Rare Hiyama Kuroge Wagyu now available at newly-open Wagyu Vanne

If you haven’t heard of Hiyama Kuroge Wagyu beef, you’re probably not alone. However, while its reputation may not yet have reached Hong Kong’s shores, it is renowned in its homeland of Japan as being one of the finest sources of beef, with its marbled structure and melt-in-your-mouth flavours placing it firmly on the to-nosh list of any beef aficionado. The good news, though, is that this rare meat is finally available in the city, courtesy of the recently-opened Wagyu Vanne.

Delicious beef dishes at Wagyu Vanne

Located in Causeway Bay’s Tower 535, the swanky new cuisinary is wholly-dedicated to all things beef. The brainchild of famed Japanese celebrity chef Vanne Kuwahara, this intimate venue – whose interiors include a dedicated Hiyama Wagyu beef wall display – offers a uniquely Western interpretation of the traditional Japanese yakiniku experience.

On the occasion of our pre-opening visit to Wagyu Vanne, the tasting experience kicked off in fine style with the Fresh Chopped Tomato Salad, a refreshing palate cleanser that served as the perfect opening act for the dishes to follow. Next, we sampled two appetisers, the A5 Wagyu Toast and a piece of Wagyu Sushi with Sea Urchin, both pleasingly bite-sized and packed with umami accents.

Yakiniku with Hiyama A5 Wagyu beef

Then came the first true yakiniku experience, a sampling of the Hiyama A5 Wagyu sirloin, grilled to perfection table-side by a dedicated yakiniku specialist. Smooth and succulent, the fabulously-textured morsel simply burst with flavour, leaving us yearning for more.

Scarcely had we blinked when the next dish – Wagyu Daily Special in “Shabu Shabu” Style with Truffle, arrived at the table. A delightfully interactive plate, the slice of beef was first swirled in a shabu shabu broth before being placed lovingly atop an egg yolk and topped generously with shavings of black truffle. It is then up to the diner to stir the mixture until a soft foam appears, before tucking into the deliciously creamy concoction.

Hiyama A5 Wagyu Shabu Shabu Style with Truffle

Next up was one of Chef Vanne’s innovative East-meets-West creations – the Wagyu Pappardelle Bolognese. Here, the Wagyu beef was transformed into a true-to-grandma’s-original-recipe bolognese sause that paired wonderfuly with the al dente homemade pappardelle pasta.

To end this scrumptious meal, the Wagyu Vanne chef opted for subtlety over showiness with a Homemade Yuzu Sorbet. Served in a small glass – just the right portion, considering our already-tightened beltlines – the tartness of the yuzu sorbet acted as a delicious digestif to cleanse the strong flavours of the preceding beef dishes, and the perfect conclusion to a truly gastronomic meal.

Chef Vanne Kuwahara helms the newly-open Wagyu Vanne
Japanese Celebrity Chef Vanne Kuwahara helms the newly-open Wagyu Vanne

Wagyu Vanne by Gosango. 1/F, Tower 535, No. 535 Jaffe Road, Causeway Bay. (852) 2885 0533.

Takumi by Daisuke Mori joins hand with Polish artist to create limited-time art menu

April may have been the official ‘art month’ in Hong Kong, but its lingering effects are still coaxing creatives in the city to push the boundaries of their imagination. One such creative mind is celebrated Michelin-starred Japanese chef Daisuke Mori, whose hidey-hole restaurant Takumi by Daisuke Mori, tucked away in Wan Chai, is collaborating with Polish designer and artist Mariusz Malecki of Studio Ziben fame to create a special eight-course art menu to bring together the worlds of high design and haute cuisine.

Takumi by Daisuke Mori
Mariusz Malecki’s artwork displayed in Takumi by Daisuke Mori

Just like Malecki uses everything from discarded wood to scraps of cloths for his collages, similarly chef Daisuke Mori has painstakingly constructed each part of the degustation menu to be a perfect fit for the larger composition of the meal which pays a homage not just to Malecki’s artworks but also to his vision and inspirations.

Takumi by Daisuke Mori
Langoustine with beetroots gelée, parsley roots purée

For instance, there is the langoustine with beetroots gelée and parsley roots purée, a refreshing dish in itself, but made more nuanced by the use of beetroot gelée – a hark-back to Malecki’s Polish roots, with this particular vegetable being a common element in Polish cuisine.

Takumi by Daisuke Mori
Black rice risotto with squid ink and silver points

Another such dish is the black rice risotto with squid ink and silver point – co-created by the artist and chef Mori – which is rich both in terms of its looks and its flavours, with chunky pieces of squid adding further to the richness of the risotto.

The set dinner is, however, only available till 18 May, but knowing chef Mori, it won’t come as a surprise if there are more such artistic collaborations up his sleeves in future.

Takumi by Daisuke Mori, Shop 1, The Oakhill, 16 Wood Road, Wan Chai, +852 2574 1299

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

Gear up for a relaxing weekend with the Britannia brunch at Statement

While other European countries like France and Italy have long been considered as the mecca of fine-dining, England has traditionally been relegated to a much-lower rank when it comes to Michelin-star-quality gourmandry. But if your knowledge of British food is limited to ordering bangers and mash, and fish and chips, then perhaps it’s time you headed to the Old Police Headquarters at Tai Kwun where Aqua Group’s British restaurant Statement has successfully given good ol’ English cuisine a modern makeover.

Britannia brunch

Particularly indulgent in this regard is their four-course Britannia brunch menu that is only offered on the weekends. First up is an array of artisanal charcuterie with sourdough bread and a jar of pickles and a sumptuous seafood platter that boasts everything from fresh Irish oysters and Norwegian smoked salmon to Cornish prawns, and mussels and clams. We particularly loved the juicy, tender prawns that were lightly poached to enhance their flavours further.

Moving on to the mains, the classic roast British beef is the obvious highlight of the menu, with Yorkshire pudding, roast potatoes and vegetables all providing suitable accompaniments. Make sure to keep your cameras ready while the beef is being hand-carved in front of you on a vintage silver trolley. Prepared in a traditional fashion, the succulent pieces of the beef pair perfectly well with the crunchiness of the Yorkshire pudding. Our only grouch was that the portions were perhaps a tad on the frugal side.

However, if beef’s not your thing, Statement also offers a selection of other main courses such as roasted corn-fed pork shoulder with mustard and paprika, or roasted cauliflower with capers and raisins, or its own take of beer-battered fish and chips.

The last dish of the four-course brunch is obviously the dessert, with such classics as sticky toffee pudding, sea-salt butterscotch ice cream and chocolate orange mousse bringing back memories of childhood. Of course, all this is accompanied by free-flowing drinks, so be it Veuve Clicquot champagne or classic cocktails like Bloody Mary, take your pick of poison and settle down for a relaxing, indulgent experience, because, after all, what else are weekends meant for?

Statement
Police Headquarters, Block 01, Tai Kwun
10 Hollywood Road, Central
Weekend brunch: 11.30am to 3pm, $628 p.p.
www.statement.com.hk

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

The Motherlode of Dining: The best places to take mum for Mother’s Day

If you’ve already bought the perfect gift for Mother’s Day, how about stepping your gift-giving game up a notch, and spoiling mum a little more with a festive brunch or dinner. Come this Sunday, the offerings in Hong Kong for Mother’s Day treats are plentiful, meaning there’s a dish out there to tickle the taste buds of every type of matriarch. 

Ecriture

Mothers Day

You won’t find a Mother’s Day lunch more ‘high’-end than on the 26th floor of two Michelin-starred French restaurant Ecriture. The delicious offerings of French nouvelle cuisine such as blue lobster and pigeon come compliments with a flower and glass of chamapgne for mummsy.

Where: 26th floor, H Queens, 80 Queen’s Road Central, Hong Kong
When: Sunday, 12 May 
Contact: 2795 5996 / ecriture@lecomptoir.hk

TokyoLima

Mothers Day

If mum happens to have a sweet tooth, TokyoLima is the place for her to spend this Mother’s Day as the Peruvian-Japanese fusion restaurant will be offering a “Mama’s Desert Station” chock full of decadent desserts such cupcake towers, croquembouche and a macaron tres sabores tower.

Where: G/F, 18-20 Lyndhurst Terrace, Central, Hong Kong
When: Sunday, 12 May and Monday, 13 May 12pm – 3pm
Contact: 2811 1152 /info@tokyolima.hk

Fang Fang

Mothers Day

Offering a very special two-day brunch menu for moms this Mother’s Day is modern Chinese restaurant Fang Fang, chow down with your favourite lady with bites such as truffle mushroom dumplings and deep-fried tofu cubes. Then wash it down with a bevvy or two, before diving into the yummy mains such as slow-cooked short ribs and crispy aromatic duck.

Where: 8/F LKF Tower, 33 Wyndham Street, Central, Hong Kong, Central
When: Sunday, 12 May and Monday, 13 May 12pm – 3pm
Contact: 2983-9083 / 

The Drunken Pot

For mums who like a little spice in their bellies, a reservation at trendy hotpot hotspot The Drunken Pot is in order. Paying tribute to mothers throughout the history of time, the restaurant has rolled out the theme of the ‘Last Empress’ and created exciting new dishes such as the “The ChrysantheMUM Pot for The QUEEN”, which consists of egg white toppings and edible flowers. Indeed a dinner for an empress, it will be a sure way to show your mother just how royal you believe her to be. 

Where: 8 Observatory Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui
When: The ChrysantheMUM Pot for The QUEEN” (HK$288), can be ordered a la carte or in a set from 1 to 31 May
Contact: 2321 9038 / info@thedrunkenpot.com

John Anthony

Mothers Day

Known for serving some of the finest dim sum in Hong Kong, this Mother’s Day, John Anthony of Maximal Concepts will also treat your beloved mums to a complimentary glass of sparkling rosé with the purchase of the pretty pink lobster har gow special. Those quick enough to secure seats (limited to the first 30 bookings) will also receive a beautiful bespoke bouquet from ANDRSN flowers, ensuring that this Mother’s Day outing is not only tasty but florally flourished.

Where: Basement Level, Lee Garden Three, 1 Sunning Road, Causeway Bay, HK
When: Sunday, May 12
Contact: 2898 3788 / reservations@johnanthony.hk

Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards 2019: HK restaurants that made it to top 50

For veterans of Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards, 2019 offered only one real surprise – Singapore-based French fine-dinery Odette ousting four-time winner Gaggan to take the top spot. Closer to home, however, there were far fewer upsets, with nine of Hong Kong’s most celebrated cuisinaries honoured at this prestigious event, sponsored – as ever – by S.Pellegrino & Acqua Panna.

Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards 2019

Tucked at the foot of the table (at #50 no less) was Ta Vie, with the French-Japanese restaurant having taken a tumble from last year’s 16th slot. Despite this, its fusion of European and Asian culinary traditions – under the skillful supervision of chef Hideaki Sato – makes this particular posh noshery well worth keeping tabs on for the future.

Meanwhile, making its debut as this year’s #44 was that most-beloved Canto cuisinary, Seventh Son. Helmed by Chui Wai-kwan, the seventh son of the legendary Fook Lam Moon founder Chui Fuk-chuen, the restaurant has long been a fixture in Michelin guides, making it a bit of a mystery as to why it has been previously ignored here.

Close behind was another Chinese fine dinery – Four Season’s Lung King Heen. Though falling 14 places to #38 this time, chef Chan Yan-tak’s legendary kitchen has continued to be sought out by Cantonese connoisseurs over the years, with such classic favourites as abalone and barbecued suckling pig said to be particularly worth seeking out.

Restaurateur David Lai’s basement establishment Neighborhood, meanwhile, proved to be a shoo-in at #37. Widely praised for its fine French-Italian fare, its minimalist interior and down-to-earth ambience have also won it many admirers – including the judges.

Debuting on the list in the highly-commendable #34 slot is VEA, with its winning combination of French-Canto fare clearly meeting with adjudicatory approval. Rightly renowned for its pared-down eight-course tasting menu, which focuses on seasonal ingredients, it’s an apt recognition for one-Michelin-starred chef Vicky Cheung.

For visionary chef Richard Ekkebus, meanwhile, it was a testimony to his legacy that Amber – The Landmark, Mandarin Oriental’s French restaurant that comes under his purview – ranked #21 this year, despite being shut for renovations. With the chef promising that “its best days are still ahead”, gourmands are already counting the days until the restaurant opens its doors next month.

Clearly another one to watch is Belon, which – under the tutelage of chef Daniel Calvert – soared 25 places to become #16, making itself 2019’s Highest Climber in the process. Though its self-penned description as “a dynamic neo-Parisian bistro with an eye on the classics” may seem pompous to some, thankfully this failed to dissuade the judges from giving it a metaphorical thumbs-up.

The ‘best’ is quite the standard in the case of award-winning chef Umberto Bombana, who’s widely hailed as ‘the King of Truffles’. So it wasn’t really a surprise when 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana, his critically-acclaimed three-Michelin-starred establishment, came 12th this year, up one place from last year.

It was another fine-dining restaurant, however, The Chairman, that took Hong Kong closest to the top 10 this year. Finishing at #11, it is perhaps fitting that chef Kwok Keung-tung’s low-profile cuisinary took the city’s top slot – after all, given its locally-sourced ingredients and organic farm, it’s about as authentic a taste of Hong Kong as you can get.

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay
Photos: Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants 2019, sponsored by S. Pellegrino & Acqua Panna

Restaurant review: Ignis by Linx, a contemporary resto-lounge for sophisticated revellers

It’s a bold move to open yet another resto-lounge in the rather-saturated party hub of Lan Kwai Fung, but Ignis by Linx, that opened doors just a few months ago on the first and second floors of California Tower, seems more equipped than most to meet the challenge. 

Ignis by Linx
Interiors at Ignis by Linx

Sprawling over two floors – a modern club and lounge space on the first floor and a decadent dining room on the second, connected by a spiral atrium staircase – Ignis seems designed to allure the more sophisticated breed of revellers, those who wouldn’t settle for anything less than top-class tipples, while also enjoying a vibrant high-octane entertainment experience. And, thankfully, the bevvies at Ignis far from disappoint.  

Ignis by Linx
Fourth Hokage with Tanqueray, Four Fox sake, lemongrass syrup

Under the careful craftsmanship of bar manager Paulo Quejano, the classic cocktails here get a modern makeover – so we have the timeless Old Fashioned given a contemporary twist with fat-washed bourbon, peanut butter and truffle, while the much-loved Cosmopolitan is reinterpreted with orange Curaçao liqueur, slow-cooked with raspberries, thyme and a hint of turmeric. 

Ignis by Linx
Cosmopolitan

Suitably satiated, guests can turn their attention to matters more gastronomic, and here too, Ignis’s menu can hardly fail to impress discerning gourmands with its contemporary cuisine that deftly blends Western elements with Asian touches. It’s a feat achieved by none other than executive chef Mark Sin, who has previously worked at such acclaimed restaurants as Tom Aikens and Mirabelle in London, and Bo Innovation in Hong Kong.

Ignis by Linx
Mushroom with confit egg yolk & potato puree

From the carefully-curated menu, the standouts that we would recommend are, of course, the morels and king mushrooms with confit egg yolk, a rich decadent affair with creamy yolk and tomato puree, and the petite-sized lobster bisque, which featured a single lobster wanton in chili oil, a perfectly savoury appetite-enhancing start to any meal. Moving on to the mains, the grilled octopus leg with kimchi mayonnaise and ponzu daikon would vie for your attention, both due to its enormous portion and its soft, yet mildly charred texture. Another crowd-pleaser is easily the succulent mint-crusted lamb loin served with home-made onion jam and house-fermented pickled mustard.

Ignis by Linx
Grilled octopus leg

It is, then, safe to say that it’s its cuisine and ambience that makes Ignis by Linx a worthy addition to Hong Kong’s favourite party destination, but only time will tell if the resto-lounge can capture and hold the fancy of the city’s famously fickle partygoers. We hope it does, because we’d like to give Ignis our metaphorical thumbs-up!

Ignis by Linx
1 & 2/F, California Tower
Lan Kwai Fong
(852) 2623 0298

Text: Suchetana Mukhopadhyay

Lunchtime Fuel: New lunch menu at Mercedes me Store delights Central crowd

Known for its superb customer service, German carmaker Mercedes-Benz continues to delight customers not just by delivering the finest of luxury automobiles but with delicious fine-dining fare as well. The innovative pop-up Mercedes me Store, which opened last year, has continued to wow Hongkongers with innovative culinary treats within this dynamic space, which has been used for an array of lifestyle events as well as corporate functions.

So, when we got word that the Mercedes me Store had launched a new lunch menu, we immediately took the chance to see what had additions had been made to its already-impressive menu.

Mercedes me

Upon walking up the stairs to its second floor, we were seated to an almost-empty dining area. However, within minutes of our arrival, every table on the floor filled up. The dimmed ambient lighting and busy chatter amongst the guests matched with the rainy-day sky outside, making it easy to forget that only half the day was complete, and leaving us in a boldly after-work mood.

Mercedes me

Excited to try out Head Chef Joaquin Elizondo’s newest dishes, we began the three-course meal with the Whipped Sweet Potato with Sichuan chickpeas and home made lavash. Every bite was savoured as the hummus-like spread was ably paired with crisp pita bread bites, delighting us with a creamy Middle East-inspired treat.  

Mercedes me

Next to arrive was the Wagyu Striploin, smoked with spice rub and placed atop abéarnaise sauce – a presentation so wonderous that even the vegetarian at ourtable remarked: “that looks incredible”. And so it was, with the steak’s insides remaining wholly succulent despite our ‘well-done’ request – a true feat indeed. Meanwhile, the béarnaise sauce worked its charm as the extra bit of flavour to make the dish a must-try.

Mercedes me

Last, but certainly not least, we opted for the Homemade Carrot Cake – moist and flavourful, but not overly spiced the cake offered finely chopped walnuts at just the right size. The icing was especially memorable as just the right amount of sugar was used, so one could truly appreciate the taste of the cream cheese.

With this innovatively re-engineered new lunch menu, the Mercedes me Store brings a delightful new culinary treat to Central’s already-bustling lunchtime scene, impressing us so much that we’d happily make it a weekly experience.

Mercedes me Store
Shop 38 & 40,
G/F, 48 Queen’s Road Central

Text: Bailey Atkinson

Culture meets Canto cuisine at Moon Lok Chinese Restaurant

As a newly-opened venue for Cantonese opera and other forms of Chinese theatre, the Xiqu Centre unapologetically celebrates the Chinese way of life. Taking the theme even further is the Moon Lok Chinese Restaurant, a traditional Cantonese cuisinary located within the Xiqu Centre.

Signature Peking Duck at Moon Lok Chinese Restaurant

Covering an area of 8,000 sq. ft, the restaurant evokes the atmosphere of a Chinese garden, right from its jade-coloured floral painted walls down to its expansive menu. The highlight here is, of course, the succulent signature Peking Duck, that needs to be ordered a day in advance. Prepared in a temperature-controlled ageing oven, it takes more than a day to complete, and the result is tender perfection. The succulent slices of the roast duck come with an array of such accompaniments as finely sliced cucumbers, scallions, radish, ginger, cantaloupe, sweet sauce and thin pancakes.

Braised Mixed Mushrooms with Fungus

But while roasted meat is one of the most popular dishes at Moon Lok Chinese Restaurant, it’d be a shame not to savour some of their other signature dishes like the Braised Mixed Mushrooms with Fungus, a vegetarian dish featuring elm fungus and yellow fungus, and Fried Rice with Minced Beef, Spring Onion and Garlic, a dish that is inspired by risotto, the Italian variant of rice. Flavourful and non-greasy, the humble rice is easily one of the hidden delights in the menu.

Fried Rice with Minced Beef, Spring Onion and Garlic

Of course, as a proud Cantonese restaurant, Moon Lok boasts a comprehensive dim sum menu as well, but this traditional fare has in some cases been given a contemporary twist, in the form of such delicacies as Pan-fried Shredded Radish Cake with Sakura Shrimp, Pan-fried Pork Bun with Black Garlic, Baked BBQ Pork with Aged Orange Peel Pastry, Crab Meat, Mushroom and Basil Spring Roll, etc. Comfortingly familiar yet with a creative twist, each of the dishes at Moon Lok is testimony to the vision of its award-winning executive chef Hui Mei Tak, who has been acclaimed as one of the best culinary geniuses in China.

Baked BBQ Pork with Dried Orange Peel Pastry

It is no surprise, then, that Moon Lok Chinese Restaurant brings the best of Chinese culture and cuisine under one roof – and that’s indeed a joyful marriage for a restaurant whose name aptly means “full of happiness”.

The Flying Elk: Uncompromising Nordic fare sets out to woo the cuisine-curious

           

Apparently the kind of stealth cuisine that has long ducked the fine-dining radar of even the Fragrant Harbour’s boldest big eaters, it seems that Nordic fare might have, at last, come in from the cold. Until recently solely synonymous with the make-do meatballs of Swedish self-assembly sofa retailers, sumptuous Scandinavian-style suppers are finally on offer at a high-end Hong Kong dinery. And it doesn’t seem a moment too soon.

Given Hong Kong’s renowned appetite for menus of a more maverick nature, it’s no surprise that The Flying Elk – an unashamed Nordic noshery – has found a ready welcome amid the hotpot houses and bijou bistros of downtown Central. An admittedly novel notion, it arrives on the city’s nightlife (and lunch life) scene courtesy of Maximal Concepts – the SAR-based hospitality group behind Mott 32 and Brickhouse, to name but two – and Björn Frantzén, the redoubtable three Michelin-starred Stockholm-born superchef.

The Flying Elk boasts Scandinavian flourishes

Cards on the table, this isn’t actually the first time Frantzén has tempted hungry Hongkongers with his own brand of Stockholm home-cooking. Indeed, it was just over two years ago that Sheung Wan-set Frantzén’s Kitchen opened its doors, a dining spot rightly famed for its Nordic-Asian fusion fare. The key difference with his latest venture, though, is that it makes no concession for local tastes, defiantly serving solely Scandinavian dishes in an ambiguously authentic Nordic style.

Even the name of his new establishment hints at his unwillingness to compromise – a native of the forests of Sweden, the mythical flying elk could neither be captured nor tamed. Indeed, a similarly Nordic defiance permeates the restaurant that bears the beast’s name, with even its log cabin stylings more than hinting that this is not just another fad-focussed downtown dinery.

Chef Jim Löfdahl of The Flying Elk
Chef Jim Löfdahl of The Flying Elk

Charged with maintaining that authenticity while Frantzén is away tending his global interests is his protégé and long-term collaborator, Chef Jim Löfdahl. As bullish as his boss when it comes to his commitment to delivering top-class cuisine time after time, he says: “Fine dining is really cooking taken to the next level. To be able to perform in that kind of environment, you need to be able to push yourself every day and to always be on top of your game.”

Roasted Scallops
Roasted Scallops

Keen to determine whether there’s more to their menu than just Swedish sweet talk, we opted to commence our contemplation of the comestibles on offer with the Roasted Scallops, one of the restaurant’s signature dishes. A compelling combination of scrambled egg, truffles, crispy potatoes and scallops, all atop a warm layer of beurre noisette, as a statement of intent, it’s hard to fault.

Next up was the Roasted Beetroots – presented astride a spinach-and-watercress bed – a dash of  almond and truffle vinaigrette provided a suitably piquant counterpoint. The standout here, though, was the cream of Jerusalem artichoke, which underpinned the whole of this vegetarian delight.

Poached Cod
Poached Cod

With the appetisers more than passing muster, it was then on to the Poached Cod. This proved a dish so impressively prepared and so delightfully delivered that it left us yearning for just one more dollop of its subtly lemon-flavoured onion cream glaze.

Venison
Venison

While not wanting to belittle any of the taste bud titillations that preceded it, just about everything paled in comparison to the Venison victorious, the main course nonpareil. Perhaps as a sign of just how rare it is to find such exquisitely-served game in Hong Kong, we fell upon it with relish, devouring it in record time. Overall, the pairing of berries with the fulsomely fatty meat proved an effective – yet suitably subtle – touch, with any gaminess dialed down just enough to make it genuinely delicious.

Sticky Toffee Pudding
Sticky Toffee Pudding

Then, making us oddly nostalgic for the Nordic nights we had – admittedly – never known, it was on to the Sticky Toffee Pudding. Doused in a generous ginger butterscotch sauce, this is just a must for anyone who feels as though Christmas cuisine can never truly  outstay its welcome.

So, can Nordic comfort food woo the wavering diners of Hong Kong away from such safe harbour staples as French, Italian, Korean and Japanese cuisine? The answer would have to be very much in the affirmative. After all, it may just be that the famously long Scandinavian nights are really just a pretext for famously long Scandinavian suppers. Only by checking out The Flying Elk will you know for sure.

The Flying Elk. 2F Wyndam Mansion, 32 Wyndham Street, Central. (852) 2898 3788.

 

Taste of Hong Kong 2019: An extravaganza of food, flavours and fun

The fourth iteration of Taste of Hong Kong took place last weekend at Central Harbourfront, ensuring four days of food-filled fiesta for Hong Kong’s gourmands.

Taste of Hong Kong 2019

With an enticing culinary line-up of 15 restaurants from across the city, the event saw equal participation from veterans like Zuma and Little Bao, as well as newcomers like Old Bailey, John Anthony and The Flying Elk, with even a sprinkling of Michelin-star glamour, courtesy of Bibo and The Ocean.

Taste of Hong Kong 2019

Of course, no culinary experience can be said to be truly complete without a fair amount of quaffing. With that in mind, a whole bunch of stellar distilleries and alcohol merchants set up shop at Taste of Hong Kong, with an array of welcoming cocktails – the perfect companion for the alluring dishes. Check out the video below to relive the moments: