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Taiwan, a Chinese puzzle

By: Philip Game

Lunar New Year fireworks in Taichung

The tea leaves must fill one-fifth of the pot and before tasting, the tea aroma is sampled by inverting a taster cup into a small bowl.

Rat-a-tat-tat-tat. A fusillade shatters the serenity of the arcane tea house ritual. Is this the end game, the invasion threatened ever since 1949? No, simply fat strings of firecrackers exploding to herald the last day of Lunar New Year festivities. Traffic slows for the trailer-mounted, larger-than-life, deities hauled through city streets by temple volunteers, then ploughs on through dense clouds of smoke and eardrum-shattering explosions. Yes, the Red hordes are landing in force: package tourists disembark daily by the thousand from the direct flights which now hop across the Straits. This peaceful invasion threatens at times to overwhelm Taiwan's natural and cultural heritage.

The drinks are served in urinal-shaped vessels, and my Szechuan Hot Pot simmers within a miniature bidet. Welcome to the Modern Toilet, a chain restaurant in Taipei which plumbs new depths of tastelessness. Meanwhile at the sumptuous Silks Palace restaurant, adjoining the National Palace Museum, exquisitely presented dishes draw inspiration from the priceless antiquities housed in one of the world's finest collections of Asian art.

Often overlooked, Taiwan - the other China - can certainly overturn the preconceptions of a first-time visitor. More images

 

 
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