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The Scent of Soy Milk and Morning Light

A single blue sneaker sat sideways by the door, a tiny archipelago of sand surrounding it, marking the exact moment the children had ceased to be tourists and had become residents of this house. I sometimes think that the true measure of a place is not the architecture but the way it allows you to be messy, and Fugui Minshu, with its cozy layout and the specific, comforting scent of laundered cotton, felt less like a rental and more like a shared secret. The morning began with the oldest insisting on the window seat and the youngest asking if the mezzanine loft was a magic carpet, his voice echoing softly against the wooden beams. We drank soy milk that tasted of old-fashioned markets and warm, golden mornings, the liquid coating our throats with a creamy, nostalgic sweetness. I leaned back in the iron rocking chair, the rhythmic creak-clack of the metal providing a steady heartbeat to the morning chaos. There is a particular rhythm to waking up in a house where you can hear the echo of a child's laugh traveling from the living room to the bathroom—a distance that felt just long enough to allow for a fleeting moment of solitude before the collective energy of the family reclaimed the space.

The Golden Crunch of a Street Corner

The walk to the local eateries took about ten minutes, a journey through narrow alleys where the March light stretched in long, slanted angles across the pavement. The air, thick with a heavy humidity that clung to our skin like a damp veil, felt as if it were holding us all together in a slow, humid embrace. We found ourselves in a winding queue for A-San Meat-round, the children observing the crowd with wide, curious eyes, wondering why so many adults were waiting for a small piece of fried dough. When the food finally arrived, the first bite provided a tactile shock—a sharp, golden crunch of skin that gave way to a tender, steaming interior. "It's like eating a savory cloud!" the second one exclaimed, his voice muffled by a mouthful of pork. I watched them eat, the rich, salty sauce dripping onto their shirts in amber streaks, and realized that these unplanned, slightly sticky moments are the only pieces of the travel puzzle that actually fit. It was an authentic friction, a sensory collision of heat, salt, and laughter that made the trip feel lived-in rather than curated, turning a simple street corner into a landmark of family memory.

The Blue Glow and Buttery Crumbs

By ten o'clock, the house had settled into a low, humming vibration, the living room sofa becoming a landing pad for exhausted bodies and open boxes of Bu Er Fang egg yolk pastries. The pastries were still slightly warm, the outer crust shattering into a thousand buttery flakes that clung to the children's cheeks like golden confetti. The salty, dense yolk at the center felt like a rich reward for the day's walking, a concentrated burst of sweetness and salt that lingered on the tongue. We turned on the Xiaomi K-song microphone, and for an hour, the living room of Fugui Minshu was transformed into a chaotic concert hall. The children sang off-key into the night, their voices bouncing off the walls and swirling around the mahjong table, which now served as a makeshift stage. I sat back, watching the flickering blue light of the Netflix screen dance across their faces and the way the kids eventually collapsed into a heap on the sofa bed. Their breathing eventually synced into a heavy, satisfied sleep, a deep rhythmic tide that only comes after a day of genuine discovery, leaving the room smelling of butter and contentment.

One small, yellow pastry crumb on a sleeping chin.

  • Savor the crispy skin meat-rounds at A-San for a taste of Changhua's street soul.
  • Book the mezzanine loft at Fugui Minshu to give the children a magical space to play.

Nearby Food & Attractions

ABees

ABees (formerly Jia-Feng-Mi) is a creative cafe at 215 Zhang-Shui Road in Changhua City, where the menu tilts toward coffee, savoury galettes and dessert crepes. Signature plates include pollen-topped coffee, spiced tomato-zucchini crepes, kale-and-yam crepes, and cinnamon-apple-honey crepes, with most orders landing around NT$400 per person. Although opening hours are not posted, the high ratings and ever-rotating specials make it a popular queue spot for locals seeking something beyond the usual street food.

55 Eat

Chris Cafe

Chris Cafe is a tucked-away Hong Kong-style coffee shop in Taichung's Qi-Qi district, serving homestyle Cantonese comfort food. The star dishes are a deeply savoury 'sorrow-defying rice' — a char-siu egg rice made famous by Stephen Chow — and the indulgent peanut butter French toast that locals love. The dining room is calm and unhurried, ideal for a quiet break while shopping at Da-Yuan-Bai or exploring the Qi-Qi business district. Reservations are recommended so you don't miss the most popular plates.

75 Eat

Buer Fang

Bu-Er-Fang is the only bakery in Changhua County dedicated almost entirely to the classic yolk pastry, with nearly fifty years of history behind it. Each pastry is baked with buttery shortening into a deep golden flake, wrapped around a glistening salted duck egg yolk and a smooth red bean filling.每逢中秋或年节, queues of devotees snake around the block, making it the must-buy souvenir of Changhua. Beyond yolk pastries, the counter also offers mung-bean pastries and wife cakes — all old-school baked goods. Online orders are not accepted; the only way to taste them is to show up and queue in person.

59 Eat

Wuxianji Hotpot Lukang Flagship

Wu-Xian-Ji Hot Pot's Lukang flagship is a 496 Zhong-Zheng Road hotpot destination in Changhua County's Lukang Township, beloved for its stylish interior and comfortable lighting. Diners pick from a wide range of soup bases and order a la carte, with the main draws being the oversized meat platters and unlimited rice and drinks. Hours run from 11 AM to 2 AM, so even late-night cravings can be answered with a steaming pot. At NT$250-300 per person, the value is excellent and it regularly lands on lists of Changhua's must-eat hot pots.

121 Eat