Handmade taro balls since 1949, crunchy peanut ice cream rolls and steaming fish ball soup — all in a lantern-lit gold-mining alley above the sea
Jiufen is a former gold-mining town turned hillside snack strip — narrow, steep, thick with charcoal smoke and roasting peanut aromas. Jishan Street is the beating heart: over 100 stalls stretching end to end, sea on one side, mountain on the other. The golden window is 15:00-17:00, when red lanterns flicker on and the sun rakes the alley gold.
The one catch is crowds — peak rush 14:00-19:00 turns the alley into a shuffle. Come before 11:00 or after 20:00 for breathing room. Some popular stalls sell out by late afternoon, so earlier is always smarter.
The most-loved dishes — ranked by what locals actually order, not what tourists are pushed toward
Jiufen's signature — freshly steamed taro and sweet potato balls, bouncier than anywhere else. Served hot in ginger syrup or cold over shaved ice. Colours: purple (taro), orange (sweet potato), green (matcha), grey (sesame).
Strange on paper, addictive in practice — a soft crepe or popiah skin rolled around shaved peanut brittle, one or two scoops of vanilla ice cream, and fresh cilantro (optional). Eat immediately while the skin is still crisp.
The comfort food of Jiufen — clear, mild broth with firm handmade fish balls, some stalls adding minced pork or squid. Pairs well with thin noodles or rice. Cheap, filling, warm.
Sticky rice dough mixed with mugwort — grey-green, chewy, earthy. Two fillings: savoury (preserved turnip + dried shrimp) or sweet (ground peanut + sugar). A traditional Hakka snack and one of Jiufen's best.
A Jiufen specialty hard to find elsewhere — fishballs marinated with red yeast rice residue. Vivid pink colour, mildly sweet-savoury, faint wine aroma. Bouncier texture than standard fishballs.
Eggs repeatedly braised in spiced soy broth until the exterior turns tough and coal-black, while the inside stays soft. Deep sweet-savoury, five-spice aroma. The most popular souvenir from Jiufen — keeps for days.
Glutinous rice with pickled greens and pork belly, steamed inside fresh bamboo until the bamboo scent permeates the rice. Peel and eat on the go — ideal hand food for the steep alley walk.
Mochi filled with sweetened taro paste, rolled in peanut flour or corn starch. Heavier and more fragrant than Japanese-style mochi — perfect with a pot of tea at one of the teahouses.
Steamed bun with minced wild boar filling — firmer and gamier than pork bao, with a deeper, earthier flavour. Stalls serve them piping hot; the aroma draws a queue.
Less a single dish, more an experience — oolong or red tea brewed in traditional clay pots, surrounded by red lanterns and aged wood that inspired countless Spirited Away comparisons. Light snacks (honeyed lychee, mochi, nuts) come with the tea set. Third-floor sea view is stunning.
Streets and markets where the food clusters are walkable
ถนนแคบหลักของจิ่วเฟิ่น 100+ แผง — ลูกเผือก โรลถั่วลิสง ลูกชิ้นปลา เค้กหญ้า ซาลาเปาหมูป่า ไข่ดำ ของฝาก เรียงกันตลอดแนว ชันเล็กน้อยแต่เดินสบาย ช่วงบ่ายคนแน่นสุด
บันไดหินชันที่พาไปสู่บ้านน้ำชา A-Mei — วิวโคมแดงจากตรงนี้ถ่ายออกมาสวยที่สุด เวลา 15:00-18:00 แสงทองลงมาพอดี มีคาเฟ่และร้านชาเรียงทั้งสองข้าง
จุดนัดพบของบ้านน้ำชาหลายหลัง — วิว Keelung Islet ในระยะ 1 กม. โคมแดงห้อยระโยงระยาง ช่วงพลบค่ำบรรยากาศดีที่สุด ค่าชาสูงกว่าตรอกล่าง แต่ทิวทัศน์ถ่ายโพสต์ได้ทันที
เดินไปอีก 10 นาทีจากจิ่วเฟิ่น — เงียบกว่า คนน้อยกว่า มีร้านอาหารท้องถิ่นเล็กๆ และร้านขนมที่คนในพื้นที่ยังไปกินอยู่จริงๆ เหมาะถ้าอยากหนีฝูงชน
The shops with queues — pin them on the map before you go
Open since 1949 — the grandmother of Jiufen taro balls. Sits at the top of Old Street with the best sea view. Handmade daily, no additives. Choose hot (ginger syrup) or cold (shaved ice). Five colours: taro, sweet potato, matcha, purple yam, sesame. Michelin Bib Gourmand.
The classic rival to A-Gan Yi — sits mid-Jishan Street. The elderly owner hand-rolls the taro balls at the front of the shop most days, making her herself part of the photo op. Five flavours, similar texture and price.
Multi-storey teahouse in antique wood, draped in red lanterns — widely cited as the Spirited Away visual inspiration. Oolong and Yi Mei tea in gongfu ceremony style. Small snack sets available. Third-floor sea view is the best in the area.
Red yeast fishballs that are hard to find elsewhere — vivid pink, mildly sweet-savoury, bouncy. The broth has a faint wine note. Eat solo or add thin noodles.
One of the most-queued stalls in Jiufen — Hakka grass cakes made fresh each morning. The savoury filling (preserved turnip and dried shrimp) is the standout. Sell out early; arrive before noon.