I was recommended to go to Tung Po Seafood
Restaurant by my good friend and fellow wine writer Stephen Quinn as he had
heard that it was an incredible experience to go and eat at – plus it has a
Michelin Star to boot! Tung Po is located on the second floor of a wet market
in North Point, not the most glamorous location for a Michelin Starred
restaurant but you have to experience the place first before you judge it.
The place is always packed and needs at least a
week’s advance booking to go there but once you have witnessed the atmosphere,
service and food you will be itching to get back and relive the whole
experience again.
Robby is the chef/owner of the place and he is
as well known for his great food as he is for his ability to entertain. He is
known as the ‘dancing chef’ and on the night in question last week we witnessed
his incredible ability to moonwalk with the mop in hand, and break dance to a few
of the funky tunes that were blasting out of the speakers on the floor.
White table cloth, candles and decanters there
are not, but stools, wine glasses if you need and great food (not to mention
very, very cheap corkage fees) are what makes this place special. So Stephen
and I, wife and sister in law in tow, grabbed a selection of wines and headed
off to dinner.
The amazing ability that Chinese restaurants
have in keeping corkage to a minimum (at worst you may have to pay $30-$50 but
generally it’s free) makes a mockery of some of the corkage fees that Western
restaurants in town charge you for the freedom to drink a wine of your choice
rather than one that lines the pockets of the establishments, and this is why
some local restaurants are getting more and more popular with casual wine
drinkers.
We grabbed a handful of wines from varying
countries and of varying varietals and set about attempting to pair them with
Robby’s great selection of foods. We kicked off with an Elena Walch Gewurztraminer
from Italy which we saw fit to pair with a squid, cucumber and wasabi salad
and the pairing was very good indeed. The Gewurztraminer was lovely, floral and
fresh with a good body to it. A little off-dry but not at all sweet, this made
a great pairing to the salad and would make a delectable summer white wine when
the weather gets better.
We then ordered a Prawn in Salty Egg Batter (which
although salty egg is not my cup of tea) and paired it with a German Riesling;
Tesch Krone Riesling 2010 from the Nahe Region of Germany. All told, another
excellent pairing as this is a nice dry Riesling that suits Chinese food in
general but also goes really well with seafood and in this case, counteracted the
saltiness of the batter.
I am a big fan of South African Chenin Blanc
and South African wines have a notoriously hard time selling in this country
(mainly because there is a choice of bad or terrible South African wines on our
local supermarket shelves here). We decided to pair the Beaumont Chenin Blanc
with a dish of local clams sautéed with chili and garlic and, once again,
another fine pairing. The chili was nicely counteracted by the medium body of
the Chenin and, as this worked so well, begs the question why more people aren’t
making more effort to link together South African wines and Chinese food.
It wouldn’t be a gweilo dinner without something
sweet and sour (it’s comfort food folks) so we ordered a sweet and sour pork
mainly because we wanted to eat it but also because, knowing from experience,
the Tesch Riesling goes really well with this dish. If you are being a boring
eater and doing sweet and sour pork and fried rice, if you’re not drinking beer
then I can highly recommend German Riesling.
Deciding to be a little extravagant we took a
bottle of 1964 Domaine Jean Dupont Bourgogne Chardonnay which we thought would
go nicely with a fresh locally caught fish. Don’t ask me what kind of fish it
was, all I know it was alive and swimming not 10 minutes before it was
steaming on the plate in front of us! That’s how we do it here, choose it,
catch it, gut it, eat it…..
I have no idea who ordered the squid in squid
ink but other than looking like a bowl of black goo it actually tasted very
nice and was a great accompaniment to the Chenin, the Riesling and the Gewurztraminer.
Not something I will be ordering again, but you don’t learn anything by being
boring and ordering the same food everywhere you go.
Needing some meat to pair with the two bottles
of red we brought to the party we opted for quick fried Angus beef with garlic
which we paired, firstly with the Eponymous Cabernet Sauvignon from Napa which,
as expected was a wicked pairing, the juicy tender beef melting in the mouth
swiftly followed by a coating of delectable Napa velvet on the palate was
something to savour.
There wasn’t much beef left and we were getting
full and, other than the fried noodles that were ordered to begin the “soaking
up the booze” process, there was little left to pair with our final bottle, the
Vale Huarpe Barbera from Argentina. Actually, when we first tasted this wine
straight after opening we did not like it at all. However, after two hours
sitting there breathing a while it turned out to be a very nice drop indeed. It
had some nice roundness with chocolate flavours and the tannins had subsided
considerably.
All this took place to the background music of
(from what I remember) Eminem, The BG’s, Michael Jackson and various tunes that
make you want to get up and join Robby on the ‘dance floor’. I can only say that
if not for the food, Tung Po has its Michelin Star for its service and staff
ability. I have been to hotels where staff know less about wine and wine
service than the staff at Tung Po and this was a real delight. Service was
swift, done with a smile and there were no mistakes. So what if they’re wearing
wellington boots? It all adds to the charm of the place!
All I can say is, Tung Po is like organized mayhem…..and
you’ll love it! Next time you are thinking about having six bottles of wine at
a Michelin Starred restaurant, go and buy six bottles of wine and head to North
Point’s Tung Po. For four of us, who were later joined by two more and then
consumed around 6 bottles of Tsing Tao the bill came to less than $1400 –
bargain, cheap corkage, great food, great atmosphere and service….we’re definitely
going back!
Tung Po Seafood Restaurant – 2nd
Floor, Java Road Cooked Food Market, 99 Java Road, North Point, Hong Kong Tel:
2880-9399 (need to book before 5:30pm)
Elena Walch Gewurztraminer is available from
Castello del Vino in Wan Chai (www.castellodelvino.com.hk)
Tesch Krone Riesling is available from Thomas
Palmer Fine German Wines (www.finegermanwines.hk)
Beaumont Chenin Blanc is available from
Vincisive (www.vincisive.com.hk)
Jean Dupont Bourgogne was (maybe still is)
available from Slurp.Asia (www.slurp.asia)
Eponymous Cabernet Sauvignon is available from
Open 3 Wines (www.open3wines.com)
Valle Huarpe was a sample from Lipu
International and, although this brand is not available in Hong Kong they have
many more great Argentine wines (victor@belhk.com)

Good review Ali and some interesting wines all round. Glad to se the Chenin worked with a potentially difficult chilli dish.
ReplyDeleteThanks Darren. It was a really good pairing highlighting the versatility of the wines and of Chenin Blanc....
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