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Exclusive: a first look inside the reimagined Duddell’s in Hong Kong

Tatler Hong Kong

更新於 08月28日05:57 • 發布於 08月26日08:30 • Fontaine Cheng

There’s something quietly audacious about a restaurant reinventing itself after twelve years on the stage. In Hong Kong, where dining rooms open, vanish and reappear with dizzying speed, Duddell’s has been a rare constant: a high-end Cantonese destination that doubled as a salon for art, cocktails, brunch and cultural conversation. But constants, as any collector knows, risk becoming background. And so, Duddell’s has emerged from renovation more grown-up, more assured, with André Fu’s interiors and a cuisine that sharpens heritage into the present. Downstairs refines Cantonese classics; upstairs, the Upper Room offers dim sum and cocktails, with the terrace usable rain or shine.

The Upper Room at Duddell’s: a vibrant new space for dim sum, cocktails and brunch

The Upper Room at Duddell’s: a vibrant new space for dim sum, cocktails and brunch

The new dining room with pistachio greens, mineral blues and stained-glass flourishes

The new dining room with pistachio greens, mineral blues and stained-glass flourishes

The renovation is by André Fu, whose fingerprints are all over Hong Kong’s most refined spaces. His new vision for Duddell’s is painterly and nostalgic, with pistachio greens, mineral blues and buttery yellows brushing against terrazzo and oak. Stained glass panels wink with Lingnan watchtower echoes; the whole space feels like a collector’s dream: cultured, layered, faintly eccentric. It’s a room that draws you closer to look at the textures and details.

Designed by André Fu, the dining room reflects a cultured maison where heritage and modernity meet

Designed by André Fu, the dining room reflects a cultured maison where heritage and modernity meet

Downstairs: sharpened classic Cantonese cuisine

Fresh lily bulb with okra is a light, delicate, and elegantly understated appetiser

Fresh lily bulb with okra is a light, delicate, and elegantly understated appetiser

Traditional handmade crispy glutinous rice chicken, a Cantonese classic reimagined

Traditional handmade crispy glutinous rice chicken, a Cantonese classic reimagined

The cooking under chef Chan Yau-leung is at its most poised now. Duddell’s has always leaned on heritage, but this new chapter reads like a palate refreshed.

A crab cake, golden-edged, comes crowned with bird’s nest and layered with silken egg white: a familiar banquet idea elevated into a study in texture. A dish of sweet and sour pork, so often maligned, reappears here with “first cut” meat. Crisp, juicy and clear-flavoured, showing what happens when technique meets restraint, and the signature fried chicken, marinated, air-dried and fried (while hanging) until the skin crackles like glass, remains an emblem of patience and technique. Meanwhile, richness deepens with a claypot of Wuchang rice, braised with abalone, fish maw and conpoy until each grain gleams with umami.

Chan has sharpened the classics, sanding down the excess and letting craftsmanship do the talking.

Sweet and sour crispy premium cut pork, a refined take on the Cantonese classic, using only the prized first cut for the perfect balance of crunch and flavour

Sweet and sour crispy premium cut pork, a refined take on the Cantonese classic, using only the prized first cut for the perfect balance of crunch and flavour

Upstairs: all-day dim sum and considered cocktails

The staircase at Duddell’s, now illuminated by a striking new light installation

The staircase at Duddell’s, now illuminated by a striking new light installation

Climb the stairs, and Duddell’s changes tempo. The Upper Room has been given a clear identity. Think dim sum and cocktails all day, plates designed for grazing, and a terrace you can enjoy without checking the weather forecast.

The cocktail list, designed by Mario Calderone, is built around the Ba Gua, the feng shui map of energies. Spirits are laced with osmanthus, ginseng, and even baijiu, folded into elegant serves. And then, of course, there is brunch: this is Hong Kong, after all. But Duddell’s has the space, the terrace and the champagne, which runs alongside dim sum and claypot comforts.

Earth, a bittersweet harmony of baijiu, Aperol, pineapple and osmanthus honey

Earth, a bittersweet harmony of baijiu, Aperol, pineapple and osmanthus honey

Lake, a light blend of jasmine vodka, elderflower, peach and bergamot mist

Lake, a light blend of jasmine vodka, elderflower, peach and bergamot mist

With Fu’s interiors weaving Hong Kong’s cultural past into the present, a cocktail list that treats drinking as intention rather than habit, and a new dual-floor rhythm, Duddell’s has found a way to make its second decade feel more assured than its first. Not reinvention, but refinement, and that may be the most modern move of all.

The new bar at Duddell’s, where cocktails by Mario Calderone draw on the Ba Gua to balance flavour with intention

The new bar at Duddell’s, where cocktails by Mario Calderone draw on the Ba Gua to balance flavour with intention

The Upper Room terrace at Duddell’s, now designed for year-round enjoyment, rain or shine

The Upper Room terrace at Duddell’s, now designed for year-round enjoyment, rain or shine

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