Archive for the ‘Chinese Food’ Category

Chongqing Foreigner Street

Friday, September 19th, 2008

So in the morning we were leaving the nice small city of Mianyang (only 6 Million people ;-) ) for Chongqing. I must confess I had never heard the name of this city before only to find out now that it is the largest city in whole China and even the world!

I thought he was taking me to yet another nice small town near Chengdu. Well not quite… !

When my friend told me that we will be driving for 5-6 hours in order to get to Chongqing I started to wonder.

When I saw the first thing I saw of Chongqing was the traffic. Chongqing is unbelievable chaotic. If the traffic in other Chinese scared me, the traffic in Chongqing terrified me.

Then the Skyscrapers came into my view. Chongqing is unbelievable gigantic and chaotic. It is (at least in summer) hot, humid, loud and chaotic.

My friend took me immediately to some Chinese party in some Chinese hot pot restaurant in the middle of Chongqing. It all just got too much for me. 100 strangers were introducing themselves murmuring names that I would forget the same instant.

All faces looked the same, everyone was a lawyer (must have been a lawyers party) and the Chongqing food did not look very tasty to put it nice.

indish_food_chongqing.jpg
Indian Food in Chongqing, Foreigener Street

Luckily the Chinese tend to be very good and caring hosts. He saw that I was totally overwhelmed by the city, by meeting 15 loud, celebrating Chinese lawyers around one pot (Chongqing hot pot, “Huguo”).

So we sneaked out and my Chongqingnese friend took me to the foreigner street. This street is a mixture of foreign restaurants and a fair with carousel and such on one of Chongqing’s many hills.

We had some very delicious Indian food: Bananas wrapped in special bread. The Indian Cook was so happy that I greeted him with “Namaste” and spoke English to him, that he gave me my portion for free.

Coffe house in foreigener street, chongqing
European Coffee, finally!

Then we went to the Café de Paris and had some excellent French Coffee. We were sitting on the a second floor balcony with a beautiful view on Chongqing by night. The coffee in Chongqing’s foreigner street tasted just like at home. And the Chinese girl working in the Café de Paris at Foreigner Street in Chongqing even spoke some French! Unfortunately her French boss was not home.

So Chongqing greeted me with some foreign specialities that I had been longing for for a long time.

Metro – a Foreign (German) supermarket in Chongqing

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Chongqing has several foreign supermarkets. One of them ist he American supermarket chain „Walmart“ and one – I was surprised to learn that – is a German supermarket.

So in the morning my hosts took me to the German supermarket metro in Chongqing. They must have been guessing once more how much I was longing to see a European “longnosed” face in this strange China Adventure.

Oh how dear can be a piece of German cheese when you are so far away from home? How much can you long for some taste of home in your China Adventures.

The German supermarket in Chongqing had several German brands like “Spreewaldgurken”, “Ritter Sport”, “Spekulatius” and oh Cheese!!!!!

I got a piece of Edam Cheese that costs a fortune in China: 70 Yuan = 7€. This is even more expensive taking into account that a lawyer in Chongqing usually earns no more then 5000 Yuan (500€), A teacher maybe 3000-4000 Yuan.

Address: No.101, Baihe Road, CETZ, Chongqing

Hot Pot in Mianyang (Sichuan Provence, China)

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

One of the most famous Sichuan foods is the Hot Pot. In general Europeans should be warned that at times Sichuan foods are so hot (spicy) that they can make you cry.

The hotpot is not unlike the European fondue. Since little children and people with stomach trouble (and some tourists like me) can’t eat so hot the Hot Pot has two seconds. In one there is a red broth witch is unbelievable hot, in the other there is non-spiced broth. I usually stick with the baby-version of the hot-pot ;-).

Then the food comes in, in our case we decided for a meat hot pot as I don’t like fish so much. So they brought different types of meat: Beef, Pork, Whatever, Beef stomach, some intestines of a small animal, some filled noodles and Chinese meatballs. All are thrown by the Chinese Service women into the Hot Pot. Only exception are the small animal intestines witch should not be cooked long. The intestines are served on a plate and you grab them with your chopsticks and hold them in the hot pot for like 30 seconds. Luckily I got away with saying: “These have never been my favourite food and the meatballs are so good…”

They also served pumpkin cakes that were very good. The good thing about cakes and sweets in China is, that sweets in China are not too sweet, they are even less sweetened that German sweets.

When the meat was done we started eating by fishing meat and noodles by chopsticks or a little net from the Hot Pot. You have to be lucky to catch something that is done and that you like. If you catch something you don’t like or just spices you drop it.

The meet is then dunked in a mixture of sesame oil, balsamic (or similar) vinegar, herbs and garlic.

When you believe you can eat no more the vegetables come. Now you can fish for mushrooms, Chinese cabbage and others. So vegetarians have to be patient and whoever intends to eat some veggies in the Sichuan Hot Pot should leave some space for them in the stomach.

Thirst and the China Crisis

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Drinking enough Water is really important in China. You are easily tempted to ignore your thirst while travelling. The Water from the tab can’t be drunken and often enough I ended up somewhere in the evening realising I had no bottle of drinking water.

In China the tab water can be drunken if it is boiled so what I did was boiling the water and drink it hot just like the Chinese do. The problem is that I am not accustomed to drinking hot water and never drank more then a cup in such situations.

Chinese breakfast is usually served without any drink. And since no one is drinking you feel strange about ordering some drink. The Chinese eat a strange soup or porridge containing no salt for breakfast that I find inedible. For Chinese this restores the water supply and I end up dry.

During the day, walking around then there are sold small bottles everywhere. These usually only contain 0.5 litres and are emptied soon and you end up dry in China. Usually I was drinking little bottles of sugared green tea while from Germany I am used to only drink water.

Also not accustomed to the warm-wet climate of Beijing I was sweating very much. And when I talk about sweating I mean that the whole body is wet, the sweat is running down my face.

Since days my skin had started to hang like in an old woman. I saw it, wondered about it and did not realize what this means. So I had started to live on my body-reserves without realising. Yesterday this ended in a big collapse.

At the night before I had gone to disco. I had danced with real fun until I was like in trance. I danced and danced and probably sweated several litres. I bought one small bottle of green tea witch I drank during that time and ate some pieces of water melon.

Since I was not supposed to come home in the night I was sleeping in a massage salon (more about that in another text). The breakfast offered was without any fluids not even a coffee or tea – Chinese breakfast. Then I started out for Olympia, running through the city, sweating and all I had to drink was some green tea. When I arrived at the Olympic Stadium of Beijing Security Check even took away from me the one bottle I had.

I suppose making it forbidden to carry fluids into the stadium is supposed to keep people from carrying alcohol. Bottles of water and tea where sold everywhere but I was in such a hurry to arrive at the game that I forgot to buy water. Once I had found a seat in a good position and with my big backpack I started to feel unbelievable thirsty. I was thinking about water all the time. My mouth was dry and my body.

Once I left my backpack (containing my laptop) and my seat in the mercy of some very nice Chinese in the Olympic Indoor Stadium of Beijing. I did not know them and I did not speak there language. So I did not sneak to go and buy some water. I was stupid enough to only buy one small bottle since it was expensive for Chinese relations (5 Yuan = 50 Eurocents) while a large bottle can be bought for 3 Yuan elsewhere.

I ended up dry again. When a woman of a Chinese family started to buy some something I asked her to bring me two bottles of water and a piece of bread. She came back with two pieces of bread…

When I returned home my friend was in a great hurry. Even though we had to drag along my whole luggage he insisted on taking the public transportation which is faster and cheaper then a taxi. I pointed out that I don’t think I can make it. That I have no water.

I was covered with sweat, running behind him carrying heavy luggage in the swearing sun. The sweat was running down my forehead and my toe that I had hurt a few days before started hurting more and more.

I started fantasising about water. I tried to buy water but in the shops we crossed there was none to be found. I believe my friend did not take my request as urgent as it was. He was in a great hurry and thought I can drink once we arrived. But I was close to collapse. I started to hate everything Chinese. Every Chinese sign I was seeing every Chinese word spoken I did not understand. Every Chinese face I saw and I even started to hate the Chinese patience. And especially the Chinese, who tried to enter the bus before we could leave it such that we missed our station.

My friend was trying to distract me by letting me tell stories about funny situations. But what I needed was water not stories.

When we arrived the idea was that I would stay in Starbucks (where I have Internet) in the care of a non-English speaking friend of my friend until they have finished their chores. Then something was wrong with my mobile phone, I believed I needed a pin number which I did not have. I opened my suitcase on the street in order to find the card I had gotten with it.

I cried and cried was unable to stop crying, was fearing to be left alone without mobile phone, without anyone whose language I speak. My thirst was unbearable my head ached and the sweat ran down my face, my body. I sat on the street with my opened suitcase; my belongings scattered on the street and cried and cried. My friend, who had been in such a hurry, just turned and walked away after a short time. I was left there crying and beyond reason with the Chinese and no one to speak German or even English.

I left all my possessions where they were. My laptop, my camera, my passport. I hated everything and everyone. I ran in the next restaurant requesting water. I did not know anymore how to speak or make myself understood even though I usually do. All I could remember was two words: “Shui” (water) and “ke” (thirst). “Shui” I pronounced wrong. I was just repeating shui and ke until they realized what I want. They gave me half a litre of water that I downed in one sip. Then another. They made me sit down in their air-conditioned room.

I slowly returned to my senses even though I was still miserable. The problem with my mobile phone was solved without language and the numbers exchanged. The friend of my friend than brought me to Starbucks, made sure my luggage is stored in a sae corner and left. At Starbucks they even spoke some English and many foreigners were there. I would have loved that place. It was great. But all I could feel was my unbearable thirst. I received a glass of Ice water with my coffee that was empty to fast. I did not dare to ask for more even though I would probably have gotten it.

Then I tried to find a toilet. The one inside was taking like forever. So I went to another floor where the toilet was also busy. So I went back downstairs and just saw someone else enter the toilet. My very loud “Scheiße!!!!!!!!!!” came from the heart and was not understood by anyone. But I guess the meaning was transported. Then I saw from afar how they removed my half coffee I had not drunken yet. I did not know what to scream in what language. I ran after my coffee screaming something, complaining in English I believe.

Then I went back to the upper floor for the toilet and another girl was now waiting for the door. So I went up one more etage and saw how the toilet door was closed. I screamed and pushed the door open. Inside was one employee of the store trying to clean or whatever. So finally I could use the toilet.

Back downstairs the brought me a new coffee for free. All Chinese where so unbelievable nice to me and still I hated them all. My heat was hurting and my thirst unbelievable. And after they ve been so nice how could I ask for more water?

Then my friend, his friend and me had some language or whatever mix up or whatever about where should I sleep and how to get there. I could do no more. I asked an English speaking Chinese friend from the Internet that I had never met before for help. She helped me to find a hotel for the night. She was even taking the next taxi to go to the hotel and help me there. She had also offered to come to Starbucks but that was far away. So I figured I could manage, just hop in a taxi? Forgot I was in China!

There was a long street, two many people and two few taxis. The taxi is stopping wherever The guest want to get of. And you are always in the wrong place. When the next taxi came I ran beside it jumped, stumbling against the taxi in front of some Chinese who had tried the same and screamed: “THIS IS MINE!!!!!” I had expected some fight, some argument now, maybe the driver refusing to drive me. I was screaming, crying and shaking. One security man came to check what it’s about and figured I am harmless. The taxi driver put the suitcase in his car and opened the door for me and everyone else stepped back and smiled. I gave the taxi driver the card of the hotel (I had slept there before) He confirmed with my English speaking Chinese friend. I was droped of safely and for a fair price.

I bought a big bottle of water and had a good shower. My friend treated me with some Pecking Duck, my favourite. I was drinking lots of water all night. This morning I wake up relaxed, my skin tough like it has always been. My head is fine only the toe still hurts and is swollen. But I am back to normal and fine so far.

I have never known what real thirst means until yesterday.

Simpler Chinese restaurant away from Beijing’s Center

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Today I eat in a Chinese restaurant that has middle class prices for Beijing. A meal at about 20 Yuan that are about 2 Euro. Most restaurants I have been to tried to be very helpful. The usual case in Beijing is a menu containing pictures – the food often does not look like the picture later – and more or less funny English translations.

Todays restaurant offers the following:

- Mix tofu wire
- The pig’s liver of salt solution
- The yellow croaker soaks the cake
- Is addicted to the pig’s intestines
- Does the pot tea tree mushroom [?]
- The daily family activity cooks the hairtail
- The onion explodes the mutton
- Burnt slides the meatball
- Three fresh stuff pie
- Little confused immortal liquor

And I am eating “The agricultural wife and children fry the meat” which is some kind of unidentified meat with some kind of undefined green vegetable and chilly.

Eating Pecking Duck

Saturday, September 6th, 2008

My friend Nan took me to the most famous Pecking Duck restaurant. It did look impressive and the food was for Chinese standards very expensive. Yet the two of us did not even pay 300 Yuan (30 €) for a complete high class menu.

Inside it looked very luxurious. Nan headed for the stairs but they send us to the elevator. China has this very nice way of blocking an entrance by putting a smiling woman all day in an entrance that is supposed to be blocked. And when you try to go that way she smiles and points the way that you are supposed to go. Sounds like a good way to solve some employment problems at home in Germany…

Upstairs the waitresses even helped us sit down. The menu was written in two languages and had large pictures of the food. Only problem was that the food we got later did not really look like the pictures.

Choosing from the menu was also very funny. Even though Nan is 100% Chinese she does not eat many things that I also would not eat. She said for example: This is duck tongue. I can order for you if you want but I am not trying. Seeing some scorpions offered as food she even turned her head disgusted.

Eating Pecking Duck in Beijing
Eating Pecking Duck in Beijing

In the end we settled for some mixed pickles that are very famous in some areas of China and are really almost as good as Spreewaldgurken. And then also ate something that was supposed to be salad with duck breast. But it neither looked like salad nor like chicken breast nor any like the picture. Nan even complained to them in Chinese but they told her important is what is in the words not what is in the picture of the menu…

Even going to the toilet was an experience. There was one employee just for the toilet and she was not like in Germany a cleaning woman. No, the toilet service woman walked me all the way to the right, western style toilet (I wanted to use the Chinese standing toilet as I find them cleaner but she insisted). Then she gave me a paper seat for cleanliness (The toilet did not look very clean though and even with a paper seat I would have preferred the Chinese toilet. But she insisted.) Then she waited right in front of the door. Afraid I would fall in the toilet? I got no idea. A little privacy …? But privacy is a foreign word in China anyway… I kept waiting in the hope she would go away but she just busied herself doing whatever right in front of the door. When I went to wash my hand she did not only show me how the soap-mashine worked, she even got the paper towels out of the supplier for me. Now that was a nice service! How often I have cursed the paper suppliers in Germany!

Breakfast in China

Saturday, September 6th, 2008

In the morning I was awakened by some yelling and bumping against my door. But when I had the door opened there was no one. It seems like the Chinese, who are always so quite in Germany here are very loud. Much that sounds as if something is wrong is nothing but some general chit-chat it seems.

Since I was awake at 6 am now anyway (it was midnight in Germany) I thought I could get up as well. So I decided to make myself some coffee and try to find some breakfast.

One of the most valuable things I brought to China is a little jar of instant coffee and some canned milk. Even tough the green tea offered in the hotel room is quite good I just would hate to start my day without coffee.

KFC in Beijing, China
KFC in Beijing, China

So then I started “Lina’s Little Journey through Beijing” in order to find breakfast. And when I talk about breakfast in China I don’t feel like I should eat a plain old cheeseburger at McDonalds.

My first guess was to ask at the reception. Even the English speaking employee was present. At first they said I should go to the 8th floor. 8 that makes sense as the Chinese word for 8 is spoken “ba” which is similar to the word for “rich”. 8 is a common lucky number in China.

But as soon as I was heading to the 8th floor in order to find my Chinese breakfast they were calling me back. Why I did not understand and I thought – thinking of my limited mandarin knowledge – it would not be a good idea to ask “为什么“ (wei shenme = why).

So they started to explain me in a mixture of Chinese, English and handsigns where I should go for breakfast.

Bikes in Beijing
Bycicles in Beijing

I started walking in that direction, happy about the coffee in my thermo-cup. I saw a lot of teenagers all wearing the same clothes. Probally a school uniform. I watched people on bikes of every form. Teenagers on their way to school, employees on the way to work and so on. Almost all bikes have a front basket and in almost every front basket there is a thermo-bottle of green tea.

So I went – or I think I did – in the place in Beijing where the hotel stuff had told me to find my breakfast. And I found a KFC. So I kept asking people – improving my Chinese – where to find breakfast.

Only problem: I had forgotten my dictionary and did neither know the words for “breakfast” nor for “search” or find “find”. In the end „吃饭在那里?” (chifan zai nail? = where is food?) worked quite good and I was send first to a McDonalds and then to another KFC. I started to get so despaired the next McDonalds I was send to I entered. I could have eaten a burger for about 18 Yuan = 1.80€. But even though my stomach started to hurt from no breakfast I did not see why I should eat a burger for breakfast.

Beijing Street Romance
In this litte Beijing Street I found breakfast

So in the end I decided to return to the hotel and force them to tell me where I can find non McDonalds breakfast in China. Then I saw a beautiful little street and more out of curiosity then real hope I entered.

First thing I saw was a little restaurant or something like that. Real and Chinese breakfast! It did not look very open to me so I asked a guy in front: “有吃饭?” (you chinfan? = have they food) and he took me inside and tried to explain everything to me.

When I entered the restaurant everyone was staring at me. I guess not many foreigners enter there. There where nice pictures on the wall and plastic seats in strong colours.

Breakfast in Beijing
Breakfast in Beijing

There where like 5 different kinds of strange looking soup, some filled noodles, some boiled eggs and salad that I would rather not try.

I decided for the big filled noodle and some Chinese, white rice soup. It cost 4 Yuan (40 cents). I hope this is not a bad sign. The number 4 is in china a number of bad luck just like the 13 in Germany. 4 (spoken “si”) is similar to the word for death. So I just hoped I would survive my first real Chinese breakfast.

Everyone was watching me and I was watching everyone. At one table there were 3 women and one young boy of preschool age watching me. And me watching them. Small Chinese children always make a fuss about eating from what I watched. And they get a lot of attention through this. Even thought they are old enough to eat their breakfast themselves they are being fed. A Chinese once told me they are pampered until they go to school. Once in school Chinese children are very disciplined. But the change from being a child to being a school-child must be very heard for Chinese children. I wonder how they manage.

While I was eating my Chinese rice-soup for breakfast the young boy shyly waved at me. So I waved back and said “你好” (nihao = hello). But he was to shy to answer even with his mother coaxing him some.

After a while they left so I said “??” (baibai = byebye) and the little boy answered byebye. After I finished my boal of rice soup I left the restaurant. On the street I met the 3 women with the little boy once more. They greeted me very friendly.

Chinese Employees exercise
Chinese Employees starting work

Walking back to the hotel I saw a lot of women in uniform dresses. Coming closer it seemed like they were all employees of a jewellery store. They where doing something like a dance interpreting “We are the champions”.

An English lady walked by and took a picture so I also dared to make a picture. Turned out she was English, but quite aggressive. She said “Very impressive, very mechanical though!” And I answered that I think it’s a much better way to start your work day then how we do in Europe or America. Seems like she preferred Europe since she made some more unfriendly comments about the mechanical Chinese and then left.

Back in the hotel I was hungry again. Seems like some rice soup does not keep you satisfied long. And the filled noodle I did not really like.