At Yme Casa, everything reminds you of a
homey old Shanghai, with the dark period furnishings, draperies and all kinds of
antiques. -- Image of article Where the chic meet to eat
At Yme Casa, everything reminds you
of a homey old Shanghai, with the dark period furnishings, draperies and all
kinds of antiques. -- Image of article Where the chic meet to eat
Family Li Imperial Cuisine features a high-end,
royal setting. -- Image of article Where the chic meet to eat
ONCE there were quite a few
home restaurants using special or "secret" recipes passed down through
generations. Today few are left and they offer intimacy and home cooking. Nie
Xin tucks in.
Zhi Jiahao is exacting when it comes to restaurants for
very private meetings with clients and friends: It must be extremely quiet and
discreet.
Accordingly, the 30-year-old sales executive chooses Yme Casa,
a si fang cai restaurant, literally private-home cooking or kitchen.
"It's homey, casual and more important, very private; the food tastes
like your mother's cooking," says Zhi of the intimate eatery on Wuyang Road in
the former French concession.
It's a place with old Shanghai ambience
for those in the know, where the chic meet to eat and business deals are sealed.
The term si fang cai has gained currency, but the genuine article is
rare, or nonexistent. The traditional si fang cai in China were famous for
serving very special and unusual dishes made using private or secret recipes.
Family Li Imperial Cuisine on the Bund serves dishes once prepared for
the imperial family in Beijing. It honors the tradition of secret recipes but
it's not in a private home. The original Li restaurant is in Beijing.
"Si fang cai today is home catering that features traditional family
recipes in a setting just like home," says Gu Zhongchao, a member of the
Changning District Food and Beverage Association.
Yme Casa, which opened
four years ago, is typical of a small handful. The Chinese name, Jia Yan, means
"home dinner."
The entrance is hidden among ordinary houses and a few
boutiques; inside, it's like homey old Shanghai, with the dark period
furnishings, draperies, silk bolsters and on the table colorful glassware and
china.
"It's like visiting a close friend's home," says businessman Zhi,
referring to the sofa, the small wooden tables and the shelf that displays
pretty old dishes.
Four years ago, Zhao Yirou opened this private
kitchen in a 100-square-meter house, with just one table. Her mother Madame Yu
(Mama Yu) presides in the tiny kitchen. "It's not just a restaurant," says Zhao,
who is in her 30s. "I'm trying to promote a lifestyle."
Originally, it
sold fashion, accessories, decorations and furniture - all the things Zhao likes
- and it had a single table in the living room.
"It started as a dual
concept but gradually the si fang cai part became successful," she says.
Today it has five tables and serves no more than 16 customers at one
time.
"Si fang cai is a first choice for overseas Chinese who have a
special affection for old Shanghai, for artists who enjoy local culture and for
officials and celebrities who need privacy," says Zhao.
"I want my
customers to feel at home - it's easy, casual, not noisy and crowded," she adds.
She serves a set menu of Shanghainese food, known as ben bang cai
(local-style cooking), all prepared by her mother and two assistants.
The three decide the menu, buy fresh ingredients at the market and
prepare everything themselves. Mama Yu knows the likes an dislikes of the
regulars.
Dishes feature seasonal vegetables and reflect various
festivals, such as de Chinese rice pudding (ba bao fan) during the Spring
Festival.
Yu serves the Shanghainese standards, such as braised whole
fish with spring onions and Shanghai wonton; "lion's head" meatballs with hairy
crab meat; and drunken shrimp with preserved plum. She frequently serves her own
creations.
The minimum cost is 200 yuan (US$29) per person.
Zhao
recalls a 78-year-old diner arriving on the night of the Mid-Autumn Festival
last year; he was returning from the United States for the first time in 65
years.
"Everything made him remember his childhood in Shanghai almost 70
years ago," says Mama Yu.
Quite a few restaurants call themselves si
fang cai, and they may be large or small. "By my definition, si fang cai can
only be a small, home restaurant," says businessman diner Zhi. "Some big
restaurants do serve home-like food, but they are not authentic si fang cai
restaurants."
Today's concept of si fang cai is very different from the
original, says Jiang Jinling, a 75-year-old Shanghainese local. Traditionally,
only the private kitchen that inherits an exclusive recipe could become si fang
cai - mother's cooking is just homemade.
Royal secrets
Family Li
Imperial Cuisine serves a set menu of what are said to be once-secret recipes.
The legendary Li Shunqing was Lord Secretary to the household of the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) Emperors Tongzhi and Guangxu, and he oversaw security
of the Forbidden City and the imperial kitchen. He supervised the eunuchs who
tasted the food before the emperor, lest it be poisoned.
The imperial
cuisine was lavish, mixing the best dishes of the Han and Manchu people, as well
as other minorities, and Li became very familiar with it.
He recorded
the menus and recipes, including ingredients and preparation. His "secret"
cookbook was passed through generations and in 1985 seven family members opened
the Beijing restaurant.
Today's Family Li Imperial Cuisine is said to be
authentic, cooked according to Li's records.
At the very beginning,
Family Li opened in a hutong (alleyway) only set one table each day and accepted
only one reservation at least three or four days in advance. No order was
allowed; diners just ate what the kitchen had prepared. In 1986, president of
Merck Petroleum from the United States came to China on a project and tried
Family Li, being the first foreign customer. Bill Gates, Jackie Chan and writer
Louis Cha are also on the diner's list.
The restaurant in Shanghai that
opened in 2006 with nine private rooms still feature Beijing food, such as
smoked pork, well-stewed superior shark's fin with duck meat, deep-fried fresh
scallops, fried egg custard, fried lobster with fungus and bamboo shoots in
Beijing style, fried beef with chilli sauce and sweet and sour ribs.
The
cost per person ranges from 600 yuan to 2,000 yuan per person. Since the dishes
are meticulously prepared and cooked, reservations are required.
In a
villa on Xinhua Road, the small Lanting restaurant is furnished with antiques,
old paintings and calligraphy.
There is no menu. The chef prepares
dishes requested by diners who call a few days in advance.
"The dishes
are homemade, but nothing very special," says Wang Yikai who dined there twice.
"But the ambience is quite good and the service is not bad. Guest can chat and
relax on the couch after the meal."
These private-home restaurants serve
local culture and nostalgia at the top of their menu.
"Many customers
choose si fang cai for privacy, memories of childhood and feelings of home,
which don't exist in big restaurants," says Gu from the food and beverage
association.
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