legend seen on a tee-shirt, Beijing*
Successful Searches for Roast Duck (Easy) and 'Tea Tools' (More Challenging)
Whatever Happened to the Friendship Store?
People's Republic of China |
We walked 2km along Dongchang’an Jie, first retracing our steps of two weeks ago to the Ming Observatory, and then continuing over the Jianguomen flyover in the direction of the Friendship Store. This venerable institution, once open only to foreigners, diplomats and high ranking officials, was created to ease the lives of the Soviet experts sent to assist with China's economic development in the 1950s. In the early days of western contact it was the only place the new western tourist could shop. Not allowed local currency (as in North Korea now) the Friendship Stores were the only places they could spend their Foreign Exchange Certificates. They sold good quality Chinese arts and crafts, western luxuries and uncensored western newspapers while guards on the doors kept out the ordinary people. Foreign Exchange Certificates disappeared in the 1990s, western luxuries became widely available and restrictions on who could use the shops were abolished.
Crossing the Jianguomen flyover |
We first visited the
Beijing Friendship Store in 2004. In 2007 it was still the best place for
Chinese oddities - the particular bamboo trays needed for tea ceremonies for
instance - but the Friendship Store concept was beginning to look dated. This
time our mission was to find a set of tea tools - our daughter wanted them to go
with her tray.
As we should have
expected, the Friendship Store is no more. The building was still there, draped
with banners bearing names you can find in every major city on earth (except
Pyongyang). I cursed Armani and Versace, and Baskin Robbins whose stall is next
door and u-bloody-biquitios Mc-sodding-Donalds for their homogenisation of the
globe. ‘Our world is a duller, less varied place because of you,’ I thought as I
readjusted my Ray-Bans on my nose (and I cursed Ray-Bans too, smug in the
knowledge that I bought mine for £2.40 in a Buddhist Temple in Myanmar, so I
know they were genuine fakes).
Having failed in
our tea tool mission we made the long walk back and found a place near the
station that would sell us a coffee - not a drink much liked by the Chinese and
not easy to get if you are determined to avoid what our daughter calls with a
shudder ‘the Scottish Restaurant’ (though Ronald McD is no sort of Celt I
recognise).
Along Dongchang’an Jie to Wanfujing Walking Street
Back at our hotel we showered, changed and checked out before returning to Dongchang’an Jie, this time heading west towards the city
centre. Walking slowly in the hot sunshine it took us a while to reach
Wangfujing, one of Beijing’s main shopping streets.
Dongchang'an Jie - not quite the last bicycle left in Beijing |
Much of Wangfujing is pedestrianised, what the Chinese call a ‘walking street’, and we made a gratifying detour round the huge queue at the Jasmine Ice Cream stall – Chinese produced ice cream with an essentially Chinese flavour and nothing to do with Baskin Robbins.
Wangfujing Walking Street |
Shuaifuyuan Hutong and Quanjude Roast Duck
We turned right into Shuaifuyuan Hutong, a small street decorated in such a way that, had it been in anywhere else in the world, we would have called it ‘Chinatown’. The Chinese relish playing up to their stereotype sticking plastic Ming gables and red paper lanterns everywhere. On one side of the street is a jiaozi (dumpling) restaurant, and everyone from out of town has to have their photograph taken with their statue. Lynne saw no reason to be different.
Lynne wants a jiaozi, off Wangfujing, Beijing |
Our goal, though, was the restaurant opposite. Having failed on our quest for roast duck at Bianyifang on Lynne's birthday we had decided to herald our departure with a duck lunch at Quanjude, the oldest and perhaps finest duck restaurant in Beijing. After a tricky day’s negotiating it was over roast duck at Quanjude that Henry Kissinger and his Chinese counterparts patched up their differences.
Quanjude Duck Restaurant, Shuaifuyuan Hutong, off Wangfujing, Beijing |
The restaurant is expensive, by Chinese standards. Beers were 25 Yuan (£2.50) each; the previous evening our entire dinner (including
two of the same beers) came to less than 50, but here we were paying for the
ambience and the theatre.
Our duck was wheeled out by a young man in a chef’s hat, surgical mask and latex gloves who set about carving it for us. We had a brief demonstration of how to fold a pancake round spring onion and slices of duck smeared with plum sauce – a task we had failed at before and failed at again. Looking round the room we were gratified to find that other diners – overwhelmingly Chinese – were equally inept.
Carving our duck, Quanjude Duck Restaurant, Wangfujing, Beijing |
The questionable structural integrity of the wraps did not detract from our enjoyment and just as we finished the leg and breast meat,
along came the soup and the wings and other bits to nibble.
I love duck but a question remains unresolved: for my final meal on earth would I prefer duck in Beijing or confit de canard beside the
Dordogne (before, of course, fresh pineapple and coconut ice cream)? Further research will be necessary.
We ate a whole duck between us, which cost £35, extravagant by Chinese standards but cheaper than the bottle of wine which accompanied our wedding anniversary meal at the Yorke Arms in Pately Bridge.
Quanjude Duck Restaurant, Beijing |
In Search of Tea Tools
We left Quanjude happy and replete and applied ourselves to the serious business of finding tea tools. And what are tea tools, you ask?
They are a collection of nicely polished wooden scoops, prodders and brushes; the
Swiss Army Knife of the tea ceremony.
Wangfujing has several of what appear to be department stores, so we wandered into the nearest confident that a Chinese department
store would have a tea department. It was not, we discovered a department
store, at least not one I would recognise. I might be out of touch, the
department store is not my natural environment, but last time I was in one it
consisted of departments selling various related items. This store housed a
series of individual stalls, each selling one particular brand name, some we
knew and others we had never heard of. There were six floors like this - yes,
we went up the escalator to the top and checked every single one with a growing
feeling of disbelief. As market stalls go they were certainly posh, some were
larger than many shops, but market stalls were what they were and clothes were
pretty well all that was on offer.
We tried another ‘department store’ and it was the same. Brand names here are everything. For the second time that day I found myself
cursing Jimmy Choo, Hugo Boss and their ilk. I am sure there are people in the
west who are obsessed with brand names and feel themselves naked without an
Armani suit or Gucci handbag, but I doubt there are very many and they include
nobody I know (or want to know). The Chinese have a fascination with all things
western and the advertising campaigns of Vuitton, Versace and others are
attempting to convince (have already convinced?) a gullible section of the
newly wealthy that brand names are the pinnacle of western culture. When they
eventually see through it, and see through it they will, the Chinese view of
western culture will have been damaged beyond repair. If all we have to offer
is KFC and Oakley sunglasses, then we truly are culturally bankrupt.
Rant over.
On a lighter note, the obsession with western culture has led the sweatshops of Guangdong to produce tee-shirts by the million bearing
slogans in English, very few of them making any sense. For some choice
examples see the top of this, and the preceding three posts (here, here and
here).
We eventually found a tea shop giving tastings and actually using tea tools. We inquired, mainly by mime, whether they had any for sale. The assistant looked blank, but fetched a colleague whose more agile mind deduced what these weird foreigners were after. We soon became the proud owners (if only until we passed them on to our daughter) of the cool tools below.
Tea tools |
The Art Exhibition Scam
Leaving Wangfujing we continued to the city centre. On the way we encountered, and not for the first time, the 'art exhibition scam'. A
couple of personable young people fall into step with you and strike up a
conversation. After a while they tell you they are art students and invite you
to their end of year exhibition. The idea is that you go to the show and pay high
prices for cheap mass produced prints in the belief that you are buying the student’s
own work and helping fund their education. We did not fall for it in 2004 when
we first visited Beijing and were not going to fall for it this time, though
Dan Cruikshank did when he was filming 'Round the World in 80 Treasures'. I
don't think the story was in the TV series, but he writes about it in the book.
Tiananmen Square
We rested on a low wall near the portrait of Mao in Tiananmen Square. During a ten minute sit we were approached by two different touts
selling guided tours to the Great Wall. They each gave us business cards,
should we change our minds. They were identical except for the name.
Near the portrait of Mao, outside Tiananmen Square,Beijing with a bag of tea tools |
We walked to the entrance of the Forbidden City but did not go in - we did that in 2004. The Forbidden City is big and to do it justice requires
several hours. After a long, hot walk we lacked the energy.
Instead we decided to stroll across Tiananmen Square. On our previous visits we had merely walked through the underpass and emerged on the
square, but now we had to negotiate a security check. There is nothing the
Chinese authorities like more than a bit of intrusive security to remind the
people who is in charge. [a month later (28/10/13) a
car was driven deliberately into the crowd by the entrance to the Forbidden City and burst
into flames killing five (three of them the occupants of the car). ‘Security’,
I repeat, exists to remind people who is in charge, it rarely makes anyone
safer.]
Tiananmen Square, a vast concrete wasteland |
Despite some imposing buildings around it, and Mao's mausoleum in the centre (we visited him in 2004, too) Tiananmen Square is
largely an ugly expanse of bare concrete. It is a vast space and there is
usually an event of some sort going on and a soldier or two prowling round to
ensure everybody behaves decorously, but the only thing worth seeing, apart
from Mao's mausoleum, is the Qianmen Gate at the southern end.
Qianmen Gate, Tiananmen Square |
After seeing that there was not much to do except descend to the adjacent metro station and head back to our hotel to pick up our cases
before setting off for the airport and the start of the long journey home.
*Gungbo (not gungo) is the pinyin transliteration for a dish of chicken, chillies and peanuts which might produce a smiley face. Harvey Ball was a commercial artist credited with designing the 'smiley face'. Unlike the others, which are pure gibberish, this tee-shirt has some sort of narrative, or at least stream of consciousness. How aware of the narrative the designer was is another issue.
Part 2: Beijing (2): Xicheng and Beihai Park
Part 3: Beijing to Pyongyang
Part 4: Pyongyang (1): A Day for Bowing
Part 5: Pyongyang (2): A Day for Waving
Part 6: Panmunjom and the DMZ
Part 7: Sariwon and Nampho
Part 8: The Nampho Barrage and back to Pyongyang
Part 9: Last Day in Pyongyang (1), Gifts and the Metro
Part 10: Last Day in Pyongyang (2) Serious Study and Juche Thought
Part 11: By Train out of the DPRK
Part 12: Datong
Part 13: Pingyao, Preserved Ming City
Part 14: Pingyao to Taiyuan and the Bullet Train back to Beijing
Part 15: Beijing (3): A Duck and a Rant