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As Taipei grooms its reputation as one of the top destinations in Asia for vegetarian cuisine, the Grand Hyatt Taipei is repurposing the Monday blues as an opportunity to go green.

In a new collaboration with Green Monday, a social enterprise that encourages meat-lovers to give up their beloved steak for one day a week, many of the hotel’s nine restaurants will be introducing omnipork, a 100% plant-based pork alternative, in their meat-free meals.

Yun Jin Chinese restaurant and Pearl Liang Cantonese seafood restaurant have also completely revamped and upgraded their existing vegetarian cuisine. New creative dishes include a crispy fried bean curd sheet roll that’s fashioned like a chicken drumstick with an edible “bone,” braised minced veggie ball soup, steamed black truffle dumplings, crispy shredded vegetarian puffs, and deep fried shredded pumpkin rolls with a pomelo sauce.

“Green is the new black,” said Jan-Hendrik Meidinger, general manager of Grand Hyatt Taipei. If you’re living green at home, you shouldn’t have to change colour when you come to a hotel.”

Taipei has a reputation as Asia’s most vegetarian-friendly city. Global animal rights organization, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), named the city the most vegan friendly city in Asia, and according to CNN over 13 percent of Taiwanese are vegetarian.

Banquet – Double boiled black mushroom soup, yam, Matsutake mushroom, lotus seeds, taro, bamboo pith, chestnut.

Green Monday was created to combat climate change and global food insecurity. Since it started in Hong Kong in 2012, 22% of Hong Kong’s population now shun meat on Monday (according to the organization) resulting in 300 million animal lives saved annually and 375 billion liters of water saved each year.

For more information visit https://www.hyatt.com/en-US/hotel/taiwan/grand-hyatt-taipei/taigh/dining