Showing 1 - 15 of 19 results
With its sleek design and razor-sharp service, Soho's premier ‘dim sum and tea' hangout is perfectly suited to a smart date or business… more »
Just a stroll from Chinatown, Bar Shu sends out a siren call to lovers of fiery Szechuan flavours. Punchy dishes with chilli top notes and complex… more »
Haozhan may no longer be at the cutting edge of Chinatown eating, but it continues to offer novel tastes, without a red lantern or dragon motif… more »
Yming looks & feels more genteel than most of its neighbours in Chinatown, but don’t let the blue carpets & white tablecloths kid you into thinking… more »
Commercial, glitzy & frighteningly expensive, Mr Chow has been selling blinged-up Beijing food to Knightsbridge glitterati, supermodels, screen… more »
A plate of ho fun at Alan Yau’s budget Chinese noodle bar may not be the steal it once was (prices have about doubled since the launch), but… more »
Originally pitched as a mid-market sibling to Bar Shu across the way, Ba Shan is, if anything, more atmospheric, with its stone floors, Hunan screens… more »
The Ping Pong concept was always a good one. Take the centuries-old Chinese tradition of ‘yum cha’ – tea & dumplings – then add funky cocktails… more »
Tucked away on the second floor of The Millennium Hotel, Le Chinois brings modern Cantonese cooking to the heart of Knightsbridge. This was once… more »
Done out like a storybook market inn, this Soho sibling of the Bayswater original is patrolled by tough silk-clad women, who aren’t above rushing… more »
The minimal, grey on black, slate & leather stylings of this slinky Chinatown interloper look expensive, but the menu remains affordable. It roams… more »
One of the new wave, with a name that promises memorable dim sum, this ‘minimal, white, very white’ Chinatown café is a mixed bag. Come at… more »
On the face of it, New Fook Lam Moon, now nearly 30 years old, is just another Chinatown eatery complete with the obligatory lacquered ducks &… more »
Waitresses in brightly coloured, sequinned costumes set the tone in this Chinatown newcomer, which specialises in the regional cuisine of Xinjiang… more »
Spread over three floors gaudily festooned with red lanterns, gold dragons, calligraphy and artwork, this frenetic Chinatown eating palace is famous… more »
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