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The cornucopia of options include Chinese, Japanese and Italian restaurants, a chocolatiere, an Old World bar, two poolside eateries and La Coupole, where Western and Asian buffets anchor every meal.
Six of those outlets are open to the general public.
The hotel’s flagship eatery, La Coupole, was named for a landmark Parisian brasserie. Like its renowned counterpart, the restaurant is expansive, seating 160 in a dramatic space that mirrors the entrance lobby. Grand columns and an artful arrangement of tables demarcate the restaurant into a collection of more intimate spaces. A custom-made Molteni stove anchors a resplendent show kitchen, and three wrought-iron chandeliers hang from seven-meter ceilings.
La Coupole’s menu is just as deep with Western fare as Eastern. To
Housed in its own building overlooking the pool deck and canal, and steered by an Italian chef, Do Forni opens as just one of a half-dozen Italian restaurants in
But the wine list is long on
Two East Asian restaurants run lines into the culinary heritage of
“There are 23 types of sake, most of which comes from small, not very well-known breweries in
While Hachi occupies a spot in the main hotel building, midway between La Coupole and the lobby, Fu Lu Zu cultivates age-old ambiance in a separate building near the sports club. Here, diners fishing for delicacies as various as shark’s fin and braised bird’s nest or such mainstays as lobster, crab and barbequed pork can retreat to one of six private rooms or enjoy a more communal experience in an 82-seat dining room.
Plush red seats and a dramatic coffered ceiling are dominant notes in the restaurant’s atmosphere. Saturday and Sunday mornings are reserved for dim sum. Unlike most restaurants in In the hotel lobby, Le Bar’s food menu is casual, running from quarter pound beef burgers to wonton soup. But its drinks menu is anything but. Eight kinds of martinis vie with eight champagne-based cocktails as preludes to a long evening. Nearly 20 labels of single malt scotch lord their pedigree over as many blends.
The lounge area itself is Old Shanghai, with deep, leather club chairs nestling in an alcove banked with Palladian windows, beneath a mezzanine crowned by a baby grand piano. The piano comes into play most afternoons for high tea.
Just beyond the lobby, the delicious smell drifting through the lobby is sourced at Chocolat, a small, European style gourmet shop where a chocolate fountain defines the ambiance. They’re turning out all things chocolate here, from éclairs to candy to fondue. But there’ll be all manner of pastry and bread. The espresso experience aims to be the best in town. “You can buy a kilo of espresso locally for USD 10, but we’re spending more than three times that,” said Callegaro. “We want people to remember their espresso at Chocolat.”
Likewise, Aqua is open only to hotel guests. Open from 10 in the morning to 6 in the evening, the poolside restaurant seats guests pavilion style, serves them from bento boxes and promotes views over the canal to the
As the hotel’s team of five head chefs season their inpidual operations, they’ll expand beyond their kitchens to special food and beverage events around the hotel. Callegaro expects to host at least a wine dinner per month. He imagines MICE spreads all over the hotel grounds. He wants each chef to conduct a cooking class.
“There’s a whole world of food here,” he said. “And a city that, we hope, is plenty hungry.” |
Source www.mandarinmedia.net