It's not easy to find an authentic Indian restaurant in Taipei. Himalaya is one of those you can dine at without any hesitation.
Take a glance at the menu which lists dozens of traditional Indian dishes from starter shami kebab (spice mutton ball) to main course to mumtaj biryani (saffron chicken rice) to dessert gajar halwa (Indian carrot cake). The house is constantly filled with Indian music. "And all the different spices are imported from India," said chef and manager Deepak.
Deepak has 18 years cooking experience in Saudi Arabia, Japan and Hong Kong. Originally from India, he calls considers Taipei home. He used to own the old Taj Palace Restaurant on Sungchiang Rd., which was well-known among Taipei's Indian community. A year ago, the palace moved to the old area of Tataocheng (
PHOTO COURTESY OF HIMALAYA
A few entrees are a must-try at Himalaya. The first is Tandoori chicken, which is grilled with mixed spices and yogurt. From the crispy skin one can tell that this famous dish is grilled by an experienced hand. Then it's vegetable sheesh kebab, with its vegetables and grilled meats in a spicy sauce. The third must-try is mutton roghanjoshi, which is a kind of thick mutton curry. It's fragrant but not too hot and spicy.
Indian food is definitely heaven for vegetarians because its use of vegetables is far from bland. Palak paneer, which is Indian cottage cheese mixed with spinach and gravy is a very satisfying dish. For sweeter tastes, one should try baigan bharta, which is fried eggplant minced with potato and blended in gravy, then cooked again, creating different flavors for the dish. Then of course there is hommous, a typical Middle Eastern vegetarian dish and a favorite among foreigner customers.
One great advantage of Himalaya is that food here is generally 5 to 10 percent cheaper than the more popular Indian restaurants in central Taipei. But the authentic tastes remain the same. One proof is that the majority of customers are foreigners or previous patrons. The residents from Tataocheng find the Indian dishes "too spicy" and "complicated" according to restaurant staffer Sonam.
The NT$280 business lunch is prepared with one Tandoori chicken leg, one vegetarian dish, one kind of curried meat (choice of chicken, mutton, fish or prawns), one kind of rice and one kind of nan, or bread. Lunch is also served with soup, a drink (either lassi, lemonade or orange juice) and coffee. It's a lavish lunch.
For dinner one can choose the two-for-NT$1,000 set menu, which includes half a Tandoori chicken, curried meat, curried vegetable, one kind of rice and two kinds of nan, plus two drinks. Indian Kingfisher Beer is recommended.
Nine Taiwanese nervously stand on an observation platform at Tokyo’s Haneda International Airport. It’s 9:20am on March 27, 1968, and they are awaiting the arrival of Liu Wen-ching (柳文卿), who is about to be deported back to Taiwan where he faces possible execution for his independence activities. As he is removed from a minibus, a tenth activist, Dai Tian-chao (戴天昭), jumps out of his hiding place and attacks the immigration officials — the nine other activists in tow — while urging Liu to make a run for it. But he’s pinned to the ground. Amid the commotion, Liu tries to
The slashing of the government’s proposed budget by the two China-aligned parties in the legislature, the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP), has apparently resulted in blowback from the US. On the recent junket to US President Donald Trump’s inauguration, KMT legislators reported that they were confronted by US officials and congressmen angered at the cuts to the defense budget. The United Daily News (UDN), the longtime KMT party paper, now KMT-aligned media, responded to US anger by blaming the foreign media. Its regular column, the Cold Eye Collection (冷眼集), attacked the international media last month in
On a misty evening in August 1990, two men hiking on the moors surrounding Calvine, a pretty hamlet in Perth and Kinross, claimed to have seen a giant diamond-shaped aircraft flying above them. It apparently had no clear means of propulsion and left no smoke plume; it was silent and static, as if frozen in time. Terrified, they hit the ground and scrambled for cover behind a tree. Then a Harrier fighter jet roared into view, circling the diamond as if sizing it up for a scuffle. One of the men snapped a series of photographs just before the bizarre
Feb. 10 to Feb. 16 More than three decades after penning the iconic High Green Mountains (高山青), a frail Teng Yu-ping (鄧禹平) finally visited the verdant peaks and blue streams of Alishan described in the lyrics. Often mistaken as an indigenous folk song, it was actually created in 1949 by Chinese filmmakers while shooting a scene for the movie Happenings in Alishan (阿里山風雲) in Taipei’s Beitou District (北投), recounts director Chang Ying (張英) in the 1999 book, Chang Ying’s Contributions to Taiwanese Cinema and Theater (打鑼三響包得行: 張英對台灣影劇的貢獻). The team was meant to return to China after filming, but