PassageMaker China
Whit's China Business Blog

Days 3-4

January 9, 2010 by whit · 1 Comment 

A note on these blog entries – if you are following this on Facebook (which is blocked rather effectively by the Great Firewall of China), if the photos don’t load properly go to my blog page – http://psschina.com/category/whits-china-business-blog/.

In yesterday’s post, I failed to include one very important photo of the single best vegetable dish in all of China.  This is from the Xinjiang restaurant on the night of my arrival.

Hand cut potato "noodles", stir fried with chiles

What you see in this picture is not a plate of noodles.  Rather it is a potato cut into incredibly thin, consistent strips that mimic the look of noodles.  This is all done by hand.  I do a fair amount of cooking, but I cannot even imagine the time and skill it must take to make this dish.  Quickly stir fried with chiles and chile oil, just so the potato begins to soften, this is one of the most elegant dishes I’ve eaten.  Costs about $2.50 at this upscale restaurant.

Now last night for dinner we went to Mao Jia, The House of Mao, for excellent Hunan food.  Mike’s wife is from Hunan, and it is one of my favorite styles of Chinese cuisine.  Some photos – getting hungry again just looking at them.

Mao's favorite dish - basically pork fat - and a lovely green bean dish

No wonder the Great Helmsman was portly - I practically had a heart attack just looking at it!

cold beef with chiles, cilantro and cucumbers

Pork with red chiles and beef with mild green chiles and mushrooms

This is only about half the food we ordered - they bring it in stages, as soon as the dish is ready

crepes filled with strawberry jam - yes, really - and it's not dessert. Came in the middle of the meal. Dessert in China is typically sliced oranges or watermelon.

soft shell shrimp with chiles - you eat the shells - one of my all-time favorites. There is also a salt crusted version of this dish that gives the shrimp a smokey flavor.

Pork shanks - awesome

The best mushroom dish I've ever eaten

a dish of a very delicate (and delicious) greens with pork

A very nice potato dish, but in comparison to the rest of the meal, not a standout

what a meal

Afterwards, I went out on the town with Dave Learn to a local nightclub.  The music was so loud you felt it in your bones.  A very good time despite the limited conversation.  Afterward, we went to get a massage at about 3 AM.  This is not as strange as it may sound.  It is quite common for saunas in China to operate 24 hours a day, and the place was well staffed and quite elegant.  Dave was in charge and so I am not sure what type of massage he ordered but it was at least two hours long and hurt like hell.  I woke up this morning feeling like I’d been on the losing end of a bar fight.  I got the crap beaten out of me by a 90 lb girl.  That said, it’s even money I’ll have another one in a day or so – at about $15, you can’t pass it up.

Despite getting home at dawn, after a few hours sleep, I was ready to go again.  Meeting Mike Bellamy at his new home for a lunch meeting, I was blown away by the view from his terrace.

My Blackberry Storm 2 has a nice camera, but can't do a panorama, so you'll have to use some imagination. This is the first shot, starting on the left

The tall building is the district police headquarters

The elevated highway goes to the Port of Yantian on the other side of the mountain. The red circle marks PassageMaker's office.

This road was under construction for years - now that it's finished getting to downtown Shenzhen is much quicker

The hills in the background are Hong Kong's New Territories - a tightly controlled international border with razor wire fences and guard towers.

Lunch consisted of fast food Japanese noodles for me and a Subway meatball sub for Mike in a mall food court.  Go figure.

At Mike’s building is a fire safety sign in the lobby.  He pointed it out to me because whoever made it used a computer translator “robot” to get the English.  Every expat has a book full of stories about terrible English translations, but this takes win, place and show in the international competition for world’s worst translation.

Here's the fire safety sign - looks OK, doesn't it?

"Withdrawal to the attention of North Korea"?! WTF?!

This a great example of why PassageMaker is in business.  The robot picked up a character, 朝, cháo, that is commonly used to abbreviate North Korea, but also means “towards”, as in “move towards the exit”.  Maybe someday they will make a translator that really does the job, but until then, you need experienced capable human beings.

We spent the rest of Saturday working at the office.  Tonight we are meeting a visiting friend for Mongolian food (I get hungry just writing those words) and then out to the grand opening of the new McCawley’s Irish Pub in the Futian district of Shenzhen.  The original McCawley’s is way out in Shekou, about an hour from the office, and it will be nice to have a good pub closer to the office.

More tomorrow…

Comments

One Response to “Days 3-4”
  1. WormFood says:

    I found this same fire sign in 华强北 (huaqiangbei), and lucky for me I had my camera with me. I couldn’t resist, I had to get a picture of it. If I didn’t have my camera with me, I would have come back to get a picture of that sign. What a classic. http://www.wormfood.net/pictures/in_case_of_fire_do_what%3f%3f%3f.jpg

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