Travel 5 minutes 08 December 2017

Inside Lung King Heen: The First Cantonese Restaurant In Hong Kong To Get Three Michelin Stars

Cantonese cuisine has evolved in the past decade. But what was it like at the start? We talk to Lung King Heen's executive chef Chan Yan-tak.

For Chan Yan Tak, or “Tak Gor” as many lovingly call him, his lifelong journey in gastronomy didn’t begin as a personal choice.

He entered the kitchen in 1964 at the age of 12. When his father passed away, the responsibility to provide for his four younger siblings suddenly fell on his shoulders. Through the introduction of a neighbor, he started to apprentice at Dai Sam Yuen restaurant in busy Wan Chai. During that era, cooking was a career for those less educated and desperate to survive. Apprentice cooks got free meals and accommodation in addition to their monthly salaries. While it might seem like a good bargain, all of them had to cramp into bunk beds in a small flat near the workplace. It was not an ideal environment to relax after a day of really hard work.

Back in those days, Chan’s work was his whole life. He got up at 4:00 a.m. to prepare dim sum, staying at the restaurant for more than 10 hours every day. Understandably, such a work schedule didn’t allow him to indulge in entertainment.

Many cooks then, as the public came to perceive them, got their hands into gambling and lost all their income. Leaving work after midnight, Chan spent most of his down time at the cinema. Besides that, he could only go back to his home in Kowloon twice a month with his earnings in tow—traveling to the other side of the harbor was a time-consuming feat before the Cross-Harbor Tunnel was built.

The executive Chinese chef at the Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, Chan’s value comes from more than half a century of experience in the kitchen.
The executive Chinese chef at the Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, Chan’s value comes from more than half a century of experience in the kitchen.

A Disrespected Business

During the 60s to 70s, cooks were lowly-regarded, whether you worked at a dai pai dong or an upscale restaurant. As Chan recalled, “Cooks were like a broken cotton-padded jacket—it’s not presentable but warm. They got by.”

Hong Kong experienced a gigantic transformation since then. New infrastructure in public transport and public housing were established. Free education was provided. These were followed by a booming stock exchange and property markets. In response, the restaurant business began to target the tycoons emerging from the vigorous economy. But not much was improved in the kitchen, child labor became extinct and free accommodation was taken away. It was still a job for people who failed at school, looking for a trade. Notable chefs in the population’s memory could be counted on the fingers of one hand.

And then, things started to change when the MICHELIN Guide arrived 10 years ago.

The First Three-starred Cantonese Restaurant

Chan said that, except for the bits and pieces he read on the newspaper, he had very little idea about the MICHELIN Guide beforehand. And then one day he was informed by the hotel’s leaders that an undercover food critic might be there to taste his food.

“My colleagues on the front end were so nervous. Whenever they saw someone look around or ask questions, they assumed that person was the undercover critic. But none of us had any idea,” he said, chuckling.

To Chan, the best solution is, first and foremost, to serve every customer as well as they could. In the end, the call from the MICHELIN Guide finally came: Lung King Heen took the coveted three stars. They are the first Cantonese restaurant to do that, and the only one in Hong Kong.

“The general manager of the hotel at the time was about to burst into tears,” he noted. As happy as he was, Chan only understood how much of an achievement it was after he received a hurricane of press coverage on the day the news was announced publicly.

“I had media coming for interviews before that, but not frequently,” he recalls. “When that happened, there was a large group of reporters looking for me at the restaurant entrance. And I had a long list of interviews scheduled. They came from Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, Japan, the U.S., France and even the Baltic countries.”

He was referred to as “Master” and “Tak Gor,” names that signified unprecedented reverence to Cantonese cuisine.

Crispy Scallops with fresh pear, shrimp paste and Yunnan ham.
Crispy Scallops with fresh pear, shrimp paste and Yunnan ham.

Potential Opportunities

Cantonese cooks finally got the recognition they deserved. Not only did they become known among a wider audience, but many chefs from Michelin-starred restaurants were offered lucrative contracts at new restaurants due to the escalating interest to invest in gourmet Cantonese cuisine.

“For instance, Pui Gor (Mak Kwai Pui, the owner of Tim Ho Wan) worked at Lung King Heen,” Chan explained by quoting a conversation with his old partner. “People might not understand it’s a big deal if you put it this way. But if you say he comes from a three-Michelin-starred restaurant, it changes their perception immediately. Pui said having that in the resume helped him set up his business.”

As for Chan himself, he receives several proposals to jump ship each month. Even though he never gives them too much thought, he gets more support from the hotel than before.

“There were only 35 of us when we first opened,” he says. “I told the management the number of staff was inadequate, but they didn’t act upon the request. Since we made it into the MICHELIN Guide, the company has become more confident in us and distributed more resources to the restaurant. Now our team has grown to 45 members.”

Superior pottage with shredded chicken.
Superior pottage with shredded chicken.

Diners with A New Attitude

It was actually the patrons who made the biggest leap of attitude. The people of Hong Kong are very familiar with Cantonese cooking. Therefore, to many, a meal at a Chinese restaurant was nothing more than a casual get-together. After being featured in the MICHELIN Guide, Cantonese food had become the center of gravity in the local dining scene. Not only did the locals begin to take it seriously, but many customers at Lung King Heen came from overseas with an interest to know what it is.

The reservation list says it all: before receiving the Michelin stars, diners could get a table if they made a reservation two days beforehand. The first year when it was included in the guide, the restaurant was at its maximum capacity even during the last order. And you still have to be patient if you want to secure seats at Lung King Heen now, typically fully booked a month in advance on weekdays and three weeks on the weekend. Some people even make reservations a year in advance to secure a table on Chinese New Year’s Eve.

Diners have grown more curious about Cantonese cuisine and taste food more carefully. Some put on an analytical lens and write reviews about their experiences. Chan shared with us two unforgettable occasions:

“There was a foreign cook who cried as he was eating. I asked his wife if they had any problem with the food. The cook told me he cried because it was so delicious. The other group of customers were from Hong Kong. They were laughing as the meal went on. And again, I asked them what happened. In the end they gave me the same answer: they laughed because the food was so good.”

Baked whole abalone puff with diced chicken, one of Lung King Heen’s signature dishes.
Baked whole abalone puff with diced chicken, one of Lung King Heen’s signature dishes.

The Taste of Experience

The MICHELIN Guide changed the whole ecosystem of Cantonese cuisine and brought it up several notches in the pecking order of the gastronomic world. But Chan believes something has never changed, nor should it.

“Presentation has become a big factor in gourmet Cantonese cuisine nowadays,” he states. “Certain dishes are served by person; some chefs would come out and communicate with the customers. We also have a wider range of ingredients, more quality produce from other countries available to us. For example, we import bitter melon from Okinawa, eggs from Japan and fresh truffles from Australia. But these aren’t the foundations of Cantonese cooking.”

According to him, Cantonese food is different from its counterparts in the world of cuisines. It consists of many sub-categories, from siu mei to dim sum to cooked dishes, as well as many cooking techniques including steaming, stir-frying, deep-frying, braising and many more. There is a cornucopia of recipes to make the same dish, as every chef develops their own approach, or inherits it from their mentor. However, no one can find a golden formula or shortcut in preparing Cantonese dishes. The accumulation of experience and personal interpretation are the keys to success. The importance of the cooking basics will never disappear regardless of the era. That’s why Chan rejected all the foreign cooks’ requests for apprenticeship—the nuances and complexities of Cantonese food can’t be learned in a few years.

Perhaps, it’s the taste of experience which makes the only three Michelin-starred Cantonese restaurant so appealing.

This article was originally written by Chan Wing Man and translated by Vincent Leung.

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