In the true spirit of all things Shanghai, this flashy newcomer
isn't afraid to strut its stuff in the capital. Adorned with
antique furniture and purple lanterns, this upscale four-story
venue, with multiple private rooms, top-notch service, and
impeccable dishes to boot, treats Beijing palates to the refined
taste of the south. Though the menu is laden with seafood, shark's
fin and abalone, the hongshaorou, is the piece de resistance.
Reminiscent of thick molasses, the sauce provides explosions of
sweet and savory flavors, as the cubes of fatty pork melt in the
mouth. We also recommend the pink briny bacon, stir-fried with
emerald-green dragon beans, the quality of which somehow managed to
drown out the Kenny G background music. But the true measure of a
Shanghai restaurant is always the steamed dumplings. We ordered the
crab roe and pork xiaolongbao and though the actual fillings were
somewhat frugal, the soup inside did more than enough to sate our
hunger and establish Shanghai's Yuan Yuan as a classy new immigrant
in Beijing.
(that's Beijing December 19,2007)