Red bowl's chic hotpot
Updated: 2015-05-23 06:59
By Dong Fangyu(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Seafood dish.[Photo provided To China Daily] |
"This is a nice place for foreigners who have never had hotpot in China," a diner from the US said. "They will be smitten."
Individual drop-ins can start with the ale, creative cocktails, sake or wine at the bar, before rubbing elbows with fellow hotpot aficionados at a hotpot counter with individual burners.
Four or more can dine at tables with a communal pot; larger groups can take over private rooms named ma (numbing) and re (hot) with multiple communal pots.
We opted for the traditional Chinese way of sharing, sitting around and using a communal pot so we had much more room to mix and talk.
But there was a much tougher decision to make - choosing a flavored broth out of yuanyang, spicy Sichuan, seafood congee, tomato and potato, Beijing traditional and wild mushroom. We plumped for yuanyang combo stock, half spicy and half wild mushroom stock.
I was greedy with the dipping sauces as well, choosing two: sesame paste and sesame oil with garlic. The two other options - dry chili sauce, and the seafood sauce both also sounded inviting, but really I was too busy to try the mall.
Now the real fun started, selecting from an extensive menu of ingredients to cook in our pots.
Meat lovers are spoilt for choice at Red Bowl, with a list including Japanese kobe beef sirloin, hand-cut beef shank and exotic meats such as Inner Mongolian sheep rib and hand-cut lamb leg.
Offal is a must have in any hotpot meal, and Red Bowl is no exception. The restaurant that belongs to the luxury hotel Rosewood Beijing, says it adheres to the program called "Partners in Provenance", which means selecting poultry and produce fresh from local and indigenous farms.
Duck kidney and blood jelly are absolutely fresh. After being scalded in the broth, the duck kidney takes on a unique crunchy texture; and the blood curd gives a waxy texture with a mellow aroma.
If you have never had beef bone marrow, an adventure awaits you. Red Bowl's beef bone marrow (48 yuan) may look unsightly raw, but pulled from the pot it is delicious, with a light aromatic and buttery taste.
- Building collapse in Guizhou caused by landslide: govt
- Xi welcomes Japan delegation but warns against historical distortion
- Chinese Vice-Premier stresses flood control
- China to draft more social work standards to improve service
- Hospital fee adjustments won't raise medical bills
- Newspaper tells staff to start own business
- Colombia: A birdwatcher's paradise
- Journey of a migrant girl from village to ad world
- Photographer captures Chinese on the train
- Hou Hsiao-Hsien's The Assassin premieres in Cannes
- Top 10 highest-paid white-collar jobs in China
- The dying craft of balance scales
- Culture Insider: Six things you may not know about Grain Buds
- Premier Li rides on new China-made train in Rio de Janeiro
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Premier Li embarks on Latin America visit |
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Spring Festival trends reflect a changing China |
Patent applications lead the world |
Today's Top News
China, Peru agree on feasibility study on transoceanic railway
China manufactures first
car for US market
Wisconsin hopes to make cheeseheads in China
China, Peru to diversify trade focus
Li: 'Great potential' for Sino-Colombian ties
Green-tea flavored coffee: a simile for cultural ties
Beijing responds to surveillance by US plane
Beijing sets out its rights after reports of incursion
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |