Showing posts with label Shangri-La. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shangri-La. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2025

SHANG PALACE’S NEW A LA CARTE MENU BY CHEF KEITH YEAP

 



Grounded in classical Cantonese technique, yet confidently layered with subtle Malaysian influences, the new à la carte menu at Shang Palace captures Chinese Executive Chef Keith Yeap’s two decade-long culinary journey.

 
There’s a quiet precision to that speaks volumes of the chef’s inimitable experience gleaned across Asia and the Middle East. Yeap is not one to tamper needlessly with tradition. “We want to distil the soul of Cantonese cuisine,” he says, “but also to tell a story.” His dishes are underpinned by structure and discipline, yet laced with warmth and a sense of curiosity.
 

You taste this immediately in the appetiser of Cherry Tomatoes with Aged Plum Dressing and Imperial Sichuan Pickled Mustard. The bright fruitiness of cherry tomatoes is heightened by delightfully tangy-sweet pickling juice of plums whilst the meticulously prepared, salty-sour-spicy zha cai pickles are mellowed through careful soaking, their intensity balanced by hints of sweetness and sesame seeds. 

Then there’s the Silk Lava Shrimp Ball, one of Yeap’s signature creations. Inspired by the colourful troll dolls he saw in an airport shop, the dish blends nostalgia with playfulness. 


Beneath the crisp, golden exterior of shredded spring roll skin lies a core of molten mozzarella encased in shrimp paste. Paired with a lightly sweet mango sauce, it’s an unexpected combination that works, both texturally and in flavour.



Simmered for eight hours, the Ficus Root Nourishing Brew is a masterclass in the Cantonese art of double boiling. Dried coconut strips, water chestnuts, ficus root, red dates, and chicken yield a clean, sweet and profoundly comforting broth, reminiscent of soups lovingly prepped by family matriarchs.
 

The unmistakable aroma of tong kwai (angelica root) heralds the arrival of a splendid Flame-seared Herbal Crispy Duck. We love the lacquered and crisp skin and the succulent flesh. The balance of herbal depth and roast duck richness is on-point.
 

Also notable is the Smoked Wagyu MBS 6 Beef Ribs, where jasmine tea leaves are used to gently perfume the already rich, stewed meat. The beef is first cooked low and slow, then smoked until it reaches that elusive, melt-in-the-mouth texture. The result: smoky, tender ribs with a lingering floral aftertaste that elevates the dish into something quietly luxurious.

 

Yeap also honours the Cantonese cuisine philosophy of allowing the ingredients to speak for themselves. His Golden Seared Hokkaido Scallops is an ode to the purity of flavour with sweet, plump scallops topped with shrimp paste and judiciously cooked until just set.
 

Texture takes centre stage in the Crispy Spiced Quinoa Oatmeal Shrimp, where light Sichuan chilli powder adds a flicker of heat to the quinoa-oatmeal crust. 



Meanwhile, the Steamed Fresh Australian Abalone, topped with the familiar pairing of ginger and spring onion, is timeless in its simplicity.


Dessert is a classic: Steamed Bentong Ginger Milk Custard. Yeap uses Bentong ginger for its signature heat and fragrance, creating a custard that is smooth, soothing and bracing all at once. It won’t please everyone, he concedes—but those who appreciate the purity of this Hong Kong staple will recognise its quiet brilliance.


Instead of theatrics, Yeap’s menu draws you in with its clarity, finesse, and depth of understanding. This is Cantonese cuisine viewed through a Malaysian lens—one that respects tradition while embracing thoughtful innovation.
 

Available daily for lunch and dinner from 11 June 2025, the new offerings at Shang Palace are a compelling reason to revisit what we think we know about Chinese fine dining.

For dining reservations and inquiries at Shang Palace, please contact tel: 03 2786 2378 or email: dining.kl@shangri-la.com


Monday, June 02, 2025

CHEF KAZUO TAKIZAWA’S NEW GRAND MENU AT ZIPANGU

 


Chef Kazuo Takizawa’s new Grand Menu at Zipangu reads like a love letter to the seasons of Japan, gently kissed with the flavours of Malaysia.

Thoughtfully composed like a haiku, the meal begins with a whisper — a cool, textured tumble of Salmon and Avocado, slick with salted kelp and wasabi soy sauce. It arrives atop a crisp rice cracker lined with fried nori, a poetic symphony of flavour and crunch.


The richness of salmon gives way to the clean zingy note of wasabi, while the umaminess of kelp hums softly in the background like a distant tide. It’s the kind of dish that makes you pause between bites, out of reverence.


Then comes a heartwarming bowl of Chicken and Vegetable Miso Soup that feels like slipping into a cherished coat in the heart of winter. The broth is gentle, faintly smoky. The chicken—salt-marinated, grilled, then eased into the miso—lends depth whilst young corn, lotus root, and shimeji mushrooms tumble through the comforting broth. Takizawa-san calls it “home-style” and it resonates with us.
 

Spicy Salmon Zanmai Roll arrives next, lush with layer upon layer of salmon: raw, cooked, and jewelled with pearly roe. Cucumber, surimi and egg make this sushi roll indulgent without being boastful, the touch of sriracha leaving a gentle glow rather than a blaze. A sip of cold Junmai Daiginjo sake draws the flavours together—clean and fleeting.

The signature mains emerge as a quartet of restrained brilliance. There is the familiar Black Cod Teriyaki and Japanese White Radish yet the fried cod, a nod to Malaysian tastes, holds greater allure thanks to the daikon steeped in Takizawa’s own blend of dashi and teriyaki sauce. A dish updated for its audience without compromising its heritage.

The Grilled Bluefin Tuna Collar is a study in devotion and sustainability. Sourced from a humongous 80kg fish, the collar—often overlooked—is treated with the kind of care and respect reserve for something sacred. 


Marinated in sake, doubanjiang (spicy bean sauce), ginger and secret herbs, then grilled, the rich and meaty tuna collar flesh tastes faintly of the ocean’s depths: hints of minerality mingled with whispers of oyster and brine, soothed by the gentle sweetness of capsicum in a lush, complex sauce.

For me, the conversation-stopper has to be the A5 Japanese Halal Omi Wagyu Tenderloin. Cooked simply, perfectly with a dash of salt—seared until just charred outside, but pink and yielding within.
 
Each bite is warm velvet. On the side, there are fried garlic chips, mustard, wasabi, and a Japanese steak sauce—unnecessary but delightful if variation is called for. Grilled vegetables lend a gentle counterpoint. This is the kind of breath-taking dish that leaves you in awed silence at such masterful culinary perfection.
 
Finally, the crescendo of heat: a Spicy Chicken Curry unlike any you’ll find in Japan. It has swagger, warmth that builds and lingers. Takizawa uses a 30-year-old recipe, refined and reworked with Malaysian heat. The chicken, braised with leek, is tender; the spices—paprika, ginger, garlic—meld into a bold, unapologetic chorus.


Sweetness to soften the ending is Yuzu Sorbet. Icy and fragrant, the yuzu sings—sharp, floral, clean with a kind of silken poise renders by a sticky, almost translucent starch syrup woven through it for unexpected elegance.


In the hands of Chef Kazuo Takizawa, every plate from Zipangu’s Grand Menu tells a story—seasonal and soulful. Each creation soothes as much as it stirs.


For reservations at Zipangu, call tel: 03-2032 2388. Address: Level 1, Shangri-La Kuala Lumpur, Jalan Sultan Ismail, KL. https://www.facebook.com/shangrilaKL
 
 

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