New day for dining
Change is a given in Beijing’s restaurant scene, but this spring it’s come in a big way to three of the capital’s most prestigious dining rooms, Mike Peters reports.
Sun Yat-sen and his wife dined here. So did the Irish dramatist George Bernard Shaw. Chairman Mao hosted visiting heads of state and welcomed Chinese writers, and Premier Zhou Enlai ate and drank with US envoy Henry Kissinger.
With a broad facade on Chang’an Avenue, the Beijing Hotel has a long, proud history, built in 1917 in the architectural style of 17th-century France. In the run-up to the Beijing Olympics, a 10-year management contract was awarded to Raffles in 2006, and under that prestigious chain’ s wing the French res tau rantJa an( derived from the ancient Sanskrit word for “bowl”) was widely lauded for its ambiance and cuisine.
At the beginning of this year, management was assumed by Nuo, the luxury hotel brand of China’s Beijing Tourism Group. BTG has won acclaim for its flagship Nuo hotel in Beijing’s Lidu area, inspired by the artistic and cultural visionaries of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
“The complex is actually three hotels,” says Gerrit Thesing, general manager of what is now Beijjing Hotel Nuo, where there is Western-style service and a little more tweaking underway than in the more traditional Chinese hotel and private dining rooms. But even in the part that is now Nuo, the changes are gentle.
The tall French windows, the elegant chandeliers, and the piano sitting on the original 1924 dance floor are untouched. The piano is said to be the world’s oldest-known Boesendorfer — an Austrian piano maker dating to 1828 and a brand made famous by a particular fan, Franz Lizst.
“We want to refresh the hotel a little but let the great history come out,” Thesing says. “Let this grand old lady sparkle again.
“Maintaining the status quo is important — we don’t want to overwhelm guests, or the staff, with a wave of change.”
Thesing was part of the founding management team at the flagship Nuo, and was excited to recruit chef Eugenio Iraci, who had briefly left the Nuo group, to come back and run the kitchen at Jaan with chef Allen Xu.
“A property like this has so much appeal,” Thesing says with a grin over lunch early this week.
Iraci’s revamp of the Jaan menu may be the biggest change the new regime has implemented so far, but even there, the mantra was good, simple, easy French food, but at a very high level.
The spring set lunch, for example, offers a choice of three appetizers, three mains and two desserts (145 yuan or $21.50 for two courses, 178 for three).
Starters include a delicate smoked salmon cannelloni with cream cheese, caper and chive, served with mesculin greens and lemon dressing. There is also a salad of pulses and fregola tossed in smoky eggplant caviar and candied cherry tomatoes (adding smoked duck breast is optional), but the zestiest plate was the pate-like pressed pork shoulder with parsley coulis and grilled country bread.
Leading off the mains is a photogenic pan-seared sea bass in a “Mediterranean mantle” of tomato carpaccio fragrant with olive, served on a harlequin of vegetables. There’s also a roast beef fillet with shallots and thyme jus, and a fresh-made tagliatelle with mushroom ragout.
For dessert, you can choose ice cream or sorbet or a composition of fresh fruit, but this is also a good time to abandon the “good, simple, easy” formula. Go for the gloriously vulgar option: crusty choux buns filled with rich French pastry cream.
The new dinner menu has more flourishes — and a new wine list is evolving — but we’ll let you explore those on your own.