Tuesday 2/1/11
Max and I decided to roam the city on our own today. We started the day with a tutorial from his mom on how to use the Metro and where all of the major stops were. Then we walked with Ivan down the street to the 24-hour McDonald's to use their wifi. Turns out it was a Hinet hotspot and you needed a subscription so we headed towards Starbucks instead. Starbucks turned out to be a Wifly hotspot (still need a subscription) but Max randomly got logged in and was able to connect. It was such a sad thing to stand with dead devices while watching Max roam Google maps looking for the next nearest free wifi spot. After trying a few more places to no avail, Ivan headed back and Max and I hopped on the metro headed towards Taipei City Hall.
The metro was quick and easy to navigate. There was a quick change of trains at the Taipei Main Station and soon we were back in the main shopping district. It took a while to orient ourselves because the shops were basically blocks of department stores that looked the same but were numbered A4, A8, A9, etc. Outside of one of them we caught a free wifi hotspot and sat on the bench for 10 minutes uploading pictures, looking up restaurants, etc. We walked around looking for Hankyu department store which was supposed to have a Uniqlo and a Muji store.
We wandered into a building called Eslite which was kind of like a Fred Segal on steroids. There were a lot of Japanese-esque mini boutiques and everything was super expensive. After a quick browse we headed to the next block which turned out to be Hankyu. The main floor was a lobby connected to the Taipei City Hall metro station (how did we miss this??) and the main department store. We headed down the escalator and saw Uniqlo (B1) and Muji (B2). I was pretty hungry at this point so we browsed the food court first. Almost all of the department store blocks had a food court in the basement. We saw a katsu place called Anzu with a long line and decided almost immediately to join the line. Chinese rule: if there is a line, the food must be good! Also, I caught a wifi signal in line so I was able to log into Facebook and check in on Foursquare. Turns out we had wifi access in the restaurant too so it was the first time it felt like we were eating back in the US... taking pictures here and there and uploading them while we waited for our food.
The katsu was amazing. It reminded me a lot like Wako: we were given toasted sesames to grind in a bowl and the katsu was served on a tin cooling rack. Max had the TORO black pig which was SUPER fatty and I had the tiger prawn with pork tenderloin which was delicious. It came with a salad and choice of soup too.
After that we did a little shopping at Muji and then headed up to Uniqlo. Jeggings seemed to be an in thing there and I tried on a couple of pairs but they looked horrible! Bad throwback to the nineties. Uniqlo was by far the most crowded store we visited -- there was a long line at the fitting rooms and it took about 20 minutes to finally get in.
On the way out we hit up the food court floor again for a snack. (Okay, actually for the wifi.) We had some fresh juice at Happy Inn. Max had the "green bean job tear" and I had a papaya yogurt. We picked up a crepe cake for Chinese New Year and headed home.
It was about a 10-15 minute walk home from the metro station so we stopped by a cosmetic store to pick up some face masks and the Taiwan version of Best Buy to see if they sold scanners so we could scan Max's baby pictures. They didn't have any standalone scanners so we headed back home. I was super tired and hurting all over so after a short rest (of stuffing face with CNY snacks) we headed to the Shilin Night Market for a massage. It was $600NT for a 45 minute foot + shoulder massage (about $20) that came with a snack and some hot tea. Each lounge chair had its own TV and headphones so I watched America's Next Top Model while squirming in pain from my masseuse lady's man hands.
After the massage we headed home and I went straight to bed.
Max and I decided to roam the city on our own today. We started the day with a tutorial from his mom on how to use the Metro and where all of the major stops were. Then we walked with Ivan down the street to the 24-hour McDonald's to use their wifi. Turns out it was a Hinet hotspot and you needed a subscription so we headed towards Starbucks instead. Starbucks turned out to be a Wifly hotspot (still need a subscription) but Max randomly got logged in and was able to connect. It was such a sad thing to stand with dead devices while watching Max roam Google maps looking for the next nearest free wifi spot. After trying a few more places to no avail, Ivan headed back and Max and I hopped on the metro headed towards Taipei City Hall.
The metro was quick and easy to navigate. There was a quick change of trains at the Taipei Main Station and soon we were back in the main shopping district. It took a while to orient ourselves because the shops were basically blocks of department stores that looked the same but were numbered A4, A8, A9, etc. Outside of one of them we caught a free wifi hotspot and sat on the bench for 10 minutes uploading pictures, looking up restaurants, etc. We walked around looking for Hankyu department store which was supposed to have a Uniqlo and a Muji store.
We wandered into a building called Eslite which was kind of like a Fred Segal on steroids. There were a lot of Japanese-esque mini boutiques and everything was super expensive. After a quick browse we headed to the next block which turned out to be Hankyu. The main floor was a lobby connected to the Taipei City Hall metro station (how did we miss this??) and the main department store. We headed down the escalator and saw Uniqlo (B1) and Muji (B2). I was pretty hungry at this point so we browsed the food court first. Almost all of the department store blocks had a food court in the basement. We saw a katsu place called Anzu with a long line and decided almost immediately to join the line. Chinese rule: if there is a line, the food must be good! Also, I caught a wifi signal in line so I was able to log into Facebook and check in on Foursquare. Turns out we had wifi access in the restaurant too so it was the first time it felt like we were eating back in the US... taking pictures here and there and uploading them while we waited for our food.
The katsu was amazing. It reminded me a lot like Wako: we were given toasted sesames to grind in a bowl and the katsu was served on a tin cooling rack. Max had the TORO black pig which was SUPER fatty and I had the tiger prawn with pork tenderloin which was delicious. It came with a salad and choice of soup too.
After that we did a little shopping at Muji and then headed up to Uniqlo. Jeggings seemed to be an in thing there and I tried on a couple of pairs but they looked horrible! Bad throwback to the nineties. Uniqlo was by far the most crowded store we visited -- there was a long line at the fitting rooms and it took about 20 minutes to finally get in.
On the way out we hit up the food court floor again for a snack. (Okay, actually for the wifi.) We had some fresh juice at Happy Inn. Max had the "green bean job tear" and I had a papaya yogurt. We picked up a crepe cake for Chinese New Year and headed home.
It was about a 10-15 minute walk home from the metro station so we stopped by a cosmetic store to pick up some face masks and the Taiwan version of Best Buy to see if they sold scanners so we could scan Max's baby pictures. They didn't have any standalone scanners so we headed back home. I was super tired and hurting all over so after a short rest (of stuffing face with CNY snacks) we headed to the Shilin Night Market for a massage. It was $600NT for a 45 minute foot + shoulder massage (about $20) that came with a snack and some hot tea. Each lounge chair had its own TV and headphones so I watched America's Next Top Model while squirming in pain from my masseuse lady's man hands.
After the massage we headed home and I went straight to bed.




