Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Yong Kang Street Taipei

Yong Kang Street Taipei is home to the original Din Tai Fung, a world renowned restaurant that serves the famous Siew Loong Pau or Xiao Long Bao @ Soup Dumplings. Other than Din Tai Fung, Yong Kang Street is also famous for its beef noodles and mango dessert. However, there are plenty of cafes and eateries around Yong Kang street and little boutiques that sell clothing and souvenirs. It is a "happening" place to visit. 
Taipei, Taiwan








Dragon beard veggie
Chinese sausage
Fried rice

Interesting to see the main person handling the prawn noodles was seated right in front of the shop.

Mango dessert crowd
Beef noodles crowd




Lemon tart
I stood and watch. Amazed. Wished my country would put this good habit to practice. 2 trucks would drive along the road with music blaring away. The music is to inform all shopkeepers that they are here and to get their rubbish together. I saw shopkeepers walking out with their rubbish; all well-separated and tied properly in bags. They would queue up to throw their rubbish in one truck and rubbish for recycling into another truck. Such discipline. No smells. No dirty water dripping from the rubbish trucks. In fact, I have never seen such clean rubbish trucks in my life!
Enjoying the fireplace


Mango dessert

Thursday, January 10, 2019

National Palace Museum


Shilin District, Taipei, Taiwan
This is the National Palace Museum located in the Shilin District in Taipei. Carrying over 700,000 treasures kept in the Imperial Palace in Beijing, China. These treasures were owned by generations of Emperors who rules the Forbidden City back then. There are thousands of years old of Chinese art here, from the Shang to the Qing Dynasties, not to mention, ritual bronzes, ceramics, jade, lacquerware, enamelware, carvings,embroidery, scrolls, calligraphy, and archival documents. All these were evacuated from the Forbidden City to Taiwan in 1948 amidst the chaos of the Chinese Civil War, in 20 000 crates!

This museum was founded in 1965; its design followed the Northern Chinese Palace. We wanted so much to see the world famous Jade Cabbage statue and "Tung Poh Roe" (layered pork cooked in soy sauce) statue; unfortunately, both of them had traveled to another exhibition! Nevertheless, by the time we finally made it to the 3rd floor, I did not want to see another piece of jade for the next 3 months!!! The collection was just amazingly immense.












We were lucky that entrance was free on New Year's Day. However after covering 3 floors, I felt like I had walked a marathon.




Ohhh...the OCD in me played up! At first I said to Hubs, okay let's go through room by room, in order. Then we went to the right wing and found that it was arranged in either even numbers or odd numbers. I was furious. How could one go from Room 101 to 103 and so on? It did not make sense! Arrrgggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!
 Old books


I learnt a new term. Kerchief-box editions. It means they are palm-sized books or miniature books fit into a box for ease of carrying them around or for storage. Just imagine how small the Chinese calligraphy were.
 Chinese paintings in books
 There were flashcards to teach young children to read.



 Do you see BORNEO???


 The longest scroll ever
 Museum cafe

 Tried Bubble Latte
 Chicken spaghetti
 Rice cakes pork burger

 THIS, my dear friends, is a CHEAT SHEET for an examination!!!




 A study

I loved going through all these characters and noticed how each of them were first written. Such a difference, then and now.


 That's my name. "Yoke"



National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan
PIXIU. A Chinese mythical hybrid creature and a powerful protector of the practitioners of Feng Shui. Pixiu is an earth and sea variation. It has a huge appetite for only gold, silver and jewels; therefore, it is an auspicious creature for wealth. It has a powerful head of a dragon and a body of a lion.

Myth: Pixiu once defecated on the floor of the Heavens. So the Jade Emperor spanked it so hard that its rectum was permanently sealed. Therefore, its diet was restricted to only gold, silver and jewels, but could not expel them. That's why it is a symbol of wealth until today.


 Royal stamps


An old time steamer
Water vessel
National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan
Wine vessel
Steamer
Wine vessel
Wine vessel





Jade divider

Lapis Lazuli
Jade




Agarwood bracelets
Agarwood necklace
Agarwood necklace

Paintings of birds
We had a great morning at the Palace Museum. Really, the treasures were beautiful and reading the history was just astonishing. It was a rainy day that day so whenever the rain stopped, we would run out to take a picture in the open and then run back in. Took us a few runs to get some decent outdoor pictures with the museum!