Kaoliang aged in Cold War tunnels · meat-filled Fuzhou fish balls · Ji-Guang sesame bread from a 460-year recipe · flavours you won't find in Taipei
Matsu is not the Taiwan you know. These five small islands sit just 10 km from Fujian province in mainland China — 211 km from Taipei. The cultural roots here are Fuzhou (East Fujian), not Minnanese, which means the language, the architecture, and the food are completely different from the rest of Taiwan. Meat-filled fish balls, dried fish-paste noodles, old-wine chicken stew, and sorghum liquor aged inside Cold War military tunnels.
Fly from Taipei Songshan in 50 minutes to Beigan, then hop between islands by ferry. Plan at least 2 nights — morning wet-market breakfast, afternoon hunt for charcoal-baked Ji-Guang Bing, evening old-wine chicken stew, and a nightcap of aged Kaoliang inside Tunnel 88 where the jars have been maturing for years. Nothing else in Taiwan tastes quite like this.
The most-loved dishes — ranked by what locals actually order, not what tourists are pushed toward
Sorghum liquor distilled by the military since the 1950s. Two main strengths: 58° — sharp, grainy, powerful finish; 38° — smoother, good for pairing with food. The standout is Dongyin Aged Kaoliang, Taiwan's presidential-banquet liquor, matured in the constant-temperature stone chambers of Tunnel 88.
Hand-crafted from freshly minced fish, with a hidden core of seasoned pork mince inside. Bite through the springy fish exterior and a little burst of savoury pork broth hits you. Served in clear hot broth with fresh scallions. Pure Fuzhou — nothing like the fish balls in Taipei.
A flat sesame bread with a hole in the centre — soldiers in 1563 wore them on a cord around the neck during marches on the orders of general Qi Jiguang. The last artisan bakers in Matsu still use charcoal ovens, pressing the dough against the inner wall. Chewy, faintly smoky. Eat plain or stuffed with fried egg, pork, oysters, or shrimp — the locals call it the "Matsu burger."
Chicken simmered in Matsu old rice wine (老酒) aged at least two years in cool stone tunnels. The broth runs amber-red from the wine, with a gentle caramel sweetness and warming ginger bite. Every Matsu household makes this — traditionally given to new mothers as a restorative after birth.
Noodles made from fish-paste + a little flour, sun-dried for long shelf life — a practical solution from an era before refrigeration when the catch was too big to eat fresh. Delicately sweet, naturally oceanic, with a satisfying chew. Grandma Fish Noodle Shop (阿婆魚麵) on Beigan also does a brilliant crispy deep-fried version.
Fried rice coloured and flavoured with red koji (紅糟) — the spent lees from Matsu rice-wine production. Earthy brick-red hue, faintly fermented, lightly sweet with egg, pork strips and scallion. Only really possible here since fresh red koji rarely travels off the islands.
Sweet potato dough shaped into golden triangular parcels. Fillings: crushed peanuts, sesame, or pork fat with scallion oil. Two styles: deep-fried crispy or gently steamed. XieHeShiHang on Beigan serves the steamed version with shaved mung-bean ice — an unusual combination that somehow works.
Cold-water mussels farmed around the archipelago — larger than average, distinctly sweet and ocean-fresh. Steamed and eaten with ice-cold Kaoliang is the classic move. Some spots now offer a mussel-infused craft lager brewed only on the islands — worth seeking out.
Steamed brown-sugar cake with a springy, fudgy texture. The Matsu version is denser than the more famous Penghu style. Good warm or cold. An affordable souvenir that travels well.
Thin rice-flour noodles poured on the rim of a hot broth pot to cook in a thin sheet, then served in sweet fish stock with white pepper. Classic Fuzhou breakfast at Jieshou Market 2F — sold out before noon, so arrive by 8 AM or miss it.
Streets and markets where the food clusters are walkable
The food heart of Matsu — a short strip in the old town packing charcoal Ji-Guang Bing bakeries, Kaoliang bottle shops, morning noodle stalls, the Jieshou wet market (2F food stalls), and gift shops. Easy 20-minute walk but you'll linger much longer.
Beigan's main food village — A-Po Fish Noodle (mornings), Goldfish Water Workshop for sweet potato dumplings and old-wine noodles, Zhongyu seafood charcoal grill (evenings), and ABRAZO Coffee on the Visitor Center 2F (mornings). Most shops shut after 13:30 — come early.
Cold War tunnel blasted through granite — now a Kaoliang ageing cellar with rows of clay jars at a stable year-round temperature. Visit, taste, and buy a souvenir bottle. This is where you'll understand why Matsu Kaoliang tastes different.
The quieter southern pair of islands. Fewer restaurants but genuinely home-style Fuzhou cooking — raw seafood, minimal processing, family kitchens. ⚠️ Most restaurants only open in tourist season (May–Sep); some require a phone booking in advance.
The shops with queues — pin them on the map before you go
The all-in-one Matsu morning market — 1F fresh seafood and produce, 2F cooked stalls (potside noodles, fish balls, fried dumplings, scallion pancakes). Peak atmosphere 07:00–09:00; popular stalls sell out before 10:00.
The most celebrated traditional fish-noodle shop on Beigan. Home-recipe fish-paste noodles — served in broth or deep-fried crispy (the addictive version). Only 3-hour windows; closed at midday; evening service Fri–Sun only.
The most-praised home-style restaurant on Nangan — old-wine chicken stew, red koji fried rice, stir-fried red yeast dishes, and fresh local seafood. Owner cooks with market-fresh ingredients, fair prices. No English menu — just point at what the next table has.
Tiny shop in Tangqi Village, Beigan — menu handwritten in Matsu dialect, owner explains every dish. Freshly made sweet potato dumplings, old-wine noodles (老酒麵線) with a warm fermented aroma, and sticky rice balls. The real deal.
Not just a shop — walk inside the real granite tunnel, see hundreds of clay jars ageing quietly in the cool dark. Free tasting of 58° and 38°. Buy bottles at prices cheaper than the airport. ⚠️ Liquor over 24% ABV: max 1L carry-on, rest must be checked baggage. Wrap bottles well — turbulence happens.