When I left in 2007, Vienna was knee-deep in a pan-Asian
food (and, with limitations, culture) craze. Sushi places were opening their
doors at every street corner. Chinese dresses could be found in main street
stores. People were crazy about Feng Shui, “Zen” this and “Zen” that, “Asian”
spas and other true or perceived bits and pieces of “Asian” culture. Old Chinese
restaurants decorated with generic imperial-looking paraphernalia that used to
offer little more than chopped up meat on rice (with perhaps a few forlorn
bamboo sprouts) felt compelled to ramp up their game. Instead of dirt-cheap
lunch specials of sweet and sour pork, the word “Wok” appeared on signs in
their windows and they changed their names from “China-Restaurant zum Goldenen
Drachen” to things like “Lotus Asia Küche”.
Having lived in Seattle, and having travelled to China
itself, I felt (for a change) well ahead of the fashion. I researched Viennese Chinese
restaurants that offered dim sum, deplored the lack of Thai and Vietnamese food
and was suspicious about the rise of the “Lotus Asia Küche”-category. If a host
culture is clearly interested in your continent’s cultures, why would you move
from more to less specific? Why go pan-Asian instead of being more daring and
authentic with the spectrum of Chinese food offered? Off to Tucson I went,
which was, admittedly, not the best ground for the various Asian cuisines, but
nevertheless, there was “Gee’s Garden” for dim sum, “Sushi Yukari” for
authentic Japanese food (as assured by several Japanese and experienced
travellers to Japan), and several good Thai and Vietnamese places.
Preparing to go back to Vienna after 5 years, I was hopeful. Maybe
the Asian craze had matured, maybe Austrians, living in the center of a small continent
with 30+ languages and cultures, had gotten more informed about “Asia” and
maybe one could now have a good green Thai curry in this town.
At first glance, I am a little taken aback. It looks like
the happy mixing has continued uninhibited. The “Lotus Asia Küche” places seem
to thrive. The menu of a Korean restaurant in my area of town also offers Thai
and Japanese food. The lunch buffet at a “Wok” place near university is an
unholy mix of Chinese and Sushi, with a deep-fried banana dessert that I
recognized from the old-style Austrian Chinese restaurants but that I have
never encountered in an American place or during my ten days in China. Chopsticks
took a little while to find. A somewhat more upscale-looking place called
“Chang” right around the corner from my apartment on one hand specializes on Peking
duck, and the staff spoke Chinese to each other, on the other hand, much of their
menu looked rather Thai. However, Thai or Chinese, the food was definitely good
enough for a neighborhood round-the-corner place. To my knowledge, there is no
specific law that says that no human is able to cook both good Chinese and good
Thai food. Perhaps the mix places aren’t all that bad. Buuut…mix places somehow
always make me cautious. And, of course, the search has only begun. Maybe the
“pure” places are waiting to be found in the urban jungle.
On the other side of the spectrum, finding crazier mixes than
Chinese-Thai has been no problem. There is a new fast food on Vienna’s streets:
“Asian noodles". Noodles everywhere, in holes in the walls of tube stations, in
booths together with pizza slices, at the traditional Viennese Würstelstand, at
McDonalds (“McNoodle”, no joke!), and in döner kebab stands. Yes, döner kebab
stands. No, I could never have imagined it either. Also, kebab meat can now be
had in the to-go boxes
(“kebab box”) familiar (to me, at least) from American Chinese restaurants. No, I have not tried it, or the noodles from the kebab stands, I
have not yet been desperate/drunk enough.
Some of these booths go the whole nine
yards: kebab, pizza, sausage and noodles. Look no further, we’ve got it all
right here.
What else is new on the “Asian” food front? Now, this I am
utterly excited about: Bubble Tea! During my stay in Seattle, I developed a
serious addiction to that stuff and could not find it for saving my life when I
returned to Vienna. I was seriously contemplating cooking up my own tapioca.
The better part of a decade later – voila! Boy, was I ever ahead of the fashion! Even better,
the Austrian version is not catering to the American palate, i.e., I do not
have to order it “half as sweet as you would normally do it”. And the best
(worst?) thing: there are two Bubble Tea places right within a 3 minute walk
from my office.
Haven't done any more in depth look at this study other than read this article, but you may want to cut back a little from the bubble teas: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/05/bubble-tea-tapioca-pearls-may-cause-cancer-study-claims_n_1856152.html
AntwortenLöschenOh man, I really am not going there much now!
AntwortenLöschen