Re: [News] 36 Hours in Taipei, Taiwan
看板EngTalk (全英文聊天)作者hisunshine (hisunshine)時間17年前 (2009/01/19 19:53)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串2/2 (看更多)
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There’s no avoiding Din Tai Fung, a mandatory stop on Taiwan’s
restaurant scene (194 Xinyi Road, Section 2; 886-2-2321-8928).
This crowded, brightly lit restaurant, with chefs rolling and
stuffing dumplings in the front, specializes in xiao long bao,
steamed soup dumplings. These are usually associated with
Shanghainese cuisine, but the dumplings here are famous for skin
that is much more delicate than those of their Shanghainese
counterparts. Try the ones with pork, pork and crab meat or purely
vegetables. Save room for taro dumplings as a first dessert. A
full meal might cost 300 Taiwan dollars a person.
Head around the corner to Yongkang Street, a celebrated eating
avenue, for your second dessert: a mound of shaved ice topped with
fresh mango, strawberry or kiwi at Ice Monster (15 Yongkang
Street). Then stroll along the Street, lined with traditional
noodle shops, Japanese restaurants and sweet tofu dessert parlors.
10 p.m.
12) SMALL EATS
Taipei is as modern a city as any in Asia, but traditional night
markets thrive in many neighborhoods. The biggest ones resemble
beachside boardwalks, with cheek-by-jowl crowds, fun-fair games,
knickknack stores selling everything from chopsticks to DVD’s
and, of course, every kind of Taiwanese snack food. The liveliest
markets are Raohe, by Ciyou Temple in the Songshan neighborhood;
Shida, between the Guting and Taipower Building MRT stations; and
Shilin, at the Jiantan MRT station.
Sunday
9 a.m.
13) INTO THE CLOUDS
Your last day? Take a bus or taxi over to Yangmingshan, the gently
sloping dormant volcano that sits in a national park on Taipei’s
northern edge. The rangers at the main visitor’s center can give
you advice on the dozens of trails. If the weather is clear,
consider walking up to Mount Cising, which at 3,674 feet is the
highest summit in the greater Taipei basin. The wind-swept high
meadows are covered in waves of silvergrass, and the views could
well inspire you to start planning your return trip to Taipei.
The Basics
In mid-February, a quick Internet search showed that the cheapest
round-trip flights from New York to Taipei for travel in early
March cost $800 on Northwest Airlines (two stops) and $930 on
United Airlines (one stop). You’ll pay about 1,200 Taiwan dollars
($31.80 at 31.75 Taiwan dollars to the U.S. dollar) to take a taxi
from the international airport in Taipei to the city center. A
shuttle bus to the main railway station, in the city center and a
convenient place for subway connections, costs 120 Taiwan dollars.
Les Suites Taipei is an intimate boutique hotel that has two
locations in the city (12 Ching Cheng Street; 886-2-8712-7688; and
135 Da An Road, Section 1; 886-2-8773-3799; www.suitetpe.com).
Late last month, the weekend on-line rate for a double at the Da
An location started at about $140 a night.
The Grand Hotel, at least architecturally, lives up to its name (1
Zhongshan North Road, Section 4; 886-2-2886-8888;
www.grand-hotel.org). Built in Qing Dynasty style, it has been a
centerpiece of Taipei’s luxury hotel scene for years, though the
location north of the city center is somewhat inconvenient. Late
last month, the weekend rate for a double started at 3,990 Taiwan
dollars per night.
※ 引述《hisunshine (hisunshine)》之銘言:
: TAIPEI, the vibrant capital of Taiwan, distills the best of what
: Asian cities have to offer — great street food, crackling night
: life, arguably the world’s best collection of Chinese art, and
: hot springs and hiking trails reachable by public transport. With
: interest in mainland China surging, Taipei — one of the most
: underrated tourist destinations in Asia — offers a look at a
: different side of China, one that escaped the deprivations of
: early Communist rule and the Cultural Revolution. Here is a
: Chinese culture (some contend that it is uniquely Taiwanese) that
: practices bare-knuckled democracy and has preserved traditions
: thousands of years old in a way that was impossible to do on the
: mainland.
http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/travel/02hours.htm
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