• Home
  • About Me
  • Food & Travel
  • Recipes
  • Larder
  • Useful Info
  • Links

World Foodie Guide

a guide to 'traveleating'

RSS
« Barrafina (tapas) – London, England (9.5/10)
Chopstick Etiquette And Other Tips »

Yauatcha (Chinese) – London, England (9.5/10)

Dec 4th, 2007 by admin

[UPDATE: 26/05/2009 I revisited Yauatcha, so please most recent review here].

After the huge argument with my husband over last Friday’s dinner at Alan Yau‘s latest Japanese eaterie Sake no Hana, I felt a little apprehensive about going to another of his restaurants, Yauatcha, for dim sum today. However, we’ve both been many times before (read previous review here) and he knows what to expect, so it turned out to be a truly enjoyable meal, which can luckily always be guaranteed.

Firstly, we had a late lunch/early dinner from 4 to 6pm, as we were going to a lecture afterwards and didn’t want to go hungry. I requested a table in the teahouse area, which is quieter and far more pleasant than downstairs, where you can’t even hear yourself think sometimes. At this time of the day, the staff were chilled out and the few people around us were simply enjoying a chat over tea and cake. So there was none of that ‘We need the table back in 1 hour and 45 minutes’ nonsense (eg Yauatcha ‘policy’).

What we ordered:

There was a good selection of dishes for my vegetarian husband, some of which we have had before, and some of which were new. We had beancurd roll with enoki and cloud ear (£6.50), beautifully presented and deliciously crunchy, fried vegetable Shanghai dumpling (£3.00), which came with a Worcestershire sauce-like dip and salt and pepper silken tofu (£8.50), a substantial portion of pieces of tofu deep fried and served with crispy bits and chopped chillis. This was followed by Hong Kong choi sum in garlic (£7.50), which was very tender, and a large plate of hand-pulled noodle with shimeji mushroom (£8.50). By this time, my husband was already struggling – a very different experience to eating at Sake no Hana!

Meanwhile, I also ordered a few non-vegetarian dishes to have on my own: Shanghai siew long bun (xiao long bao) (£3.80), which were perfectly juicy (although I can’t believe I pierced one by mistake!) and poached Peking dumpling (£4.00), four heavenly little meat, prawn and mushroom morsels poached in a light broth with chopped chillis. To make sure I had enough, I ordered a final thing – har gau (£4.60), prawn dumplings which are my favourite. Strangely enough, I liked this the least. I normally love prawn dumplings, but there was something a bit weird about these. Perhaps the crunchy prawns inside were too whole. It’s difficult to explain. It was also the first time at Yauatcha that I hadn’t ordered my favourites, shitake and duck roll, or prawn and gai lan cheung fun. But it’s good to try new things too.

Then I couldn’t resist wandering over to the cake section to have a look around. As always, the cakes were delightful. I had to have the Matcha panna cotta, which was topped with tart redcurrants, a perfect complement to the slight bitterness of the green tea.

The verdict?

With water, sublime cafe latte, my usual tea smoothie (this time I had a Mama Zhao’s) and service charge, the bill came to £64.00. My husband certainly didn’t mind paying this for what we had. No grumbles this time…And no one stopped me from taking photos (even though this isn’t technically allowed, another restaurant ‘policy’, applied far more strictly at Sake no Hana).

Other London dim sum restaurants I like -

  • Pearl Liang (Chinese) – 8.5/10
  • Imperial China (Chinese) – 7.5/10
  • Hakkasan (Chinese) – 8.5/10
  • Shanghai Blues (Chinese) – 8/10

And you might be interested in my favourite London restaurants.

10 – Perfection, 9.5 – Sensational, 9 – Outstanding, 8.5 – Superb,
8 – Excellent, 7.5 – Very Good, 7 - Good, 6.5 - Above Average, 6 – Average

All the London restaurant reviews on World Foodie Guide

Contact Details:
Yauatcha

15 Broadwick Street (on the corner of Berwick Street)
London W1F 0DL
Tel: +44 (0)871 2238066 or (0)20 7287 8484

Helen Yuet Ling Pang @ World Foodie Guide

Yauatcha on Urbanspoon

Tags: afternoon tea, Alan Yau, Chinese, dim sum, dining out, food, London, Michelin star, restaurants, traveleating, Yauatcha

Posted in afternoon tea, Alan Yau, Chinese, dim sum, dining out, food, London, Michelin star, restaurant review, restaurants, traveleating

7 Responses to “Yauatcha (Chinese) – London, England (9.5/10)”

  1. on 04 Dec 2007 at 11:57 pm1GP

    This was more like it. Nearly midnight and I’m still pleasantly full. Plus Yauatcha have the only lattes in england that I will drink over a cappuccino. Worlds apart from the pretentiousness of ‘Sake No More’

    gary

  2. on 28 Dec 2008 at 4:21 pm2Cressy

    Hi Helen,

    I just want to thank you for your wonderful site! And especially for your restaurant reviews – your reviews of Chinese and other Asian restaurants are so useful when it comes to finding the best places to eat in London! My husband has booked a table for us at Yauatcha and I was a little worried about what to expect – especially since some of the reviews on various restaurant review sites seem a little mixed. I was so relieved to find your review though – your assessments are so balanced and thoughtful (and you are often right!) so I am very reassured. We are going to London for a weekend so I plan to eat my way round Soho according to several of your recommendations!

  3. on 28 Dec 2008 at 4:31 pm3admin

    Cressy – oh no, I really hope you enjoy Yauatcha now. I seem to be the only one who thinks the service is great, while everyone seems to be served by rude people. I do love the dim sum, but I can’t say what the non-dim sum dishes are like. Look forward to hearing your thoughts about it. Do bear in mind the noise levels though (upstairs in the tea area is quieter than downstairs in the main restaurant). If you have time, do try Pearl Liang for either dinner or dim sum. I really like it there! Have a great time in London…

    Helen Yuet Ling

  4. on 15 Apr 2009 at 11:26 am4Armelle

    Our experience was not so good. We got the “We need the table back in 1 hour and 45 minutes” line, a small table in the very noisy downstairs area, unconsiderate service (my husband had to wait for his noodles until I was finished with my dim sum because the waitress had decided we were sharing despite our instructions upon ordering). Even though the ingredients are top-quality, I thought the food lacks subtlety, which makes Yauatcha an over-priced restaurant.

  5. on 17 Apr 2009 at 8:30 am5admin

    Armelle – what a shame you didn’t have such a great experience. I always ask to sit upstairs in the tea area, as it’s so loud downstairs you have to shout to make yourself heard. I’m going back to Yauatcha on Saturday to see if the dim sum is as good as it used to be, and to write a revisit review.

    Helen Yuet Ling

  6. on 24 Aug 2009 at 8:22 pm6Wild Boar

    I personally feel Yauatcha is the best dim sum house in London and I’m glad you had a great meal too. I’ve always sat upstairs and had pretty good service too. My uncle also quite liked the pretty waitresses they tend to employ haha.

  7. on 26 Aug 2009 at 6:03 pm7admin

    Wild Boar – Yauatcha is still one of my favourites and I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve eaten there (you’ve arrived at an old review, there’s a much more recent one!). Upstairs is better than downstairs…

    Helen Yuet Ling

  • Wikio - Top Blogs - Gastronomy
  • Alltop, all the top stories
  • Featured Posts

    Food & Travel: Japan Planning

    25 Food & Travel Destinations

    Where To Eat Dim Sum In London

    What's Your Favourite Dim Sum?

    A Short Guide To Eating in London

    Where To Eat In Hong Kong, Macau & Beijing

  • Recent Posts

    • The Last Post
    • Tokyo Stories
    • Kyoto Tales
    • Snow Monkeys & Soba Noodles
    • 10 Food Photography Links
  • What Do You Say?

    • admin on London
    • admin on The Last Post
    • Michael Todds on London
    • mmm on The Last Post
    • Sophie Wong on The Last Post
    • admin on The Last Post
    • admin on About Me
  • Tags

    afternoon tea Alan Yau Beijing Bologna breakfast British Cantonese China Chinese Chinese food etiquette cookery cookery book cooking dim sum dining out dumplings England fish food food & travel French Hong Kong Indian Italian Italy Japan Japanese Korean London Macau meat Michelin star Modern European noodles Portugal recipe restaurant review restaurants seafood Sichuan steakhouse travel traveleating vegetarian wine
  • Categories

  • Browse the past…

All Rights Reserved 2008 World Foodie Guide | Restaurant Reviews | Recipes | Traveleating