Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--Nine Flavors (2024)

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (1)Restaurateur George Chen has been around quite a few blocks. His latest opus is Eight Tables, a small, sparse elegant space on the second level above his new food emporium—dubbed by some the "Chinese Eataly"—China Live.

Chen got his start cooking under friend and mentor Ceclia Chiang at her famed Mandarin Restaurant in Ghirardelli Square. Chen opened his first restaurant, the iconic pan-Asian Betelnut on Union Street in San Francisco in 1995 – and it was a favorite of ours for years, where we could sample eclectic and delicious foods from around Asia. He went on to open Shanghai 1930, where we always found the best Shanghai soup dumplings.

In 2001 he opened the high end dining spot Qi at the then-new International Terminal at SFO. It was a financial disaster, wiped him out, and he and his wife spent 2003 – 2016 in the restaurant business in Shanghai. Now he’s back, with the 30,000 square foot China Live, and the jewel box Eight Tables, all supposedly backed by rich Asian investors.

The first entrance to Eight Tables is somewhat off-putting: a locked iron gate blocks theUnique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (2)entrance to seedyKenneth Rexroth Place, a one-block alley in North Beach. A sign states “Call for assistance” the phone is answered, and a lovely and elegantly dressed young woman comes to open the gate and escort us through the shabby alley and into the elevator to the second floor – where blond wood walls, frosted glass, comfortable leather seats and banquettes and soft lighting create a subdued and elegant atmosphere.

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (3)The restaurant essentially serves Chinese omikase – or tasting menu. The menu states: “We take inspiration from the historic dining style, Si Fang Cai or ‘Private Chateau Cuisine' …..which is a personal experience, as if you were coming into my home for an elaborate meal prepared in an intimate setting.” Si Fang Cai translates from Cantonese as ‘speakeasy’ and is sometimes known as private dining—General Manager Andrew Fuentes explains that close attention and a high level of personal service are as integral to the experience as the food. The multi-course menu is priced at $225 per person (with 20% service added, as well as the SF restaurant ‘health mandate’ of around 4%). The wine pairing is an additional $125 per person, but we opt for wines by the glass from the menu, and start with a Clif Family Rose of Grenache from Mendocino, and a Junmai Ginjo sake.

The first element of the meal is Jiu Gong Ge—a plate with 9 small dishes representing what Chinese cuisine considers the nine flavors: spicy, salty, sweet, sour, bitter, numbing, nutty, sharp, and smoky. Included are single bites of date, beef tendon, a bit of chicken rolled around a salted egg, bitter melon, briny clam, smoked fish andUnique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (4)more. An interesting and playful commencement.

The delightful Four Seas Dumpling is one four-lobed flower-petal dumpling containing Russian golden Osetra caviar, uni, trout roe and crème fraiche topped with minced pickled apple. We’re advised to cut it apart, and eat each piece separately – turning one course into four. All elements are most delicious, but the uni the standout for me.

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (5)By this point it’s time to change wines to an off-dry Gewurtztraminer by famed Alsatian vintner Zind Humbrecht. We glance around to pay a bit more attention to the serene and subdued surroundings with soft jazz playing in the background. The well-separated space features four round booths that can seat up to eight, four four-tops, and one long oval table. If you count the Chef’s table in the kitchen that’s really a ninth table, but there are truly only eight in the elegant restaurant space. All the waiters wear khaki-colored three-piece suits which echo the wood walls and leather banquettes, and the somm and the GM stand out in their dark pinstripes.

The Barbeque ‘Shao Kao’ course consists of a bite of Iberico char siu pork on fried shiso leaf, a square of pork belly, and Kaluga caviar on shatteringly crisp duck skin.

The Gewurz pairs well with the Gulf Prawn and consommé with pumpkin vermicelli, and more than well with the Black cod in Banana leaf that follows. Succulent translucent flesh on a lotus-root base, with bamboo heart and ginger shreds and baby eggplant, steamed and then splashed with scallion oil at the last minute. A spectacular dish, and what will turn out to be one of my favorites of the evening.Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (6)

For the heartier courses to come, the somm recommends a Flowers pinot noir for the one of us who loves that grape, and a Faust Cabernet for me. Both tasty, and should be for the per-glass price. This is a restaurant for an occasion or a splurge, certainly not one to count the pennies.

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (7)We learned Velvet Chicken years ago from Barbara Tropp’s opus when she had China Moon on Bush Street, but have never had it like this with shaved black truffles, matsutake mushrooms and a soya veal jus creating a symphony of flavors.

A square of red ‘Dongpo’ pork belly on a swoosh of rich sauce gets baby bok choy and a tiny tea-smoked quail egg alongside, and boy what a combination of richness. And that richness is intensified by the following course of a foie gras potsticker paired with a black sesame-peanut mochi, which GM Fuentes claims is his favorite course on the menu.Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (8)

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (9)We’re eased down with a scoop of fermented rice sorbet, tasting a bit like sake, topped with Goji berry vinegar and berries. And finally, Chinese sea grass shards, a passion fruit mousse and mesquite bubbles – yes just bubbles of foamed mesquite smoke – how it’s created is anyone’s guess.

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (10)We’re given a quick tour of the gleaming high-tech kitchen as it’s winding down for the night, say hello to the cheerful brigade, and briefly meet Chef de Cuisine Chi-Feng Lin, who hails from Taiwan.Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--NineFlavors (11)

The tasting menu, wines, service, tax and SF health charge add up to just over $750 for two people. Quite pricey, but a very special experience.

Unique Journeys Travel - Journal - Eight Tables--Nine Flavors (2024)

FAQs

What are the 9 flavors of Chinese food? ›

The palette of flavors and textures represent the senses of taste – salt, sweet, sour, spicy, bitter, sharp, nutty, numbing, and smoky, awakening the palate to the next nine courses ahead that will incorporate each of these flavors more in depth.

What are the Big 8 Chinese food? ›

These eight culinary cuisines are Anhui, Cantonese, Fujian, Hunan, Jiangsu, Shandong, Szechuan and Zhejiang.
  • Anhui (Hui) ...
  • Cantonese (Yu) ...
  • Fujian (Min) ...
  • Hunan (Xiang) ...
  • Jiangsu (Su) ...
  • Shandong (Lu) ...
  • Szechuan (Chuan) ...
  • Zhejiang (Zhe)

What are the 5 flavors of TCM? ›

Each food also has at least one of the five flavours of TCM. These flavours include bitter, sweet, spicy/pungent, salty and sour.

What are the different flavors of Chinese food? ›

The Flavours

Traditional Chinese medicine believes that there are five major food flavours–sweet, salty, bitter, sour, and pungent (including spicy)–and each one is connected to the well-being of different organs.

What are the different Chinese flavors? ›

The taste of Chinese food is traditionally balanced into five key categories — salty, spicy, sour, sweet and bitter — that come together to create a delicious harmony of flavours.

What are the flavor profiles of Chinese food? ›

Before understanding food flavours in China, we must first learn a bit about the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) culture. According to TCM, it is important to have a balance of the five flavours: salty, spicy, sour, sweet and bitter.

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