Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Darker Than Dark Chocolate Cake



Good morning Taipei! I was craving for some hot you tiao (deep fried dough, 油条), but ended up getting some chocolate cakes instead when I saw 2 interesting looking cafes. Just a side track, and it's purely my guess:- I noticed there are plentiful "Yong He Dou Jiang"s (永和豆浆) in Singapore, China and Taiwan. Please don't quote me on this, but I think I have chanced upon the place of origin. Yong He (永和)is a district in southwest Taipei, and yes I witnessed more than a handful of shops with the same name, with almost the same palate of delightful morning snacks, with a steady stream of patrons on scooters and regulars from the neighbourhood.



Yes! Back to the cake. And no, I have not added a black filter over the picture. I had a shock when I unwrapped the translucent wrapper, (though I had expected it won't be a regular choc cake since it's named Black Chocolate Cake "黑炭巧克力蛋糕" and I hope I remembered that correctly as I don't read traditional Chinese too well). It revealed to be charred-er-than-charred-brownie cake! Pleasantly amused and not-too-hungry, I decided to keep it back in the fridge for some better photos tomorrow morning.




Having bought 2 cakes from 2 shops just 3 metres away from each other (added some night shots of the 2 when I passed them again), it is interesting to find similar looking packaging in similar colours. I got home with a choc mousse cake from Cafe 85°C and a dark (a-hem, i mean a really dark) choc cake from Cafe 8. The cakes don't come with ribbons actually (sorry to mislead!). They are some of my rewards from 2 hours of ribbon shopping at the wholesalers'. I am not sure if anyone of you reading this share this fetish (or being anal, as a friend has put it), but I really have this thing for double faced ribbon; They do a neat job of completing a knot effortlessly. You need to twist and turn single faced ones to have the shiny-sides-up! If you bother, that is. ^__^




I am overall very impressed with the cute and chic appeal of the cake boxes. They are especially neat in such small packages. I don't do them justice with such bad lighting and photography. If someone have some good tips on photography (especially for food), please do drop me a note!

On a finishing note and a prelude to some sweet dreams, I will try to hit the Taipei store of Dean & Deluca tomorrow. It would be tempting not to window shop, and almost insurmountable to exit the shop without aa long and big lunch, but we should always press on when we are in a city with such a street-food galore and some of the best Chinese food around yeah? (in my opinion that is!)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow! K, I must say I'm terribly impressed by the pictures. Don't worry about the lighting, it has brought out the good contrast between the ebony cakes and velvety ribbons. Nice arrangement of colors & object placements too! Can I say "Wow!" again?! hahaha....

I hear you on your 2-faced (I prefer calling them 2-faced than the plain double-sided) ribbons. It's not very commonly found in the stores and even rarer to receive a gift secured with them. I guess not everyone places so much emphasis on intricate details as such. Most people won't even bother if the color of the ribbons matches that of the wrapper at all either.

Not sure about you, but I'm one of those who open a beautifully-wrapped gift carefully & keep the packaging - paper, ribbons, et al. Especially if the gift is from a friend... brutally tearing the packaging apart is comparable to ripping off someone's clothes... absolutely rude!

Looking forward to more lyrical blog entries illustrated with rich pictures, K!! ^^

~ C ~

Anonymous said...

Wow! K, I must say I'm terribly impressed by the pictures. Don't worry about the lighting, it has brought out the good contrast between the ebony cakes and their logo packaging. Nice arrangement of colors & object placements too! Can I say "Wow!" again?! hahaha....

I hear you on your 2-faced (I prefer calling them 2-faced than the plain double-sided) ribbons. It's not very commonly found in the stores and even rarer to receive a gift secured with them. I guess not everyone places so much emphasis on intricate details as such. Most people won't even bother if the color of the ribbons matches that of the wrapper at all either.

Not sure about you, but I'm one of those who opens a beautifully-wrapped gift carefully & keeps the packaging - paper, ribbons, et al. Especially if the gift is from a friend... brutally tearing the packaging apart is comparable to ripping off someone's clothes... absolutely rude!

Looking forward to more lyrical blog entries illustrated with rich pictures, K!! ^^

~ C ~

Karen said...

hey C! thank you for the encouragement! if you ever need ribbons for some gift wrapping, you know who to come to! ^^

Anonymous said...

viagra cheap non prescription viagra viagra australia buy viagra in canada viva viagra viagra cheap buy online watermelon viagra buy generic viagra viagra cialis levitra which is better cialis or viagra uk alternative viagra viagra and cannabis viagra and cialis make your own viagra