Posts Tagged 'Beijing'



Food, glorious food (and tea, too). Part 11

Longjing, a green tea varietal

Longjing, a green tea varietal

Last week Craig and I took a “Tea Tasting Safari” tour of Maliandao Street with the culinary tour company Hias Gourmet. Maliandao, located in the south-west of the city, is an area that boasts nearly one thousand tea shops on a kilometer-long stretch of road. The area is now quite developed, with lots of well-established shops and even large mall-complexes with hundreds of tea shops each, but this was not so several years ago. Before concerted government development in 1996, the area used to draw farmers who came with enormous bags of loose teas and sold them on the open street. Now the area, which is right next to the Beijing West Railway Station, still draws farmers from around the country, but they instead are selling to the hundreds of tea shops that now line the street.

Our first stop on the tour was into one of the “tea malls” on Maliandao. Walking in to the building I was daunted, to say the least. Having grown up on Lipton and Celestial Seasonings, my knowledge of tea was pretty much confined to how to put a tea bag in hot water (and even that I often managed to foil, somehow), so the thought of hundreds of stores with even more varieties of loose leaf teas…well it made me thrilled to have a guide at my side, I’ll say that.

A quick background on the many varieties of tea: there are a total of seven tea varieties, which are distinguished by their methods of processing, and each of which have their own distinctive flavors. These are:

  • Green tea (lù chá 绿茶): Most common tea in China. The tea is unfermented and the leaves are pan-fried right after being picked. The leaves are also commonly used to make balls of flower tea.
  • White tea (bái chá 白茶): White tea is made exclusively in China. It is slightly fermented.
  • Red tea (hóng chá 红茶): Red tea is a fermented tea; it is what we in the West refer to as English black tea.
  • Yellow tea (huáng chá 黄茶): Another slightly fermented tea that goes through a process of “smothering” which turns the leaves from green to yellow.
  • Puer tea (pŭ’ĕr chá 普洱茶): Puer tea can be made from green, oolong, or black teas. It has a very strong, distinctive flavor which places the tea in its own category. The tea is fermented and unlike other teas ages well.
  • Oolong tea (wū lóng chá 乌龙茶): A partially fermented tea somewhere between green and black teas.
  • Black tea (hēi chá 黑茶): Chinese black tea is fully fermented. It should be distinguished from the English and Irish teas we commonly refer to as black, which in China are red teas.

Our first stop in the building was the Cha De Fang tea shop, where we tasted our first “hua cha”, or flower tea. You might notice that this isn’t in the list I just mentioned, which is of course a little confusing. The ball-like teas that expand in water to become beautiful flowers (photos below) are actually green tea; they are handmade by sewing green tea leaves around flower buds (so crazy!!). From Cha De Fang we moved on to various other tea shops, sampling their varieties and learning about various aspects of tea culture and methods of serving tea. Some of my favorites of the day, for flavor and also for name, were Love at First Sight (a flower tea) and Iron Goddess of Mercy (an oolong variety). We also tasted longjing, one of the most famous green tea varieties, and a three-year old “imperial grade” (higher quality, more finely shredded) Pu’er tea from the Yunnan province of China.

I have to say all of the teas we sampled were incredibly tasty and made me want to swear off Liptons forever. Going in to the tea shops I was daunted by the incredible variety on offer and wondered at how to choose from among the hundreds on-hand. My biggest lesson from our tour was that “quality” in tea is really a subjective thing — in fact buyers will almost always wait for you to taste the teas, see which ones you like best, and then price accordingly.

I would definitely recommend a trip to Maliandao to experience the incredible variety and deliciousness of teas that China has to offer. A couple of tips for prospective buyers:

  1. Ask to taste! Shop owners seemed happy to serve you tea, and you should really only buy something after you’ve tasted it. If it’s your first time with Chinese teas ask to taste a sampling — green, oolong, flower teas. You will leave happy.
  2. If you’re not sure on prices, ask to taste a low-end tea, and then ask to taste a high-end tea. If you taste the two ends of the spectrum you can see what suits you and hopefully be given a fair price for what you buy.
  3. Buy what you like — there is really no standard on quality. The five qualities for judging tea are: smell; color; shape of leaves; taste; aftertaste. But really, whatever is most delicious to you is the thing to buy.

The World of Chinese Warcraft

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In moving to Beijing’s Haidian district, we swapped California’s Silicon Valley for China’s own Silicon Alley. We live right next to Zhōngguāncūn, the city’s technology hub, and can see Microsoft, Google and Sun Microsystem buildings from our apartment. Lenovo’s global HQ is just up the street while AMD and Intel have side-by-side campuses around the corner. In the midst of all this are five technology bazaars where a geek with some hardnosed bargaining skills can haggle for anything computer related.

But in the basement of these mall-sized computer markets are huge playgrounds for video game nerds where hundreds of HDTVs have Wiis, Xboxes and PS3 dangling from them. Meanwhile, internet cafes full of PCs rent access to virtual worlds like World of Warcraft and EverQuest by the hour.

The Saturday afternoon I was there was particularly intriguing as two professional video game teams battled it out in front of an audience complete with streaming video to huge-screen TVs, bleachers and even commentators. Run by GTV.com.cn, the two teams of five each battled old-school style, in the world of WarCraft III’s Azeroth (pictured here).

The popularity of arcades and huge gaming halls is, like so many things in China, in part driven by harsh government regulation. Console video game systems (Nintenos, Xboxes and Playstations) have been officially banned since 2000. Meanwhile, PC games have to be approved by the State Press and Publication Administration. Games like World of Warcraft have been repeatedly denied approval and need to have “offensive” material removed before entering the immense and growing Chinese market. The government has also cracked down on unlicensed internet cafes, closing an estimated 15,000 “shàngwăng bā” last year.

Of course, like any good prohibition, these bans have simply made the business of video games all the more lucrative for the enterprising individual. The gray and black markets for video games, both real and pirated, have been flourishing. Console video game sales soared to $4.7 billion last year, up from $3.2 billion in 2007, according to a report by China Software Industry Association. Meanwhile, online gaming posted record sales in 2008 of $2.75 billion in 2008, up 61% over 2007, according to the research firm Niko Partners.

But the PRC will not sit idly by while its youth are sucked into virtual worlds. The government has been setting up internet addict clinics for youth who spend hours blasting foes online. “Led by Tao Ran, a military researcher who built his career by treating heroin addicts, the clinic uses a tough-love approach that includes counseling, military discipline, drugs, hypnosis and mild electric shocks.”

These draconian methods have not deterred gamers, who number nearly 60 million. And the number is growing quicker here than nearly anywhere else in the world, likely surpassing the number of US gamers this year, to the notice of game makers. Giant billboards for World of Warcraft soar above busy Beijing streets while WoW has even earned a spot in my electronic Mandarin dictionary – 魔獸世界 or “Móshòushìjiè.”

However, since this past weekend, Chinese WoWers have been without their fix as the makers of the game are sloppily transitioning from one licensing company to another to host their Chinese operations. When the lights in Azeroth come back on at the end of the month we’ll see how many Chinese paladins return to smite the nonbelievers.

Happy Birthday Christmas dinners

25!

25!

For Crank’s birthday this past Saturday we celebrated by visiting Le Quai restaurant, a modern Chinese restaurant with French influence located next to the Worker’s Stadium.

The meal was, for the most part, incredibly delicious (minus one appetizer that brought to mind jello-molds of raw chicken…). We started off drinking some tasty Chilean wine, a Cabernet-Merlot mix that was way better than anything we’ve been finding on the supermarket shelves. After our jello-molded “Sichuan flavor” chicken (which I’d prefer to forget about), the meal started with a delicious battered shrimp, two ways — with a peach-honey glaze and a panko crusted wasabi coating. This was followed by a crispy duck dish infused with black tea (tasty, though not as good as the Peking-style duck the city is famous for). We also had a Beijing-style noodle dish with some meaty-sauce that was definitely on the list of most-tasty-bites of the evening. My favorite dish of the evening was probably the green beans, though, which were served with steamed bread to make tasty little sandwiches and were incredibly flavorful.

The whole evening was great — the food was tasty, the presentation was elegant, and the restaurant itself was incredibly beautiful, with an entrance filled with intricate woodwork and sculptures. The one caveat to the ambiance, which ended up being mostly humourous, was that the soundtrack to our entire evening was a Christmas-hits compilation they decided to loop continuously. Ohh Jingle-Bells. How you remind me of warm, June evenings….

Merry Christmas Craig! (And Happy Birthday, too…)

China vs. the Internet

You’ve heard me complain about China’s internet censorship before, but with the recent twentieth anniversary of the massacre at Tiananmen Square the PRC has redoubled its efforts to block a huge amount of content online that might fracture China’s official historical record.

header-TienamenSq

Consequently, Steph and I have been having a hard time logging on to update the blog. It seems that things are back up and working now so we’ll be putting up a bunch of new content soon. But first, here’s a list of recently blocked sites dubbed as threats to the peace and prosperity of the People’s Republic of China:

  • Self-indulgent ramblings of hipsters (Twitter.com)
  • Susan Boyle (YouTube.com)
  • Your eight-year-old brother’s blog (Blogger.com)
  • Ceiling and basement cat (icanhascheezburger.com)
  • Your vacation photos (Flickr.com)
  • Your grandma’s email (Hotmail.com)
  • StephoandCrank.com (WordPress.com)

Food, glorious food. Part 10

After studying up how to make dumplings at the Hutong Cuisine cooking school, Crank and I decided to try our own hands at making jiaozi without the knowing help of a cooking instructor. We did a timelapse video of the whole process to share our trials with you, and after Crank gave me a lesson in using Adobe Premier I put together my first-ever edited video to chronicle the endeavor.

The video features two varieties of dumpling, pork with scallion and chicken with corn. We also made and rolled our own dough using a basic flour and water recipe. This is the recipe we used for the pork filling. For the chicken filling we substituted pork for chicken breast (finely chopped) and used one ear of corn in place of the cabbage.

• Minced pork, 100g, 猪肉末 zhu rou mo
• Chinese cabbage, 100g, 白菜 bai cai
• Ginger (finely diced), 1tsp, 姜 jiang
• Spring onion (chopped), 1.5tsp, 葱 cong
• Salt, soy sauce, sesame oil

1. Finely chop cabbage. Add ½ tsp of salt, mix, let sit 10 minutes. Squeeze the cabbage to remove excess water. Reserve cabbage water for later.
2. Place minced pork in bowl; add diced ginger, spring onion, 1 tsp soy sauce, 1 tsp wine. Slowly add the cabbage water to the pork, mixing well after each addition until all water is absorbed (be careful to only mix in one direction).
3. Add cabbage, 1 tsp peanut or other cooking oil, 1 tsp sesame oil, and mix again in same direction.
4. Filling is complete! Add to homemade or bought jiaozi wrappers and crimp. Cook in boiling water for approximately 9 minutes, adding 500mL of cold water every 3 minutes, or when dumplings float to top.
5. Eat! Serve with soy and vinegar sauce (equal parts of each plus minced garlic to taste).

Argrgfkj. They were so good. My love of dumplings continues. See final product below.

Final Product. Which ones are whose...?

A Jig on the Great Wall

It’s amazing that I have had the opportunity to live in Beijing for a time, far away from the world I knew, being a stranger in a strange land where everything is different, the faces are new and food is strange (but delicious). However, being on the other side of the world means being far away from those I love.

And while I’m away the lives of those I hold dear refuse to remain static. Friends are losing jobs, heading to grad school, moving off to new cities, starting new careers, getting engaged and getting married. Specifically, I regret not being able to attend the wedding of my dear friends, Andrew Hoffman and Katey Hoffman (nee Krizan). They were married on April 4, 2009 in a beautiful outdoor ceremony in Corbett, Oregon overlooking the Columbia River Gorge.

While I couldn’t make it to the ceremony, the happy couple were in my thoughts all weekend and I decided to make them this little video at the time to commemorate their joyous union.

Panda Pics and Chinese Cinema

Language barriers are nothing when you’ve got the raw human emotions of companionship, love and hate. And super cute pandas. While the entire film was in Mandarin, we recently enjoyed 熊猫回家路 (Xiong Mao Hui Jia Lu) or “Trail of the Panda” at our nearby budget theater because cute baby animals don’t need subtitles. Because if you’re going to a movie about pandas do you want lots of dialog and plot development? No, you want 88 minutes of ridiculously adorable pandas rolling around and looking cuter than kittens in teacups.

The movie tells the story of an orphaned, friendless little boy, Lu, who discovers a hurt baby panda that’s been separated from it mother (I’m getting choked up just writing this). Lu names his chubby panda companion “Pang Pang” which literally translates as “Fat Fat” and sets out to reunite the fatty with its (even fatter) mother.

Lu has to hide Pang Pang from the would-be hunters who are trying to track down the cub and sell him to some horrible circus where he’d be forced to serve tea to Western businessmen. I don’t really know, I didn’t understand the complicated parts of the movie that involved lots of dialog so I just made it up. There’s many an exciting chase scene in the movie where the clumsy panda cub, with the help of some incoherent editing, evades and escapes from two rifle-wielding men and their bloodthirsty but inept German shepherds.

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Apparently using real pandas to film was not always easy. The director explains: “You cannot shout at them or beat them. The only thing we could do was wait for these superstars to be in the mood.” Unlike regular actors, which I guess Chinese directors can shout and beat into the mood at will.

Distributed by Disney, “Trail of the Panda” follows the form of all those other cute-kid-plus-animal-movies (Fly Away Home, Free Willy, It).

Forbidden and Palatial

Forbidden Palace

We’ve been living in Beijing for nigh on four months now, but it wasn’t until a friend came to visit from out town that we finally got around to seeing two of Beijing’s biggest tourist attractions – the Forbidden City and the Summer Palace. Our friend Matt Mackey had a week off from teaching English in Japan and came to explore China with one of his fellow teachers, Renate. Starting in Hong Kong, they trained through Guangzhou and Xi’an before reaching us here in the capital.

Back in the days of yore, the Emperor would travel by boat along the canals between the Summer and Winter Palaces. Less navally inclined, we traveled by bus and taxi cab. When we went it was that oxymoronic holiday weekend called Labor Day (especially ironic in Communist China) so the sites were mobbed with more than usual numbers of Chinese tourists. Our first stop was the Summer Palace, pretty close to our apartment in the northwest corner of the city. Sitting atop Longevity Hill and overlooking Kunming Lake, the Palace is really a series of imperial buildings and gardens, the highest of which is the Tower of Buddhist Incense. We paid the extra 40 kuai to get into the “special” areas of Palace, but after getting lost on the backside of the hill for a while, we wound up only using a few of our “extra special” tickets before calling it quits.

Feeling our lives had been appropriately lengthened on Longevity Hill, we headed over to the massive Forbidden City. Built in the 1400s, there are nearly 1,000 buildings still standing within its walls. We headed from north to south, traveling from courtyard to courtyard and tracing the rises and falls of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. From end to end, the complex is nearly a kilometer long so even at a leisurely pace it takes quite a while to wander all the way through. The sun was starting to sink and our feet were getting tired, so we sped up toward the end, waving goodbye to Mao’s portrait as we crossed into Tiananmen Square.

To ensure they had a genuine Beijing experience, we took our guests to the Li Qun Roast Duck Restaurant after a long day of wandering Beijing’s historic sites to stuff our faces with Beijing’s historic dish – Peking duck.

It was great to play host to Matt and Renate and get to show them around to some of our favorite spots in a city that’s starting to feel a little bit like home. Be sure to check out Mackey’s pictures from his Chinese adventure and his blog.

Summer Palace pano

(Hasselblad) Photographs!

Shortly before coming to China I bought a new toy. A prized toy. A toy I have wanted ever since I learned they existed 14 years ago. A 1984 500C/M Hasselblad camera. Since coming to China I have been occasionally bringing out the (very heavy) beast of a camera on our outings to do some photography.

Here are some favorites from recent photographic expeditions on the streets of Beijing. Nothing is done digitally (minus a small (poorly done) light leak fix on the dragon picture). All photos were taken on Kodak color slide film.

At Tianamen Square, looking at Mao's mausoleum

At Tianamen Square, looking at Mao's mausoleum

Tianamen Square, facing Mao

Tianamen Square, facing Mao

798 Art District

798 Art District

Graffiti at 798

Graffiti at 798

Here there be bicycles

Blue Doors.

A Great Wall.

Stepho and The Wall.

Last week we mentioned going on a hike with a group called the Beijing Hikers to the Yellow Grass Plateau. We recently went on another amazing trip with the same group, this time to a less known section on the Great Wall. We hiked a 20 km (12 mile) section of the wall from Gubeiko (古北口) to Jinshaling (金山岭) to Simatai (司马台). The visit was spectacular and truly awe-inspiring at times. While the day was a bit warm and hazy, it was still clear enough to see miles into the distance and appreciate the true enormity of the wall.

The 4,000 mile-long construction project lasted centuries and claimed an estimated 2 to 3 MILLION lives during it’s making. At it’s peak during the Ming Dynasty it was guarded by over one million men. Walking along the parapets it seemed it would be a lonely task, guarding that wall, which looks into a beautiful but largely uninhabited valley. We visited the wall right at the time of year the fruit trees blossom, so all around the valley were beautiful wild apricot trees blanketed in bright white flowers.

A Great Wall.

A Great Wall.

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