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Taiwanese Cuisine

Street Food Paradise

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Taiwanese cuisine is a dazzling fusion of Hokkien, Hakka, Japanese, and indigenous influences. Night market culture and bubble tea have made Taiwan a global culinary trendsetter.

A Culinary Portrait

The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Taiwanese cuisine

Taiwanese cuisine is a layered tapestry woven from indigenous Formosan traditions, centuries of Fujianese and Hakka settlement, Japanese colonial influence, and the massive influx of mainland Chinese regional cuisines that arrived with Kuomintang refugees after 1949. The indigenous peoples of Taiwan, comprising sixteen officially recognized groups, contributed knowledge of wild plants, game, millet cultivation, and fermentation techniques that predate all other influences. Hokkien settlers from Fujian province, arriving from the seventeenth century onward, established the seafood-forward, soy-and-rice-based cooking that forms the island's culinary backbone.

Japanese colonization from 1895 to 1945 introduced tempura, sashimi, bento culture, and a meticulous attention to ingredient quality that permanently shaped Taiwanese food values. After 1949, two million mainland Chinese brought the cuisines of Sichuan, Shandong, Hunan, Canton, and Shanghai, creating a compressed culinary map of China within a single island.

Taiwan's night market culture, one of the most vibrant street food ecosystems on Earth, emerged from this extraordinary convergence, offering hundreds of dishes from dozens of traditions at open-air stalls operating from dusk until midnight. Fried shallots (the aromatic foundation of countless dishes), soy paste (a thick, slightly sweet fermented soybean condiment), five-spice powder (star anise, cloves, cinnamon, Sichuan pepper, fennel), rice wine (used in marinades and sauces), and sweet potato (both a historical staple and a symbol of Taiwanese identity).

Key Flavors

beef wrap meatball sweet potato starch bun pepper tofu fermented street food breakfast night market oyster

Masters of the Kitchen

The chefs who shaped Taiwanese cuisine

Fu Pei-mei

The most influential figure in Taiwanese culinary history (1931-2004). She appe…

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Fu Pei-mei

The most influential figure in Taiwanese culinary history (1931-2004). She appeared on Taiwan Television from 1962 and published Pei Mei's Chinese Cook Book in 1969, training generations of Taiwanese home cooks.

Cathy Erway

Taiwanese-American food writer and author of The Food of Taiwan, which includes…

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Cathy Erway

Taiwanese-American food writer and author of The Food of Taiwan, which includes nearly 100 recipes from traditional homestyle dishes to street food. She is a leading voice for Taiwanese cuisine.

Essential Reading

The cookbooks that define Taiwanese cuisine

Made in Taiwan Clarissa Wei and Ivy Chen

Made in Taiwan

Clarissa Wei and Ivy Chen · 2023

A landmark cookbook staking a claim to Taiwan's culinary and cultural self-determination with accurate recipes develope…

The Food of Taiwan Cathy Erway

The Food of Taiwan

Cathy Erway · 2015

Nearly 100 recipes from old-fashioned homestyle dishes to the latest street-food crazes of Taiwanese cuisine.

Explore All Dishes

9 authentic recipes from Taiwanese cuisine

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Showing 9 of 9 dishes