China has long prided itself on its eight great regional cuisines, but in the eyes of the imperial court, they were just that, regional. "In the imperial court, the best chefs from around the country were brought together to create dishes specifically to meet the tastes of the empress dowager," said Li Li (厲莉), owner of Li's Cuisine Beijing (厲家菜) and currently a guest chef at the Far Eastern Plaza Hotel.
Her narrow frame hunched under heavy Manchu robes during a press presentation last week, she looked very much like a typical courtier of late Ching dynasty prints. This is not surprising, as her family belonged to the Pure White Banner, one of the most senior branches of the Manchu social hierarchy and her great-grandfather served as the Minister of the Household Affairs in charge of the imperial kitchens.
PHOTO COURTESY OF FAR EASTERN PLAZA HOTEL
It is from here that Li Li's story begins, which has taken her from a restaurant with just a single round table to seat 12 to being in demand internationally by some of the mostly highly regarded hotels in the world. Part of the appeal is that Li Zhijia (厲子嘉), her great-grandfather, was a kind of personal butler to the Empress dowager Cixi (慈禧太后), and many of the dishes that he passed down to children where personal favorites of the Old Buddha herself.
This historical link to a lost tradition is appeal enough in itself -- it helps also that the food that Li will be presenting over the next four nights at the Far Eastern Plaza Hotel's Shang Palace restaurant is also very delicious, focusing on steamed and boiled dishes at the expense of the more conventional stir-fry techniques that people often associate with Chinese food.
While many local chefs complain Chinese food in Taiwan has lost all its regional distinctions and can make little claim to authenticity, Li is blissfully secure in her own tradition. "It is a tradition of cooking that has come down through our family," she said, and apart from her husband Chung Chun-sheng (叢春生), "who counts as family," she does not intend to let anyone else in on the secrets of her cooking.
"Much of the food is very labor intensive," said Chung, "with preparation times of up to six months in some cases." Such long periods of preparation are required for dishes like shark's fin, for which Li's Cuisine does all the preliminary processing. "We do not use ingredients that have been processed by others," he added.
Li Li first came to prominence after winning a cooking competition in 1984. With China opening up at that time, the "discovery" of a living tradition of the imperial kitchens was made into a media event. For all that, Li's Cuisine remained a very small operation, although bookings often needed to be made as much as six months in advance, according to Li.
The restaurant continues to be an item on the schedules of many heads of state and other visiting dignitaries to Beijing. In 1991, Li opened another restaurant in Melbourne Australia, which has also proved very popular. Li's current visit to Taiwan is taking place under the guise of a cultural exchange with the Yu Chang Technical and Commercial College (豫章工商), which is associated with the Far Eastern Group. For more information about tasting this imperial cuisine, contact tel (02) 2378-8888 ext. 5888. See also Li's Cuisine Web site at http://www.lilis.net.au/.
For many people, Bilingual Nation 2030 begins and ends in the classroom. Since the policy was launched in 2018, the debate has centered on students, teachers and the pressure placed on schools. Yet the policy was never solely about English education. The government’s official plan also calls for bilingualization in Taiwan’s government services, laws and regulations, and living environment. The goal is to make Taiwan more inclusive and accessible to international enterprises and talent and better prepared for global economic and trade conditions. After eight years, that grand vision is due for a pulse check. RULES THAT CAN BE READ For Harper Chen (陳虹宇), an adviser
The breakwater stretches out to sea from the sprawling Kaohsiung port in southern Taiwan. Normally, it’s crowded with massive tankers ferrying liquefied natural gas from Qatar to be stored in the bulbous white tanks that dot the shoreline. These are not normal times, though, and not a single shipment from Qatar has docked at the Yongan terminal since early March after the Strait of Hormuz was shuttered. The suspension has provided a realistic preview of a potential Chinese blockade, a move that would throttle an economy anchored by the world’s most advanced and power-hungry semiconductor industry. It is a stark reminder of
The last couple of weeks spectators in Taiwan and abroad have been treated to a remarkable display of infighting in the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) over the supplementary defense budget. The party has split into two camps, one supporting an NT$800 billion special defense budget and one supporting an NT$380 billion budget with additional funding contingent on receiving letters of acceptance (LOA) from the US. Recent media reports have said that the Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) is leaning toward the latter position. President William Lai (賴清德) has proposed NT$1.25 trillion for purchases of US arms and for development of domestic weapons
May 11 to May 17 Traversing the southern slopes of the Yushan Range in 1931, Japanese naturalist Tadao Kano knew he was approaching the last swath of Taiwan still beyond colonial control. The “vast, unknown territory,” protected by the “fierce” Bunun headman Dahu Ali, was “filled with an utterly endless jungle that choked the mountains and valleys,” Kano wrote. He noted how the group had “refused to submit to the measures of our authorities and entrenched themselves deep in these mountains … living a free existence spent chasing deer in the morning and seeking serow in the evening,” even describing them as