A chicken-and-egg situation

(shanghai daily)
Updated: 2006-10-27 11:24

                 

Club Shanghai features the Swallow Tail Ballroom.

Those seeking somewhere special to eat are spoilt for choice in Shanghai. There are the Bund establishments with their views and their names: M on the Bund, Laris and Jean Georges. There are some hard to fault eateries in Xintiandi, T8 for one.

The city's sprinkling of four- and five-star hotels each have restaurants offering sublime dining experiences - the Westin, the Shangri-La and Le Meridien to name but three. Then there are random venues such as Sasha's and the new Hugo.

All of these deliver world-class cuisine in superbly convivial environments with hyper-attentive service. But, and here comes the rub: All will charge a price that isn't far off what one would expect to pay in some of the best restaurants of London, New York or Paris. The crucial difference being that the top restaurants of those cities have monthlong-plus waiting lists and they are always chock-a-block.

Getting a table at any of the afore mentioned Shanghai eateries, except those on the Bund, is usually not a problem. Which brings us to the oldest problem in the hospitality industry: People don't like eating in empty restaurants - a catch 22 chicken and egg situation. Glorious food in fabulous surroundings with sensational service and in the company of three score other diners makes for one of life's great pleasures.

Remove any of those factors and it just isn't the same.

This is where Bund restaurants score big and justify their prices; you'll never be the sole couple at any of these. All the staff are regularly stretched and well practiced, the produce is accordingly fresh, the chefs know what they're doing; they did it last night.

Club Shanghai illustrates the point better than most. This restaurant on the fourth floor of the Shanghai Concert Hall could make a strong case for being the most beautiful in the city. It also has character by the bucket. With its chandeliers, sweeping split-level layout and elegant tables, the place purrs seductively: "Romance baby, romance."

All of the old Shanghai hey day cliches are embodied in this 1930s-built, recently-moved gem of a building to the south of the People's Square.

A pedigree Parisian chef is in situ and cooking the kind of cuisine the French nobility died for: Unashamedly haute cuisine of the highest order.

Beef consomme is a notoriously difficult soup, but Chef Franck Bruwier's, with chicken mousse and tangerine peel, is something to behold. His lightly roasted duck breast isn't for the faint hearted, Gallic arrogance shining through. Paired with a light risotto of straw mushrooms and mung beans this dish is rich but not overpoweringly so.

Evidence of a similarly reverent approach to the core ingredients and a certain artistry, albeit faintly traditional, is clear in both the cod dish and the tenderloin.

The lunch deal has an array of antipasto, soup de la jour, a main and sweets from the counter. The homemade creme anglais is capable of making a grown man weep. Culinary credentials firmly established.

Service-wise, the staff are amply competent but struggle a little in terms of staying focused which ushers in my final two related points. There really is no need to book a table at Club Shanghai. It would be a safe bet that during today's lunch service less than a handful of diners will enjoy this most opulent of restaurants. Staff outnumber guests four to one. Were this place packed to the rafters, dizzying tunes, diners dressed to the nines, waiters dashing hither and thither, leggy cigarette girls and peals of laughter, it would be nothing short of incredible. As it is, Club Shanghai must be barely viable.

The lunch deal is just shy of 200 yuan (US$25) per head. An evening meal for two with wine could easily breach the 2,000 yuan mark. Could there be a connection?

Connected to the bar there is the elegant J Bar and through the bar there is the Swallow Tail Ballroom, harking back to a bygone era, where a live jazz band plays nightly.

Club Shanghai
Address: 4/F, Shanghai Concert Hall, No. 523 Yan'an Road E.
Tel: 021-5383-9989