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Where no chef has gone before: the Hong Kong restaurants pushing for culinary innovation

Tatler Hong Kong

更新於 06月22日08:25 • 發布於 06月21日00:00 • Gavin Yeung

Hong Kong is an enigma when it comes to culinary innovation. True, our well-travelled denizens are more accepting of left-field cuisines than many other Asian cities, yet at the same time, the city’s ultra-high rents discourage restaurateurs from taking risks on culinary formulas that haven’t already been tried and tested a thousand times over.

Read more: Hong Kong’s best fusion dishes bring a globe-trotting journey around the world to the tip of your tongue

Against the odds, there are still those mavericks who go against the grain. Feuille, the winner of Tatler Dining’s Best New Restaurant, is a paramount example of this: despite having no prior attachment to Hong Kong, respected French chef David Toutain, of the eponymous two-Michelin-starred restaurant in Paris, has managed to corral locally sourced, sustainably grown ingredients into a plant-forward menu that not only delivers deliciously novel flavours by the spade, but so with a diminutive carbon footprint to boot.

The dill pil-pil sauce, made by boiling down turbot bones to extract their gelatinous collagen, then blending it with dill oil into an unctuous, mayonnaise-like accompaniment to the bread course, is a prime example of the ingenuity on display here; as is a dish of spiny lobster wrapped in saffron-infused milk skin and served over rosemary-laced charcoal.

The Chairman’s camphor wood-smoked black-footed goose (Photo: The Chairman)
The Chairman’s camphor wood-smoked black-footed goose (Photo: The Chairman)

The Chairman’s camphor wood-smoked black-footed goose (Photo: The Chairman)

Cafe Bau’s oxen pithivier (Photo: courtesy of Cafe Bau)
Cafe Bau’s oxen pithivier (Photo: courtesy of Cafe Bau)

Cafe Bau’s oxen pithivier (Photo: courtesy of Cafe Bau)

Another innovator in the sustainability space is Cafe Bau, the casual sister restaurant to the original Hong Kong molecular trendsetter, Bo Innovation. Together with chef-patron Alvin Leung, head chef Kasey Chan has lofty ambitions to source 100 per cent of their ingredients from local suppliers, even going the extra mile to procure super-small-batch, locally grown rice from Yi O, a farming community on the western edge of Lantau Island.

There are also what I like to call the new traditionalists: restaurants that serve dishes that seem like they’ve been around forever but have never been made before—the result of a deep knowledge of the “parent” cuisine and the desire to innovate in a manner that is entirely coherent with the traditions that inform the restaurant. Wing and The Chairman are both prime examples of this approach: at the former, chef Vicky Cheng taps into hyper-seasonal produce and laborious cooking and plating techniques for jaw-dropping ensembles; while at the latter, founder Danny Yip uses the building blocks of the classics as a springboard for obsessively tested recipes that push the envelope of Cantonese cuisine.

See also: Inside the mind of a culinary icon: Danny Yip’s journey with The Chairman

Wing reinterprets fish maw (photo: courtesy of Wing)
Wing reinterprets fish maw (photo: courtesy of Wing)

Wing reinterprets fish maw (photo: courtesy of Wing)

Desserts at Feuille (Photo: courtesy of Feuile)
Desserts at Feuille (Photo: courtesy of Feuile)

Desserts at Feuille (Photo: courtesy of Feuile)

While the exploits of Cheng’s and Yip’s establishments are well-documented, another restaurant that flies the flag for neo-Cantonese food is Dionysus & Loong, a Tin Hau izakaya opened by two former fine-dining chefs that serves distinctly down-to-earth cuisine with a multitude of local influences. Taking what they’ve learnt over a decade in the kitchens of Amber, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana, Épure and Arbor, and combining it with a love for late-night eats, chefs Ming and Chi-Lung have created a unique menu of hybrid dishes cooked with tender loving care over a binchotan charcoal grill. Look for the likes of watermelon with Lao Gan Ma chilli sauce, lo shui-marinated lavender pigeon, and crispy tilefish in mustard greens broth.

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While the pressure is real when it comes to opening a restaurant in this city of ours, they say pressure makes diamonds—and these culinary gems are worth every dollar.

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