and duck tongues are the most important ingredients to add to your mixture, but it can be a little expensive, so don't grab too much. There are two Dongshan Ducks Head vendors at Ningxia and they are both quite popular. I tried hard to get a shot of both of them, but one of them was so busy that it was almost impossible! 

4. Teppanyaki (鐵板燒)

When I graduated from university my parents came to the city for the ceremony and wanted to go out for a nice meal afterwards to celebrate. I tried for a week or two to get reservations at the hip new Teppanyaki place on the Halifax waterfront to no avail. Teppanyaki for us is an expensive affair with chefs cooking up amazing dishes in front of you. When I arrived in Taiwan, one of the first meals I had was at a cheap Teppanyaki restaurant and the thing that amazed me was how cheap it was. Teppanyaki is popular here in Taiwan and is one of the leftovers from the Japanese colonial period. Despite it being "Japanese" food, the people here have put a Taiwan touch on it and made it their own. This stall sells a large variety of dishes and the two guys running it are quite busy. Every meal is under three dollars and includes the main serving of meat, some fried up veggies and rice! 

5. The Goose Boss (鵝肉老闆) 

This vendor specializes in the art of the goose. You can buy bowls of goose noodles, coagulated goose blood, goose intestines, goose gizzard and goose meat. The goose is typically cooked in salty hot water and when it comes out it is tender, salty and oily. I always thought it was a bit weird that they boiled chicken, duck and goose here as I'm used to those types of birds being broiled at home - after trying all of them though, I can safely say that they taste a lot better than what my mom cooks at home (sorry mom) and I would gladly eat it for Thanksgiving Dinner! Goose is a popular dish in Taoyuan, the county where I live, so I much prefer to eat it at home than in the night market in Taipei. This vendor however was quite busy each time I went to Ningxia, so I'm sure he's quite popular. 

6. Fried Chicken (炸雞老闆)

My family was never really big on fried chicken while I was growing up as my mom preferred feeding us healthier foods. When I came to Taiwan fried chicken was like this "new thing" to me. The Taiwanese are masters at fried chicken and are always coming up with new ways of making it even more delicious which means I have to be careful to try to stay away from it and not eat too much. This vendor sells chicken wings, legs, hearts and bum all cooked in a special tofu milk batter. The tofu based batter makes the outside really thick, crispy and tasty. All you have to do is tell the vendor what kind of chicken you want and whether you want a large serving (大份) or a small serving (小份) I recommend a large serving of chicken bum! It's good for your skin (or so they say.)

7. BBQ Everything (烤很多有的沒的老闆) 

For some reason, I find that when vendors are standing there using their cellphones, it is probably an indication of how good their business is. The night I took this shot, they weren't busy, but the next time I went, some hot girls were running the show and there was a line. This vendor BBQs everything in a giant cauldron and there is a wide variety of things to buy ranging from chicken wings and bums to fish balls and dried tofu. Since this stuff is pre-cooked all you do is add it into a bowl and they will calculate the price and season it for you. If you check the gallery below (or click on the Flickr link) you will see another shot of the same stall on a busier night when the girls were on the job. 


That will do it for the Ningxia Night Market - I'm going to take a break for a few days and then I'll start posting from a Night Market here in Taoyuan called the Hsing-Ren Garden Night Market (興仁花園夜市.)

Hsing-Ren is a newly opened night market that is only open four days a week unlike most other night markets that are open every night. "Garden" Night Markets are the "new" thing here in Taiwan and are quite popular among younger crowds. A lot of the "new" food that has become popular over the past few years in Taiwan have been products of "garden" night markets like the Tainan Garden Night Market (台南花園夜市) or the Fu Da Garden Night Market (輔大花園夜市) as they attract younger crowds who are more willing to try new and more exotic foods.  

I have a few more night markets planned over the next few months including Keelung's Miaokou (廟口夜市), Taipei's Shilin (士林夜市) and Chung-Yuan University Night Market (中原夜市)

Below is a slideshow of all the shots I used from the Ningxia Night Market Series and a few more that didn't make the cut. If you'd like to view larger versions, click on the flickr link to be brought offsite to my flickr album. 


People of the Night 10 (寧夏夜市)

The next three posts in my People of the Night series are going to be from Taipei's Ningxia Night Market (寧夏夜市) 

The night market is situated in Taipei's lovely Dadaocheng (大稻埕) district which is one of the oldest areas in the city and offers a nostalgic feeling when you visit as most of the buildings in the area have been around for a long, long time.  

The Ningxia Night Market is not a large night market, but it has some really great food and is probably most well-known for its Oyster Omelets (蚵仔煎) and other traditional Taiwanese dishes. The night market has been revitalized over the past few years and is really well organized and quality and sanitation are really important to all the vendors.

Admittedly, before starting this project, I had never been to this night market. Since then, I've made several visits over a period of a few weeks and quickly fell in love with this night market.

I have split up my shots from the night market into three posts. The first post will cover drinks and fruit and the two posts following it will be all about the food vendors.

1. Traditional Tea Boss (蜜茶老闆)

As soon as you enter the Night Market you are confronted by this guy. He's selling traditional tea mixed with honey and herbs and sports a really cool hairstyle. This vendor has a great personality, is very animated and will likely be your first impression of the Ningxia Night Market. His fresh teas are all under a dollar US and come in a bag that he will tie up and put a straw inside.  

2. Herbal Tea and Bitter Tea Boss (青草茶,苦茶) 

Directly opposite the first tea vendor stands this boss. He is selling an Herbal Grass Tea (青草茶) which is an extremely refreshing on hot summer days. The other tea he sells, bitter tea (苦茶) I wouldn't recommend to my worst enemy. Bitter tea isn't the easiest to drink, and I think you probably have to be over the age of 95 to really enjoy it. Despite the flavour, bitter tea is great for your body and really healthy. Coincidentally on some of Taiwan's popular TV shows, if they play a game and someone loses, the punishment is to drink bitter tea. When I took this shot the vendor noticed me automatically and started to talk, so I bought an Herbal Grass Tea from him. He reached into his stall, grabbed a large bottle and poured some in a bag and tied it up and I was on my way back to the MRT station.  

3. Coconut Milk / Sugarcane Juice (椰子乳/甘蔗汁) 

This guy has an interesting stall. He's got a bunch of coconuts laying around as well as several long sugarcane sticks. The coconuts aren't really that big, but sugarcane can be over two meters long which means this stall requires a bit of space. In winter, the sugar cane is often cooked before they extract the juice for a warm version of the drink. Sugarcane juice is sweet and healthy and if you have a cough it is said to be great for helping your throat. The coconut milk is freshly extracted when you order it and if you're into that kind of thing, I guess it's quite tasty (I'm not a fan of coconut) both of these fresh juices are cheap and are a lot healthier than sugary drinks you'll find elsewhere. 

4. "Wow! Frogs eggs!" (青蛙老闆) 

Frogs eggs. Sound appetizing? No, I'm joking. This is a popular stall that you'll find at night markets throughout the country. They sells various kinds of drinks using some special tapioca balls that look like tadpole eggs. There are mixed drinks with milk, lemon, mung beans (綠豆) and Aiyu jelly (愛玉) all with his special tadpole egg-looking tapioca balls. Quite a few of my friends swear by these stands when they're buying drinks at the nightmarket, especially when they want a drink with fresh milk. I'm a big fan of Aiyu Jelly which comes from Alishan (阿里山) in central Taiwan, so I don't mind stopping by this kind of stand in the summer for some Aiyu Jelly with Lemon (愛玉加檸檬)

 

5. Fresh Fruit (現切新鮮水果) 

This stall sells professionally cut, individually bagged portions of fresh fruit. If you are a tourist in Taiwan you will have missed out if you haven't had any of Taiwan's amazing fruit! This particular stall is selling various kinds of Guava, bellfruit, melons, pineapple, etc. Whatever you want costs 50NT which is a little over a dollar US. If you buy fruit from this vendor, he will ask if you want to add some sour plum powder to the fruit. I'm not really a big fan of sour plum, or adding sugar to fruit, but Taiwanese people really love to add it to their fruit. 

6. Herbal Grass Shaved Ice (仙草冰) 

This vendor is selling a healthy kind of herbal grass jelly mixed with fresh fruit and shaved ice. As far as desserts go, especially in the summer time, this one is one of the healthiest and most refreshing to eat. The base bowl of shaved ice is inexpensive and only becomes more expensive as you add fresh fruit. The vendor wasn't particularly busy the day that I took this shot, and even though my purpose is to take portraits, I thought it was best to get a wider angle of her stall as a close up from the front wouldn't have given me much of a view of her face due to the way her stall was set up. 

 

7. Fresh Fruit for Tourists (現切水果) 

This vendor is selling fresh fruit just like the guy above, but her stall seems to be more geared towards attracting business from tourists. Boxes of fruit from this stall are relatively cheap at 35NT each, and three boxes for 100NT. She sells guava, papaya, pineapple,  bellfruit, cantaloupe, mango, pear and persimmon.

The reason I think she's trying to attract tourists is because she is selling custard apples (釋迦) a fruit from south eastern Taiwan. While her custard apples are quite beautiful, one for 100NT is kind of expensive and I can't see a Taiwanese person paying that much for one, especially considering that most Taiwanese people would shop for their fruit at a fruit store or in a traditional market. 

If you don't know what a custard Apple is, they're a really weird fruit that to me taste like a banana smoothy. In Taiwan they are called "Shijia" because they look like the Buddha's hairstyle. 


I'll be back in a few days with parts two and three of Ningxia Night Market which will focus on food! 

Xinzhuang Temple Street (新莊廟街)

A few weeks ago a fellow long-term Canadian expat author, blogger and a hiking friend of mine, Nick Kembel wrote a blog about Xinzhuang (新莊), the district of New Taipei City (新北市) that he has called home for the past six years and it interested me quite a bit. 

While I’ve driven through Xinzhuang a few times, I haven’t actually stopped to visit and to tell the truth I had never actually heard of the cultural attractions that Nick’s blog introduced. Being a lover of shooting Taiwanese temples and architecture I decided that a visit to Xinzhuang’s Temple Street (新莊廟街) was something I had to put high priority on when I had some free time. 

Ciyou Temple (慈祐宮)

I found time to visit last weekend and I decided that after taking care of some other stuff in Taipei, I would try to arrive around late afternoon and explore some of the temples and the back alleys before I lost sunlight. After which I would move on to the new New Moon Pedestrian Bridge (新月橋) and then make my way back to the Temple Street to experience the night market culture of the area as Nick's blog had suggested. 

A Taiwanese child making the most of her Temple Visit 

Getting there was pretty easy, it was about a 20 minute MRT ride from Taipei Main Station (台北車站) with a transfer at Minquan West Road Station (民權西路站) and from the #2 exit you make a right turn and walk about a hundred meters and you’re more or less at the entrance. 

Guangfu Temple (廣福廟)

The thing that initially surprised me about Temple Street (and something that I feel a bit ashamed that I didn’t know already) is that the street has three temples which one of which has been classified as a level two and the other two level three national historic sites in Taiwan. Becoming a national historic site isn’t an easy task, and the fact that there are three temples in such a small area that have all attained these statuses goes to show that Xinzhuang had a very vibrant and economically sound history as the temples were all built several hundred years ago during various eras of colonial rule of Taiwan.  

A Taiwanese man praying at an altar in Ciyou Temple (慈祐宮)

Apart from shooting inside the temples, I found that the street and the alleys around it were all great for street photography. If you’re a photographer in Taiwan I highly recommend an afternoon exploring the alleys in the area as there tends to be a lot going on subject-wise. There’s a lot of see and there is ample opportunity for street work. I would recommend arriving earlier in the day though, because in Taiwan older people usually go about their business in the mornings and leave the night markets to the younger generation. 

An elderly Taiwanese women in a back alley near Temple Street 

The newly opened New Moon Bridge (新月橋) is quite beautiful, its in the shape of a crescent moon and if you walk along it at night there are some buskers performing magic tricks or music for the people who are crossing the bridge to enjoy. At about 7:00pm the bridge will light up and at this time you’ll see a lot of photographers lined up with their tripods waiting for the light show. On the way back I walked across the a glass-floor section of the bridge where you could see the river below you. It was actually a bit scary - even for someone who isn’t afraid of heights like myself. It wasn't that I didn't trust Taiwanese engineering, I just worried about the safety of my camera. 

Xinzhuang's New Moon Pedestrian Bridge (新月橋) connecting Xinzhuang to Banqiao

On the way back from the bridge I noticed that things had started to pick up and there were a lot more people arriving at Temple Street for the night market. The night market here I felt was a bit ordinary as far as night markets go. Seasoned veterans in Taiwan typically know that each night market has its special dishes and things to see - the Temple Street Night Market however doesn’t really have any culinary specialties - its all very typical street food that you’ll find at every other night market in Taiwan. I didn’t eat anything while I was there partly because I was starting to come down with a bit of the flu and my stomach wasn’t feel very good and because of the current problems with oil and food safety in Taiwan. 

Temple Street Night Market

After making my way back to the night market, I walked the entire street again and when I was done I made my way back to the MRT through a back alley avoiding the crowds and hopped on the train back towards Taipei City. 

I really enjoyed visiting Temple Street and I plan on making my way back in the future. There is more for me to see, and the possibilities for street photography earlier in the day are a lot more interesting to me than the night market (and the bridge.) 

The area is much busier at night where you can enjoy lots of street food

If you find yourself looking for something to do on the weekend in Taipei and you want to avoid the throngs of Chinese tourists at all the other tourist spots, I highly recommend you make Xinzhuang’s Temple Street a priority to visit. Its not like some of the other very touristy and not so authentic ’old streets’ in Taiwan like Sanxia Old Street (三峽老街) or Yingge’s Pottery Street (鶯歌老街) yet you’ll be pleasantly surprised at the amount of history you’re able to experience while visiting this small area of Xinzhuang, an area of Taipei city that has only recently become extremely accessible due to the expansion of the MRT system. 


Gallery