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Bao restaurant founder Erchen Chang leads a food tour of Taipei

The chef loves the markets, museums and “theatrics” of her hometown

If you don’t know Taipei but know Tokyo or Shanghai, you might think it’s loads of high-rises. But no, there are probably only a couple – then a lot of low buildings. Taipei is very understated in terms of its architecture; Taiwan is relatively a new country. There’s a sense of grey across the city that, for me, is similar to being in London. It’s quite wet; it’s slightly dystopian. But there are lots of pockets and people that make it worth visiting. 

Erchen Chang in a taxi in the Ximending neighbourhood of Taipei

I left Taipei for London when I was 14 – I’d always been interested in art and Taiwan’s education was more academic – but I come back every year. When I graduated from the Slade School of Fine Art in 2012, I took my husband and sister-in-law on a road trip here. We ate gua bao – bao stuffed with pork belly – at Lan Jia Gua Bao, then went to Jiaoxi Baozi in Yilan, a famous baozi place (baozi is like an enclosed bao). We had the most pillowy, light buns – big but very airy. When we came back to London, we started trying to crack our own recipe. That led to a pop-up, then a market space. We opened our first permanent restaurant in 2015.

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