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Island of Taiwan restaurant
Sometimes the dissonance between my blogging self and my real life self reverberates and echoes so loudly and far, that I feel very much like a poser. It's difficult to really express about food in real life the way one could if one has pictures and time to put thoughts together. I suppose that's the genius of someone like Anthony Bourdain, who can do it on TV, and consistently deliver week after week. Most of the time, the enjoyment occurs silently and the message conveyed to others is muted. Even though the world we occupy is more about the gradients than the black-n-whites, it's easier for me to divide the world in one big stroke for the sake of this blog. I think the world is divided into three camps of eaters. One is the Giadas. This is named after Giada from the food network. Each bite for her is a porno sound track fitting only if you orgasm anytime something touches your tongue. How her clit ended up in her mouth is a mystery to me. Those are the lucky ones. On the opposite end of the spectrum you have folks like me. We'll call this group The Creepy Pubescent Teenage boy group. For folks like me, eating for pleasure can be compared to reading a Playboy for the first time. Initially there's shock at how good it is, and then there's quiet enjoyment for the fear that there would be a knock-less intruder at your door, catching you at a very compromising (and embarrassing moment). The third group involves people somewhere in the middle. Maybe you're in that middle group, but I'm firmly in the quiet enjoyment group. My most recent food trip to Island of Taiwan probably was one of the most enjoyable meals in a while.
I first heard about Island of Taiwan on Village Voice. Taiwanese restaurants are hard to come by, unless you visit Flushing like Robyn did with her friends. Now I can't really compare Taiwanese food to Playboy because then it would give the connotation that it's easily enjoyable for people not from Taiwan. Some of this stuff is really about nostalgia and quite frankly not everyone will purely enjoy the food for what it is. So instead of Playboy, think of it as... nude pictures of giraffes. All I can say is... these were some fine giraffes [note: they don't actually serve giraffes here].
We went with a plan of attack that featured many appetizers. We started off with crispy pork intestines. Now if you like intestines, you know that sometimes the fat is super super chewy. This makes for nasty eating. They crispiness comes from deep frying the suckers, and the outside is generally crispy no matter where you go. The skill comes in being able to swallow the damn thing. These were exceptional. They stuffed some scallions inside the intestines and it was just delicious. Maybe intestines aren't your thing, but they're mine. Remember, giraffes.
Another plate that most folks won't enjoy was the stinky fried tofu. This also was deep fried, and it's fermented tofu chunks. Usually you find that tofu has no discernible smell or taste but these do! These orbs of awesome come with some pickled vegetables on the side and a dark sauce at the bottom. Definitely get some sauce on that mother. It's really not crazy tasting even though it's called stinky tofu.
Being a Taiwanese restaurant, Island of Taiwan of course had oyster pancakes/omelets. This version was light on the eggs and heavier on the oysters and the starch. They were able to get the edges crispy so I give them props for that too. I liked this version but by itself, it's not a destination dish that you would travel for.
You also can't go to a Taiwanese restaurant without trying Three Cup Chicken. This dish features equal part soy sauce, rice wine, and sesame oil. Then there's some thai basil and scallions and ginger. I prefer mine with a heavier ginger and basil flavor. Maybe the traditional way doesn't call for a heavy hand for those ingredients, but I like it when a chef is generous with those two things. Here, it was a more balanced taste and it's very good. It still could use an extra sprig of basil or so. This is probably the dish that most people would enjoy, even non-Taiwanese.
We also got this soup that's called 'pork gen thick soup' on the menu. No joke. That's verbatim. This was actually a very Taiwanese dish that you probably don't see else where. First imagine fish cake, which is made with some fish paste. Then substitute fish for pork and you get this. The soup has a vinegary kick to it and again, if you ain't Taiwanese, it's going to be hard for you to really like this one. The meat sticks just scream mystery meat, but I love it. My mom's version of the meat sticks have a higher Q-rating, but I was just happy to taste this.
We also sampled a bowl of spicy beef noodle soup. If you go to hand-pulled noodle places, most of the time the broth is clear. Here the broth is a deep brown and it taste just like homeland. The beef chunks were soft and delicious. I thought the noodles were a little too soft. It's a perfectly fine dish that probably doesn't compare to hand-pulled noodle places, but I just loved it nonetheless.
Last but not least, we got an order of pork buns. Traditional buns like this contain cilantro and peanut powder. These lived up to expectations. The meat was a little dry but again, I didn't give a fuck. I loved it.
I think sometimes it's hard to convey personal enjoyment in a way that's understandable for other people to understand. If you're not a native New Yorker, you most likely could still find SOMETHING that resembles the food of your past. Maybe you're from the South or the west coast. Or maybe you're from some Asian country like Japan or Korea. But if you're from Kyrgyzstan, you're probably shit outta luck. Taiwanese food is hard to find and to find a delicious Taiwanese restaurant is even harder. I'm just going to enjoy my giraffe porn quietly in the future.
The Island of Taiwan Restaurant
6817 8th Ave.
Brooklyn, NY 11220
718-680-0033
Map
Sign up to the feed and never miss a post!Posted by Danny on January 20 2010 at 11:04 am





Looks good. I am totally craving some oyster pancake now.
. . .OMG: "How her clit ended up in her mouth is a mystery to me."
Really?! haha.
Jonathan on January 20 2010 at 12:08 pm
@Jonathan
That's right!!! hahaha
Danny on January 20 2010 at 3:52 pm
CRAAAP I didn't know about this place...I gotta check it out! And bring Taiwanese friends cos I don't really know what Taiwanese food is.
WANT PORK BUNZZZ
Robyn on January 21 2010 at 11:53 am
@Robyn,
Pork bunzzz!!! I don't know how people find these places when it's buried deep in Brooklyn like that. I'm glad it's there though!
Danny on January 22 2010 at 10:43 am
Danny, you make me want to move to Brooklyn!
bionicgrrrl on January 22 2010 at 11:46 am
damn this stuff looks good!!!
robert ogden on January 22 2010 at 1:26 pm
Hahaha - I'm quite close to the "quiet enjoyment" group in person... I get really uneasy when people hyper-vocalize their enjoyment of food - especially in hole-in-the-wall places where the staff speaks no English, and I'm trying to blend in.
...Yet, I have no problem poring over the intricacies of my meals online. I guess that when the emotional range of food is all in your head, you're that much more inclined to put it into words without ever opening your mouth :P
Does Islands of Taiwan do Taiwanese breakfast?
James on January 23 2010 at 3:09 pm
I'm pretty bummed, cause I consider myself the most Taiwanese person I know (more like the only one), and I don't recognize any of those things, besides that "pork gen thick soup". I'm not even sure that's what I'm thinking about. I think my mom's has bamboo shoots and gross shitake mushrooms in it.
I went to some place called Taiwan Porkchop House, but it sorta sucked/confused me. Womppppppp.
Tiffany on January 24 2010 at 4:51 pm
@James,
Sorry to get back to your comment so late, but I don't know if they serve breakfast. It wouldn't surprise me though. Although the best thing about a taiwanese breakfast is the fried crueller, and I feel like you need a high volume place to really do breakfast well because if that stuff sits, it's not the same...
@Tiffany,
Yea for that pork gen soup, you can put anything you want in it. My pinyin sucks but it sounds like "rou gen tang". And I'm surprised the oyster pancake isn't recognizable to you... is that just because the pictured version isn't what you're used to, or that you don't eat oyster pancakes?
Danny on January 27 2010 at 11:41 am
Did you eat all of this by yourself? haha. Looks good! Do you like "wa guey"? There some other taiwanese dish also that looks very gelatinous with meat inside.
Jack on January 27 2010 at 5:29 pm
@Jack,
Oh I know what you're talking about. Not sure if they had that... There just aren't many Taiwanese places around here. Sucksssss. I gotta visit LA sometimes.
Danny on January 27 2010 at 8:50 pm
Holy crap, stinky tofu? In America. You're gonna make me cry.
Nicholas on January 28 2010 at 5:20 am
i lol'd really hard at your categories of eaters.
I went to Taiwan recently for the first time, and the moment I stepped out of the airport, and some airports smell like chlorine, some like incense, but the taipei airport just SMELLED of delicious food. I was almost tempted to lick the walls to see if it was just as tasty.
Brooklyn seems far. Do you know of the best Taiwanese restaurants in Queens or even Manhattan, perchance?
Jenny Famewhore on January 31 2010 at 3:32 pm
hola! wow Island of Taiwan how could i have missed this one. Take me there in July-Aug when im in town =) are u keeping up with all the places i want to go?
Steve on February 1 2010 at 12:31 am