Food

French Pavilion-promotion of French Culture and dining

Taiwan News
Date: 2016-06-25
By: Jennifer Lin, Taiwan News, Staff Reporter

The food crisis in Asia has caused frequent problems, leading to consumers paying more 6764391attention in food safety and product’s quality. France has a very complete food safety management and agricultural production laws providing an effective protection system. In 2015 its export trade brought in 250 million euros which showed the acceptance of French products in the international market.

In a move to promote qualitative French dining and agro-food products to Taiwanese food & beverage manufacturers, traders, and service providers as well as the public, the French Trade Commission BusinessFrance presents the “French Pavilion” during the 2016 Food Taipei Exhibition.

“In a recent meeting with the President Tsai Ing-wen, Taiwan and France extend more cooperation in agriculture and expect to make an annual dialogue with the two countries, Ministry of Agriculture, ” said Director Guidée at the opening of the seminar.     [FULL  STORY]

Edible fats supplier sentenced for hiding products’ origins

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/17
By: Chang Jung-hsiang and Y.F. Low

Taipei, June 17 (CNA) The head of an edible fats supplier in Tainan was sentenced on Friday to a jail term of six years and six months by a district court for deliberately concealing the origins of his products.

The man sentenced was Wu Jung-he (吳容合), owner of Hsin Hao company, which supplied lard to Cheng I Food Co., a subsidiary of disgraced food maker Ting Hsin International Group, between 2012 and 2014 for processing into lard-based cooking oil products, according to a verdict issued by the Tainan District Court.

The lard, however, was imported from Vietnam and Hong Kong as reported to customs as animal feed-grade fat to evade the 20 percent import duty on edible lard and avoid inspection by the authorities, the verdict said.

The court could not confirm if the imported lard was in fact for use in animal feed or in consumer products, but it found that Wu could not ensure the safety of his products.     [FULL  STORY]

Decision on Canadian beef issue still being mulled

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/06/17
By: Chang Ming-hsuan, Tang Pei-chun and Lilian Wu

Taipei, June 17 (CNA) Taiwan’s Food and Drug Administration confirmed Friday it sent officials to images (1)check on the safety of Canadian beef amid reports that a ban on Canadian beef products will be lifted next month.

Taiwan banned imports of Canadian beef products in February 2015 following the confirmation of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) — better known as mad cow disease — in a cow in Alberta.

Pan Chih-kuan (潘志寬), head of the FDA’s Food Safety Division, said Friday that Canada, hoping to get the ban lifted, requested last year that a risk assessment be conducted.

The FDA then sent officials to Canada last November to check on its beef and found that everything was OK. The results of the visit were submitted to the Executive Yuan, according to Pan.     [FULL  STORY]

FDA says pesticide residue found in 10 oatmeal items

Taipei Times
Date: May 27, 2016
By: Lee I-chia / Staff reporter

A random inspection by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) earlier this month found 10 of 36

A Quaker Oats product from the US, left, found to contain pesticide residues exceeding the legally acceptable level is displayed yesterday in Taipei next to a Taiwanese Quaker Oats product which passed an inspection by Food and Drug Administration. Photo: Wu Liang-i, Taipei Times

A Quaker Oats product from the US, left, found to contain pesticide residues exceeding the legally acceptable level is displayed yesterday in Taipei next to a Taiwanese Quaker Oats product which passed an inspection by Food and Drug Administration. Photo: Wu Liang-i, Taipei Times

oatmeal products tested contained pesticide residues exceeding legal levels, including Quaker Oats products, the agency said yesterday.

The 10 were found to have glyphosate (pesticide) residue levels between 0.1 parts per million (ppm) and 1.8ppm, it said.

They were “Old Fashioned Quaker Oats” and “Quaker Quick 1-minute Oats” sold at Carrefour Taiwan (家樂福), Costco Wholesale Corp and RT-Mart (大潤發), “Coach’s Oats” sold at RT-Mart, “Bob’s Red Mill Instant Rolled Oats” sold at Pacific Sogo Department Stores Co (太平洋崇光百貨), “Fifty50 Hearty Cut Oatmeal” and “McCann’s Imported Irish Oatmeal” sold at City’super, “Australia Fine Oat Flakes” by Fuyuan Food (富元食品) sold at Wellcome Supermarket (頂好超市) outlets and oatmeal (大燕麥片) by Fengyuan Food (逢元食品).

“Among the items that failed the inspection, such as the products from Quaker Oats, several were products imported from other countries,” FDA Northern Center for Regional Administration official Wang Te-yuan (王德原) said.     [FULL  STORY]

Easier to Pronounce Le Panier Than Carry to Success

Eye On Taiwan
Date: May 24, 2016
By: David Wang

Would the French presidents, many of whom graduated from Sciences Po, approve of their alum Pierre Guyon, 27, setting up Le Panier, a modest business selling French crepe, galettes (salty crepes) and flan au caramel (a pudding that is a popular dessert in France) in Taipei, Taiwan of all places?

2016-05-24-14.03.56

Pierre Guyon, 27

But the relatively more high-profile French personalities can’t fault Pierre for adventurous spirit and entrepreneurship as he follows his heart to pursue a passion that has been taught by a friend.

Obviously not a believer in convention, Pierre did not choose to enroll in a haughty cordon bleu course in patisserie back home to leverage the potential in cachet. His progressive tendency also shows in his attitude towards tying the knot, which he says is a mere contract that gets in the way of a relationship.

But still a stickler for certain traditions of patisserie or pastry making, Pierre takes the trouble to import from France professional-grade cream. buckwheat flour, and emmental cheese in bulk to retain high quality and minimize cost as he complaint of the exorbitant price of such cheese in Taipei.

A native of Lyons, Pierre says the city is less developed, crowded relative to Paris but is more suitable for raising a family, as well as being famous for its football team and pork sausages. The city was also the former French capital and a key trading hub linking Switzerland and Paris.

Without hesitation to promote the French advantage, Pierre has on his business card not only the drawn motif of the Eiffel Tower and Arc de Triomphe but also le panier, which he says is literally “basket” in French but also suggests a container to hold takeout food. Underneath Le Panier de Paris in orange is written The New French Food Style In Taipei on the card to also suggest a tad awkwardness in coming up with a concise, witty promotional slogan by the non-native English speaker.

After working in South Korea for a major French firm and unable to bear the robotic lifestyle of an office worker in shirt-and-tie, Pierre packed up and headed for Taipei, where he also once interned for a French firm, with some US$15,400 in start-up capital to first set up in April 2014 a miniscule stand near the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Park selling French desserts, without facilities to make crepe, which he says are considerably more troublesome. As smooth as the circular grill on which the crepe batter is deftly spread and heated, Pierre says that, as many foreigners tend to do diplomatically when asked why they choose Taipei to set up business, he likes the local culture and has made some friends over the years.

Still not totally certain of the prospects of Le Panier due to being in a foreign culture and the sometimes perplexing issue of turning more Taiwanese on to French crepes, Pierre, whose small business venture has been so-far-so-good, has opened a second, larger outlet at the former Flora Expo site at the corner of Minzu and Zhongshan Rds., where he now proudly prepares French crepes, which he says differ from the Taiwanese and Japanese varieties in being softer.

Instead of serving crepes on a plate that has to be eaten with a knife and fork in a diner that is more expensive and may put off Taiwanese, Pierre believes his way of folding crepes, available with fillings as honey, walnuts and Nutella, inside a paper cone is more convenient and localized.

The young French entrepreneur also deserves a pat on the back, besides only equipped with survival Mandarin without the ability to read Chinese characters, for braving the small business scene in Taipei, which can be cut-throat as a locally-branded franchisee selling soya pudding and cereal porridge only a few minutes from Le Panier has gone under in less than a year.

There are a few rivals in Taipei competing in the same niche but are set up in brick-and-mortar diners that target a different clientele, says Pierre, who admits that he is only basically breaking even and could use a local partner, which is difficult to find, willing to invest some US$250,000 to enable expansion into the other cities in the south. French banks won’t offer financing outside of France and Taiwanese banks won’t lend to foreigners like him, says Pierre.

One other niggling problem, as experienced by many Taiwanese-run small businesses, is finding and retaining staff, which Pierre says are not very motivated.

While obviously impressed by the French speaking skills shown by some of his Taiwanese friends who study the language in university, Pierre does not display nearly the same admiration for the range of pastries sold by Paul in Taipei, which is promoted as a high-end French brand as presumptuously snooty as women brandishing Louis Vuitton purses. Pierre says Paul, despite being also famous in France, is a mass producer of pastries with many outlets, and that the French do not go to a patisserie to sample baguette, croissants and mille-feuille with Bordeau in regal setting, as Paul in Taipei would have local consumers believe, suggesting that enjoying pastries in France being an earthy experience.

While firmly setting sights on the long-term for Le Panier, Pierre can’t see bringing onboard a non-investment partner in the form of a girlfriend as he said business and pleasure don’t mix, as he found out once. And obviously the tasty fillings added to the crepes may be sufficient to attract customers but not fondness of Taiwanese women, Pierre confesses that the combination of French status and chef de patisserie does not actually help much with his social life.

Nonetheless, Pierre may show the essential trait of a successful entrepreneur: unwavering personality. When told that some Taiwanese women judge a man by his possessions as name-brand watches, Pierre nonchalantly points to his boy-sized, black Casio to add that he owns another in white as well as a good-looking Pierre Cardin watch, and that his shopping habits won’t be influenced by a woman.

Bonne chance as they say in France.

Company found to have sold expired seafood draws huge fine

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/05/20
By: Wang Hung-kuo and Elizabeth Hsu

Taipei, May 20 (CNA) The New Taipei government fined a seafood distributor NT$15.48

(Photo courtesy of the New Taipei City Department of Health)

(Photo courtesy of the New Taipei City Department of Health)

million (US$473,000) on Friday for having sold large quantities of seafood items beyond their expiry date.

Hsu Chao-cheng (許朝程), deputy commissioner of the city’s Department of Health, said in a press conference that New Taipei-based Ocean International Co. Ltd. had sold expired frozen food products in violation of the Act Governing Food Safety and Sanitation.

Among 250 metric tons of inventory checked by the department, about 174 metric tons were found to be in violation of the act, Hsu said.

The affected products involved more than 60 different items, of which 43 had expiry dates that had already passed, Hsu said.

The remainder did not have expiry date labels, and a more detailed check of those items will be conducted to sort out their actual expiration dates, he said.     [FULL  STORY]

Aussie Gem Amid Central Taipei

Eye On Taiwan
Op Ed
By: David Wang

Well-informed westerners say there are pockets of excellence in Asia, a rule of thumb that is generally true for many aspects of culture across the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, China as well as Taiwan.

Recently Taipei mayor Ko commented, with respect to the demolition of the Zhonxiao viaduct near the Taipei Train Station, that urban aesthetics in the city nears eye-sore level, partly due to haphazard signage that results in visual chaos.

Such sentiment unfortunately also applies to over half (euphemistic estimate) the structures as condo and office towers in Taipei, which isn’t surprising considering that the 10-story Victory Mansion, torn down years ago, near the SOGO boutique mall on Dun-Hwa S. Rd. and the iconic Fu-Shing Elementary/Junior High School next door, was the tallest apartment in the city in around 1967 to have been an enviable landmark for its day.

Taipei also can’t be blamed for being a latecomer to the global pageant as a city of world-class high-rises, upscale condo towers, given the nation was only given a start to rebuild as a modern state around 1949, when its administrators was driven from China by the communists.

Also the uneven economic development between Taipei and the southern cities has skewed population growths, to have fueled migration towards the northern capital over the years to result in extraordinarily high population densities across Taipei, where most permanent and migratory residents generally care only about eking out a living. While gentrification is not really a sizable phenomenon in Taipei, with many pre-1960 low-rises being in disrepair to undermine overall urban beauty.

The sad fact is that, save trekking out to suburban Taipei to be among the sylvan outdoor, city residents typically are stuck in a concrete jungle with scant visual relief in terms of historical, architectural creations by inspiring designers as would be available in many major cities as Sydney, Los Angeles, New York City, Miami, London, Paris, Madrid, Milan.

So there has always been a café culture in Taipei where residents, rattled by the hectic pace of life, seek sanctuary in one of the many coffee shops to meet friends, chill out and find visual comfort among artistic décor, sample ethnic cuisine and gourmet coffees.

And as many other activities and encounters in life, one has to be plain lucky to

The Aussie Café only a few steps northeast of the high-profile Taiwan Cement Tower on Zhong-Shan N. Rd.

The Aussie Café only a few steps northeast of the high-profile Taiwan Cement Tower on Zhong-Shan N. Rd.

come across such cafés, one that has been fortunate to be inspired by a caring proprietor.

Luck was with me the other day as I happened by the Aussie Café, sitting incongruously but confidently holding its own design-wise on a non-descript corner hidden as a rare find in central Taipei, only a few steps northeast of the high-profile Taiwan Cement Tower on Zhong-Shan N. Rd.

The operator likely has an agreement with the Australian tourism authorities to promote travel Down Under as a sign states offering related tourism information.

The rather outdoorsy feel of the ground-level façade, unfortunately out of place against a typically-unsightly residential low-rise, leads into a cleanly laid-out interior of elongated proportion, complete with some cozy, soft-backed seating, and large windows along the entire length that enhances airiness.

It is a very serene, civilized locale for a coffee, mostly above US$4, and Net surfing as seems popular with many patrons.

The young man who courteously welcomes guests at the coffee bar didn’t show a hint of Aussie accent as he spoke Mandarin, a flaw that would actually add to the amusement of the Aussie-theme.

The café was still closed at around 10:30 a.m. on a Thursday, so one can safely assume the management does not target office staff on their way to work.

A real gem of a place to bask in Aussie ambiance while sipping coffee away from traffic along the major thoroughfare a stone’s throw away.

Most popular freeway meal: Guanxi lunch box

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/04/03
By: Wang Shu-fen and S.C. Chang

Taipei, April 3 (CNA) Service areas along Taiwan’s national freeways used to be criticized

bell-shaped cake with custard filling offered by the Qingshui Service Area in Taichung

bell-shaped cake with custard filling offered by the Qingshui Service Area in Taichung

for offering poor quality yet expensive food, but no longer.

They now provide delicious and popular food that does not cost too much, such as the Guanxi lunch box, which has been rated as the most popular meal by road travelers.

The lunch boxes served at the Guanxi Service Area on National Freeway No. 3 in Hsinchu County offers five Hakka-style main dishes — salty pork, steamed pork with pickled vegetable, deep-dried pork chop with orange sauce, double main dishes, and chicken leg with plum juice, with prices ranging from NT$55 (US$1.70) to NT$85.

Last year, the service area sold an average 17,000 Guanxi lunch boxes per month for a total of NT$1.1 million, making it the best-selling meal among all those offered by all service areas along Taiwan’s freeways, according to the Taiwan Area National Freeway Bureau.

Some specialty foods have also become popular, such as bell-shaped cake with custard filling offered by the Qingshui Service Area in Taichung. The cake was the No. 1 gift item in 2015, selling 27,000 boxes per month for a total of NT$3 million. A cheesecake from the same service area followed, selling 9,000 per month for revenue of NT$2 million.     [FULL  STORY]

Tsai proposes reforms for agricultural sector in Taiwan

Taiwan Today
Date: March 4, 2016

A raft of reforms aimed at spurring the profitability and sustainability of

The sales strategy employed by Taiwan’s lisianthus growers is worthy of emulation by all participants in the local agricultural sector. (UDN)

The sales strategy employed by Taiwan’s lisianthus growers is worthy of emulation by all participants in the local agricultural sector. (UDN)

Taiwan’s rural sector were recently proposed by ROC President-elect Tsai Ing-wen.

The initiatives include an agricultural land bank, farmers’ insurance scheme, labor brokerage system and new trading model. The bank enables the reassigning to young farmers of surplus or underused land, while the brokerage system assists in addressing labor shortages.

But it is the trading model that represents the greatest opportunity for achieving short- to mid-term improvements in the agricultural sector.

Tsai said during a March 1 visit to a lisianthus flower growing-marketing group at Singang Township in Chiayi County, southern Taiwan, that a government-backed export management company is necessary for pooling the resources of Taiwan’s predominantly small-scale farmers and delivering value-added products to market via upgraded packaging, promotion and sales processes.     [FULL  STORY]

Two Taiwan restaurants on Asia’s 50 best list

Focus Taiwan
Date: 2016/03/01
By: Y.F. Low

Taipei, March 1 (CNA) Two restaurants in Taiwan have been included on the 2016 Asia’s 50 66092665Best Restaurants list sponsored by Italian mineral water brand San Pellegrino.

Le Mout, a French restaurant in Taichung, placed 30th in the list of the top 50 after ranking 26th last year.

RAW in Taipei, a collaboration between Singapore-based Taiwanese chef Andre Chiang (江振誠) and the Hasmore Restaurant Group, made it onto the list for the first time and was ranked 46th.

The list, published by William Reed Business Media, is based on a vote by more than 300 chefs, restaurant owners and food connoisseurs from six countries across Asia.     [FULL  STORY]