Looks can be really deceiving especially when searching for those delicious shaved ice desserts in Taiwan. In a hidden corner of the city, lies a restaurant where locals can be seen lining up outside the store. I know that there must be something tasty here (if I'm not mistaken) so I joined the queue, ate inside and went home thinking to come back.
At first glance, this dessert looks like a cake. |
How do they shape the shaved ice into something like a cake? They just place a bowl on the shredded ice to create that cylindrical form. |
I don't know how to describe properly this food. An oozing lake of chocolate-looking liquid placed on a top of a shaved ice shaped like a cake. It is amazing how such a dessert can attract so many customers even on a busy weekday night. C'mon Taiwanese patrons of Liushun bean flower (六順豆花) restaurant, give the international tourists a chance to taste this delicacy. The line is very long every night and the store is not big enough to accommodate a large number of people. Haha!
The menu of the restaurant |
To order, just encircle the name of mud volcanic ice (right side) plus the for different kinds of filling (left side) that you want. |
Yù níhuǒshān bīng or mud volcanic ice (芋泥火山冰). The best-seller of the restaurant plus four different kinds of filling for the dessert. Be it a jelly, nuts, or beans, the main ingredient that makes this food special is that viscous red bean paste. Its the one that gives the “kick” that will send you to the limits of outer space. A tasty lava on a crater of goodness. It is justing waiting to erupt!
There also others dessert available for customers to choose from. Why not try the milk snowflake. With tapioca pearls and read bean glutinous balls, it will act as your barometer in assessing the taste of the ice volcano. I'm sure the Níhuǒshān bīng will be the winner even if you return to the restaurant for another taste test of the mud volcanic ice.
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Liushun bean flower (六順豆花) restaurant
address: No. 1-1, Lane 26, Xindong Street, Songshan District, Taipei City, 105
[Google Map]
open: Tuesday - Saturday, 1:00 pm to 10:30 pm
Sunday, 3:30 pm to 10:30 pm
My order:
(4 out of 5 luomujie stars)
Rapsa is a slang for the Filipino word "sarap" which means delicious. Delicious -> sarap -> "rapsa" (inverted syllable order). The Rapsa Edition of the "My Beloved Taipei" Travel Series will take readers to the tastiest and yummiest foods in Taipei. Get to know the best desserts and local delicacies that Taiwan's capital has to offer, through this subprogram of the luomujie blog. |
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