Restaurants in Shanghai
Gastronomes never had it so good in Shanghai. With restaurants serving a mind-boggling variety of Chinese cuisine, as well as a wide range of top-notch international fare, Shanghai is arguably mainland China's best city for eating. Beijing boosters will disagree, of course, and it was not always so 15 years ago ...
Gastronomes never had it so good in Shanghai. With restaurants serving a mind-boggling variety of Chinese cuisine, as well as a wide range of top-notch international fare, Shanghai is arguably mainland China's best city for eating. Beijing boosters will disagree, of course, and it was not always so 15 years ago, but the prosperous 1990s that saw Shanghai once again take to the world stage have reawakened the demand for la bella vita, as seen in the explosion of dining establishments in the last few years. For Shanghai residents, ever-attuned to the latest trends and tastes, eating out and trying new restaurants is now a pastime that rivals shopping.
While some of Shanghai's top restaurants can be found in hotels, there are scores of well-run private establishments that rival if not surpass the quality of hotel food, and usually at lower prices. Significantly improved hygiene standards should also allay any concerns you may have about eating out. Shanghai provides the unusual opportunity of dining one moment in a traditional teahouse and another in a restored colonial mansion; missing out would be a shame.
Don't expect the Chinese food here to taste the same as that at home; expect it to be light years better. While you can eat your way through China by sampling all the regional Chinese restaurants in Shanghai, the emphasis is on Shanghai's own renowned cuisine, commonly referred to as benbang cai. Usually considered a branch of Huaiyang cuisine, Shanghai cooking has traditionally relied on soy sauce, sugar, and oil. The most celebrated Shanghai dish is hairy crab, a freshwater delicacy that reaches its prime every fall. Also popular are any number of "drunken" dishes (crab, chicken) marinated in local Shaoxing wine, and braised meat dishes such as lion's head meatballs and braised pork knuckle. Shanghai dim sum and snacks include a variety of dumplings, headlined by the local favorite xiaolong bao, as well as onion pancakes and leek pies, all of which deserve to be tried.
Those hankering for a taste of home will also find that Shanghai is the most foreign-belly-friendly city in China. From the trendiest Continental cuisine to the most recognizable fast-food chains, there is a staggering range of options guaranteed to take the edge off any homesick cravings. Many Asian and European cuisines are well represented, with Italian, Spanish, French, Japanese, Thai, and Indian cooking of good enough quality to satisfy a discerning overseas palate. World-renowned chefs like Jean-Georges Vongerichten, David Laris, and Paul Pairet have also chosen to launch their China flagship restaurants here. Where Shanghai particularly excels is in the bold new tastes that are arising from the mix of East and West.
At the other end of the dining scale, the American fast-food chains of McDonald's and KFC are ubiquitous. So are Starbucks, Häagen-Dazs, and Pizza Hut. Subway is in the mix, along with Hooters, and Cold Stone Creamery. Check the local expatriate magazines for location details.
According to the corporate travel index published by Business Travel News, the corporate dining tab in Shanghai in 2010 (said to lag behind London's, but to exceed San Francisco's) averages around $302 per person per day, but most travelers can get by well below that amount. While Shanghai's top international restaurants tend to charge Western prices, you can have an excellent meal for two at a relatively upscale Chinese restaurant for ¥150 to ¥300. Some of the best local foods can be had for less than that. (Prices quoted for a Chinese meal are for two bowls of rice and between two and four dishes.) The key is to mix it up with a combination of local and international dining. If you want to try Shanghai's more famous Western restaurants, consider going at lunchtime, when lunch specials and set menus can cost less than half of what you would spend at dinner. Hotel restaurants frequently levy a 15% service charge, but few private restaurants do. There is no tipping in restaurants, and the waitstaff will usually run after you to return your change.
The Shanghainese love affair with eating has spawned a dizzying number of restaurant openings (and closings) on any given week, a vexing matter not only for restaurant owners, but travel writers as well. What follows is a list of mostly established restaurants (with an emphasis on those outside of the big hotels) that should, barring any unforeseen health-related crisis, still be thriving by the time you read this. Consult the local English-language weeklies for new restaurant listings.
The widest variety of dining options is in the Luwan (French Concession), Jing An, and Xuhui districts. This is also where you'll find some of the most ambient restaurants located inside colonial mansions on large, sprawling estates. With some of the city's top international restaurants and unimprovable views, the Bund is also another prime dining spot.
As well, Shanghai has a number of food streets (meishi jie) lined with Chinese restaurants of every ilk, though not all of them have English menus or English-speaking staff. They are: Huang He Lu, northwest of the Park Hotel (Huangpu); Yunnan Lu, east of Xizang Lu and south of Yan'an Dong Lu (Huangpu); Yuyuan Zhi Lu, northwest of Jing An Temple (Jing An); and Zhapu Lu, north of Suzhou Creek and east of Sichuan Bei Lu (Hongkou). Locals love Shouning Lu, south of Huaihai Lu between the old Chinese city and the French Concession for the restaurants specializing in spicy crawfish (xiaolongxia), and Si Pai Lou Lu in the old Chinese city south of Fangbang Zhong Lu and west of Zhonghua Lu is chock-full of roadside stalls selling all kinds of delicious local foods. Wujiang Lu, just off Nanjing Xi Lu by the Nanjing Xi Lu Metro station (Huangpu), has become a lot more gentrified and upscale with the inclusion of more Western restaurants.
China's Cuisines
China has a vast number of regional cuisines, which have traditionally been classified according to four main cooking styles. Below is a summary of the four styles and their various sub-branches:
Beijing/Northern -- Beijing or Northern cuisine is typically characterized by strong, robust flavors and hearty ingredients; pork and lamb dominate, the latter also due to the Muslim influence in the northwestern part of the country. Staples are heavy noodles and breads instead of rice. Uighur or Xinjiang cuisine falls under this rubric. Jiaozi, small chunks of meat and vegetables wrapped in dough and boiled, are popular snacks also eaten during the Chinese New Year.
Huaiyang/Shanghai -- Huaiyang cuisine, encompassing the coastal areas of eastern China, and said to require the most skill, aims to preserve the basic flavor of each ingredient in order to achieve balance and freshness. River fish, farm animals, birds, and vegetables feature prominently, and braising and stewing are more common than stir-frying. Red sauces (from soy sauce, sugar, and oil) are popular. Shanghai-, Hangzhou-, Suzhou-, and Yangzhou-style cooking are all minor variations on the same theme.
Cantonese -- Considered the most refined and sophisticated of the cuisines, the emphasis here is on freshness and lightness, with steaming and stir-frying the cooking methods of choice. Seafood dominates, but just about anything edible is fair game -- the Cantonese are known for being the most adventurous eaters. Top hotels all have Cantonese restaurants, which are always the first choice for Chinese if they're trying to impress a guest. Cantonese dim sum, featuring little morsels of food like shrimp dumplings, barbecue pork crisps, and egg tarts, is widely popular.
Sichuan -- Sichuan cooking, born in the damp interior of southwestern China, relies heavily on chilies, peppers, peppercorns, and garlic; spicy and pungent flavors are the result. Popular dishes include gongbao jiding (diced chicken with chili and peanuts) and mapo doufu (spicy tofu with minced pork). Sichuan hot pot (huoguo) is also a favorite. Although popular in Shanghai, Sichuan cooking has seldom made it here intact: The local preference for sweet and salty is readily apparent on many a Sichuan menu in town. Other southwestern cuisines, such as Guizhou and Yunnan, which are themselves subdivided into various ethnic minority cuisines, tend to be spicy and sour.
Bookstore
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Available as paperback
and as e-book.
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American Steakhouse
1515 West Chophouse & Bar
This steakhouse holds its own among all the high-end options in town. You might find it offers more value for your money than Morton's, with generous portions and reasonable prices. The décor crosses Old Shanghai with a classic American bar feel, so Westerners will…$$$ -
Fine Italian
8-1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana
Known as “Bombana” for short, this is Italian chef Umberto Bombana’s Shanghai version of his three Michelin star restaurant in Hong Kong of the same name. You will pay for the privilege of sitting in this ultra-formal dining room overlooking the Bund, with its scrumptious seasonal…$$$ -
Italian, steakhouse
Capo
Designed to evoke the aura of a Roman basilica, with pillars and corridors flanking a main hallway, Capo is the well-executed venture of the Enzo Carbone, the chef behind Shanghai's Italian restaurants Issimo and Matto. The centerpiece of this space are a pair of ovens — one for the…$$$ -
Taiwanese/Chinese
Charmant
A family owned restaurant that's been providing Taiwanese fare in Shanghai since 2003, Charmant religiously employs authentic old-school Taiwanese cooking methods, such as tossing both a young and old chicken together to boil for broth, to maximize both flavor and…$ -
Latin tapas
Colagreco
This Bund restaurant is Argentina’s first two-star Michelin chef Mauro Colagreco’s interpretation of what Shanghai needs to know about South America. His cavernous restaurant is decorated with the warmth of red leather and white-and-black checkered floors, and the menu boasts…$$$ -
Crystal Jade Restaurant
A classy Singaporean chain, Crystal Jade promiscuously borrows from regional cuisines across the nation. The dining room of their Xintiandi branch somehow blends glam decor with a relaxed food-court feel and serves up some of the best xiaolong bao (steamed dumplings with broth) in…$$ -
Hunan
Di Shui Dong
Rivaling Sichuan cuisine in spiciness (though relying more on straight chilies and less on the mind-numbing, tongue-lashing peppercorn), the lesser-known cooking of Hunan Province can be tried at this delightful restaurant atop a flight of rickety wooden stairs inside a small French…$$ -
Chinese, Taiwanese
Din Tai Fung (IAPM Mall)
Those who love Din Tai Fung's Xiaolongbao will be thrilled to know there's another location tucked away on the 3rd floor of the new high-end IAPM mall. This Taiwanese-owned restaurant chain seems to be growing at warp speed with new locations popping up all over Shanghai, but surely…$ -
French, international
Franck
Franck was one of the first French bistrots to show up on the Shanghai scene back in 2007, and it’s still competing well with the dozens of new fine international restaurants to appear on the scene (also with big-name chefs and investors). Franck’s salmon…$$$ -
Shanghai
Fu 1088
Tucked away behind an iron gate on a busy one-way street, this gem of a restaurant is in an unmarked three-story villa with glossy wallpaper and chipped mosaic floors. Dining is in one of 17 private rooms, each laden with early 20th-century furniture, cherrywood chairs, and…$$$ -
international, asian fusion
Ginger
This Asian fusion bar and bistro gets excellent marks for ambience, with a multi-story venue with large picture windows overlooking greenery and a park and an un-hurried atmosphere that is unusual for Shanghai restaurants. The food is fantastic too, with the flavors coming from the…$$ -
Hunan
Guyi Hunan
Expats and locals alike flock to Guyi for reliably satisfying Hunan at reasonable prices, and this is a great place to take guests who might want to try good Chinese cuisine but are scared of anything too spicy or strange. There’s nothing remarkable about the ambience— …$ -
Hai by Goga
Want skyline views alongside some of the tastiest Cal-Asian fusion cuisine the city has to offer? In 2011, San Francisco chef Brad Turley launched this companion to his signature Goga restaurant on the street level of the building entrance, adding a fully stocked bar and a versatile…$$ -
Cantonese
Hengshan Cafe
This bustling, two-story restaurant is always packed with locals who flock here for affordable and authentic Hong Kong-style cuisine, especially twice-fried noodles, wontons, claypot stews, and barbecued meat plates. Try the duck and pork meat plates. Also ask the waiter what…$ -
Hunan
Hunan Xiangcun Fengwei
After an extensive renovation that includes burnished cement floors and beam-exposed ceilings, former neighborhood secret Xiangcun Fengwei is now worthy of a visit even for people who live outside the French Concession. This three-story restaurant serves up Hunan staples at…$ -
Mediterranean, American, brewpub
Liquid Laundry
The team behind Boxing Cat Brewery — one of Shanghai's first breweries — and Mexican favorite Cantina Agave has launched this gastropub concept on a bustling corner in the French Concession. It was the talk of the town in 2014, with the restaurant packed even on a Monday night. The…$ -
Italian
Mercato
Celebrity chef Jean Georges' first Italian restaurant opened in 2012 in a splashy location overlooking The Bund with warm leather and wood-toned decor centering the dining experience around an open bar and an Italian wood-burning stove. The seafood is fresh and well-done —especially…$$ -
American Steak/Seafood
Morton's Steak and Seafood Grille
In 2013, the high-end steakhouse chain Morton's opened up its second Shanghai location, and now serves seafood and steaks inside a California-inspired, light and bright setting. The wet-aged beef and fresh seafood are good, per Morton's high standards. They also serve…$$$ -
French
Mr. and Mrs. Bund
Still one of Shanghai's most popular restaurants to celebrate anniversaries and birthdays, Mr. and Mrs. Bund continues to serve up fine-but-casual French fare alongside stunning Huangpu river views. Even as Shanghai's restaurant scene has exploded with competition, bringing in chefs…$$ -
Taiwanese
Noodle Bull
Since 2008, Noodle Bull has been popular for its signature Taiwanese cuisine, especially its beef noodle soups, which are a more upscale version of what you'll find in the street. They contain no MSG, are hand-made, and are sourced from fine restaurant-grade…$ -
Sichuan
Pinchuan Sichuan
Those who have actually lived in Sichuan province will swear that this is some of the best, freshest Sichuan food you’ll find in Shanghai. Sure, it tends toward the fancier side of Sichuan cuisine — nothing here would resemble the food you'd find in street side vendors in Sichuan…$$ -
Italian
Scarpetta
This little trattoria did so well in its first year that the banker-turned-restaurateur John Liu quickly expanded to 60 seats, and then took his expertise and moved it next door to open the French bistro Coquille. Scarpetta is his baby, however, and the bright-and-casual feel of this…$$ -
Sichuan
Sichuan Citizen
Sichuan Citizen is a favorite with locals and expats alike, with great cocktails, stone pot dishes, pepper beef, twice-fried eggplant, and other mouthwatering classics served in a casual, red-lantern and wood setting. The two-story restaurant is also good for hosting groups, as…$ -
Yunnan Chinese
Southern Barbarian
This restaurant’s been a favorite with locals since it opened in the late 1990s, especially among the expats who flock here for its authentic and flavorful Yunnan cuisine cooked by the owner, a native of China's interior Yunnan province. In 2013, the restaurant launched a new menu,…$ -
international
Ultraviolet
You can’t really call this a restaurant or even a dining event. Instead, refer to Ultraviolet as an all-senses-on-deck gustatory experience cultivated by the inimitable French chef Paul Pairet, who spent nearly two decades honing the concept and finding the right time and place to…$$$ -
Thai
Urban Thai
Urban Thai was launched in 2011 by a Thai mother-daughter duo who wanted to bring cozy, familiar, and authentic Thai cuisine to Shanghai. “Mummy,” the chef, is the star of the show, serving up pad thai, homemade curries, and crab specialties in a tiny dining room which seats only…$ -
Chinese vegetarian
Vegetarian Lifestyle
This is the Chinese restaurant with the power to transform carnivores into vegetarians for life with little sacrifice. The all-veggie menu changes every few months, but the standbys such as fake meat Kung Pao “Chicken,” “pork” dumplings and Wuxi-style “spareribs" will bring you back…$ -
Asian/International Brunch
Westin Sunday Brunch
The Westin brings the ultimate in dining and entertainment decadence to Shanghai with its famous Sunday brunch. Join the mostly expat crowd for fresh seafood, sushi, some of the finest Western meats you can buy inside Chinese borders, and free-flowing spirits that are so plentiful…$$$