Monday, June 2, 2014

Visiting the Office

We got "photo bombed" by the PLA
soldier in the background

This is the big leagues folks
I visited the GF's office over the holiday to checkout the work environment and participate in some water cooler chat.  Since she works as a tour guide here in Beijing, the office visit wasn't as mundane as it initially sounded.  We took the hutongs behind my apartment all the way to Tiananmen Square Monday on a tour of some of the capital's most iconic sites.  The square wasn't very crowded considering it was the Dragon Boat Holiday.  On a side note, I am not really sure what the Dragon Boat Holiday is for because my day had a distinct lack of dragons and a complete absence of boats.
I am going to have to get one of these

Despite this confusing Chinese holiday, we overcame the shortcomings of the holiday and created a few of our own traditions.  On the way to the square, we stopped in at a cafe for a few drinks.  It was in this unassuming cafe that a new milestone in my life was achieved.  I won my first xiang qi victory against Tang Qi.  The subject is still a point of contention in our household, with her reminding me about the 99 games in a row that I lost before my first victory, but the sweet taste of that one victory is so good.
Checkout that Laowai in a
green hat

Right about here, our maturity
level bottomed out
The rest of our day was spent checking out the square and the Qianmen shopping district to the south.  The Qianmen district, just south of the Qianmen gate, is pretty much the Chinese equivalent of the Mainstreet, USA at the Disney theme parks.  It comes complete with every bland American and Japanese chain store that you can think of and a trolly system that is nothing more than a charming novelty.  Ever want to drink coffee at a Starbucks that is next to a pagoda......me neither, but the Qianmen District is worth checking out.

They did a pretty good job getting it to
look to scale on the 100 yuan bill
Our trip to Tiananmen proved quite enlightening.  Initially I just wanted to checkout the increased security for the "anniversary" this week, but the trip ended up being a lot more about the "fun" and less about the "fear".  It also gave Tang Qi the opportunity to be the tourist instead of the tour guide.

Though going into the office on your day off might sound like a terrible way to spend a holiday, we both managed to have a lot of fun and enjoy the great weather now that Beijing is finally cooling off.





Thursday, May 29, 2014

Beat the Heat with Chuaner

The capital continues experiencing a heat wave as everyone attempts to keep cool this summer.  Temperatures climbed to 107 degrees fahrenheit today (I think that is something like 10 degrees celsius).  Though Beijing's sidewalks are far too dirty to attempt the old "cooking an egg on the sidewalk" stunt, the capital boasts some great ways to beat the heat and make those hot summer days a little more fun, especially when it comes to eating.
Chewing down some chuaner

Chuaner, pronounced chawrr, originates in China's troubled Xinjiang Autonomous Region.  I always make the joke, "Xinjiang.....2% of China's population......50% of the tastiness."  And yes, no one ever laughs when I tell it in person either.  Anyway, the chuaner is a Chinese form of barbeque on a stick that everyone likes to eat during the summer months.  I am pretty sure that the restaurant behind my house employees a seasonal chuaner chef, because he doesn't work there in winter, only during the summer months.  Also, most places use a hairdryer to help heat the chuaner.  I like to think that this not-so-secret ingredient adds extra flavor and dander to the food.

You can get almost anything barbecued with chuaner (the name of the spice used to season the food).  Lamb is the most popular, and there are few things as satisfying as eating a giant leg of lamb on a hot summer day.

Everyone loves lamb

My neighborhood, Beixinqiao, now sports more chuaner restaurants than people, making it easy to enjoy this Chinese form of summer barbeque.  If you're having trouble beating the Beijing heat, grab an Arctic or a Yanjing and enjoy some chuaner.      

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Moving Jobs: Takin' Care of Business

You may or may not have noticed this blog's recent name change.  "ChOFFICE SPACE" no longer seemed appropriate, because as of last week, I am now working at a new job.  My days of coming into the office and reading news articles for nine hours straight have ended and not a moment too soon.  I spent so much time on the BBC website that they should have made me an honorary foreign correspondent.

A smart woman once told me that no foreigner working in China ever made it here without being "duped".  Truthfully this statement is pretty accurate, and I am sure most of my expatriated friends would certainly agree.  Though the job is normally a bust, laowai usually end up staying for a few years.  Some might ask why, and to this I simply reply the adventure of it.  Life in the Middle Kingdom certainly isn't easy, least of all for the Chinese that don't have the option to leave.  However, this is what I find rewarding.        

Now it's x-treme
Striking out and leaving your job for the uncertainty of a new position can be stressful.  However, in my case it certainly felt needed.  So wish me luck at the new job, and enjoy my rebranding efforts for the blog.  I am thinking of just turning the logo sideways.  The kids seem to love that these days.

Also, here is a cartoon that I thought was funny
      

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Persistence is Futile: Efforts to Convince Friends and Family to Visit Beijing

Literally Everything in China is Under Construction
Convincing friends and family to visit me in China is sort of a futile effort.  Let's be honest, China has a very well-earned image problem in the rest of the world when it comes to attracting tourists.  It's smoggy, crowded, and hectic.  Not exactly most people's idea of dream vacation.  Especially not for my friends and relatives that vacation down at the Gulf of Mexico year after year.

Summer Palace
Despite this, my mother has decided to visit Beijing sometime in July, and the planning process has begun for the trip.....and so have the headaches.  We hold very different ideas of what a vacation in China should include.  The fact my father refuses to come continues to escalate this "Travel Planning Cold War" to new heights.  Their constant threats to pull-the-plug on the trip don't make matters easier either.  And I continually feel the need to explain to my girlfriend that my father doesn't hate her culture, he just doesn't want to visit or have anything to do with it.    

Temple of Heaven
Another problem I continually encounter is that everyone seems to think there're a lot more tourist attractions in the Beijing area than there really are.  Don't get me wrong, there's the Forbidden City, Temple of Heaven, Lama Temple, and the Great Wall.  However, they are in really close proximity to each other, with the exception of the Great Wall, meaning you can visit most of the city's major POI in a few days.

Obviously, curved roof =
Chinese tourist attraction
Spending two weeks in Beijing means a visitor will have to tap the city's less traditional tourist attractions such as the 798 District or just kickin' it in the hutongs, both of which appeal far more to this lao wei Beijinger than another trip to the Forbidden City.  Welcome to the Forbidden City.  If you'd like to see what was inside of the palace, please schedule a trip to Taipei, Taiwan.  This problem is exacerbated by the fact that not many people, including myself, don't consider the monolithic, Orwellian structures of the CPC as tourist attractions, at least not yet.  Maybe one day, the image of the Great Hall of the People will become the defining image of the city, but I wouldn't count on it.

Sometimes planning a trip can be more exhausting than the trip itself.  Certainly, helping other people plan a trip is more exhausting than the actual trip.  I just hope that I get some good memories out of this experience....



  


Audio Books: An Alternative to Alternative Rock

I have never been too fond of audio books as a substitute for the real thing.  Remember when they were called book-on-tapes.  Man the 80's and 90's were crazy, right?  Mostly, I use them as something to help me fall asleep.  Sort of like a sleeping bill made from the voices of B-list celebrities.  Every time I hear the dude who played Carlton on the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air reading Timeline, I become a narcoleptic. I just don't really retain much of the story from audio books, and this problem has led me to avoid them for the past several years.

However, I recently purchased one from audible.com, Amazon's audio books website.  I got really pissed when I realized that I'd purchased the abridged version by accident, but truthfully it was my own fault.  I leaped before I looked.  My experience listening to the story has been mixed.  On the one hand I needed a change.  I listen to my ipod during my half hour commute everyday, and I have simply run out of music.  Obtaining new music remains a challenge here in China, and a good audio book was a great, though expensive alternative.  On the downside, the dangers and distractions of the Beijing jungle prevent me from catching everything that happens in the story.  I am constantly asking myself how certain characters got into situations, or in some extreme cases, who the characters even are.

I will definitely have to read the actual book someday.  It is book two of a three book Star Wars trilogy, and I want to complete reading them before the new Disney-ized films hit screens.  When getting an actual copy of the book proved too expensive (tai gui la), I decided to find and download the audio book online.  Besides at this point in my life, I have a backlog of books that I need to read.  I plan to use audio books as a way to listen (read) classics that I'd otherwise skip.  Anyone up for War and Peace while trapped in Beijing traffic?

Of course, the recent surge in Star Wars related press influenced my choice in audio book.  I even hear their planning on giving Boba Fett his own film, which is awesome, because everyone loves the Fett-man.....

     

    

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Cooking Up Culinary and Cultural Understanding

Few foods express the individuality of the chef as much as chili.  Everyone’s chili is unique, and everyone thinks theirs is the best.  Ever wonder what chili would taste like with M&M’s in it?  Throw some in there then and make your own crazy M&M chili.  Remember that time someone found a thumb in their chili at Wendy’s?  No? Really?  Okay….Supposedly they planted it there anyway, but it just goes to show you that you can literally put anything in chili and still call it chili.  The great part of this is the awesome flavors that people come up with for their chili experiments.      

Cooking chili in Beijing has proven itself more difficult than you might initially think.  For one, chili ingredients tend to be very expensive.  It cost me nearly $50 yesterday for a basket of chili ingredients that would only cost me around $7-$15 in the United States.  Chili is no cheap dinner alternative here.  You really have to be dedicated to making it, or you’ll just end up bankrupt and hungry.  Also, obtaining some of the necessary ingredients requires visiting one of the city’s “western” grocery stores.  “Western” in this case basically just means they have a canned food section.  However, it still means that you have to get on the bus and take yourself to the Sanlitun district.  
      
When asked by my girlfriend what food I wanted her to cook the most, I replied chili.  No question.  Most foods are easy to get in Beijing, and the capital is certainly not short of great options for burgers.  After establishing my craving for chili, we had an interesting discussion about the “freewheeling” nature of cooking chili.  I found her hunched over her ipad looking up recipes online.  She made some comments about the large number of western spices that she was going to need to buy.  I told her not to worry and just to use whatever spices were available. 

“Would it still be chili then?” she asked. 

“Of course, you can put whatever you want in chili,” I told her.

This initially perplexed her.  To be fair, what other kind of food has listed recipes that you can totally ignore and still accomplish your culinary goal?  I am hoping she comes up with some kind of east-meets-west chili.  Either way, I am getting a free meal out of this, so no complaining here.  I am just excited to see what she’ll come up with for me.    

You sort of have to understand the general Chinese mindset about food.  No nationality on earth care more about food than the Chinese.  They just don't care about food in the American sense.  In the United States, people mainly want to know whether the food tastes good.  As KFC has proven, it doesn't matter if you substitute chicken patties for buns, as long as people think it tastes good.  In China people tend to focus on other factors, like how "correct" are the preparation and presentation.  Basically, does this food look like its supposed to look.  You'll notice many Chinese citizens visiting the United States obsess over whether American Chinese food is "authentic" or not, without caring whether it tastes good.  This sort of answers the question of why fortune cookies and crab ragoons haven't caught on in China, and probably never will either.    

Keeping this in mind, it's no wonder my girlfriend was surprised that she could just throw out the chili recipes she found, and just create her own culinary masterpiece.  It just goes to show you that differences can be culinary as well as cultural.          


Thursday, April 24, 2014

ANZAC Day

Future King and Queen of the
Commonwealth Realms in Australia
Happy ANZAC day to all my Australian and Kiwi readers out there (all "none" of you).  Some of you might be thinking, "what is ANZAC Day?"  It just so happens that I am an expert regarding the subject because I spent a few hours last night learning about it firsthand from the person on the bar stool next to me.  ANZAC Day commemorates the soldiers of the Australia New Zealand Army Corp lost during the allied campaign at Gallipoli.  The day is usually celebrated with a sunrise service, breakfast, and afternoon parades that honor Australian and New Zealand's veterans.  The day is sort of equivalent to Memorial Day in the United States, but with some important historical ties to the concept of Austalian and New Zealand's identities as independent nations (both are currently Commonwealth Realms).
An Australian veteran during an ANZAC Day parade

It's also a big deal in other parts of the British Empire, with services in London, Hong Kong, and Singapore taking place this morning.  The guy last night brought me up to speed on some of the more colorful traditions associated with ANZAC Day.  He told me that it is the only day that you can gamble in pubs and bars in Australia because people play this game called "2 up".  The game was a favorite pastime of ANZAC soldiers and the tradition of playing it remains an important part of ANZAC Day.  He told me it is an easy way to spot Australians and New Zealanders living abroad on ANZAC Day.  Despite this fun tradition, the holiday is a quite somber affair, from what I can tell, with the emphasis on honoring veterans and those lost during wars.    
Ceremony at the Cenotaph in Hong Kong

ANZAC Day service in Singapore
Getting to learn about other nation's holidays is one of my favorite things.  Though familiar with the Gallipoli campaign and ANZAC Day before last night, I didn't realize how important it was to the identities of New Zealand and Australians, especially those in the diaspora.  Some even argue that the Gallipoli campaigns galvanized the national identities of Australia and New Zealand, uniting an otherwise fractured group of territories.  Whether or not this is true, expect to see some of your Kiwi and Australian friends visiting the nearest Cenotaph today.  Make sure to remember that it is toughest to be away from home on the holidays most associated with your national identity.  Sometimes people just want to tell you about "home."



Photos courtesy of the BBC World Service