2009 Jun 29 New Openings: Juliette’s

'
Pleasingly done out in creamy-pale hues accented by fresh flowers, Juliette’s has the feel of a cool, upscale French bistro – but not the flavor. We visited for lunch (RMB 78 for two courses) and endured a wishy-washy starter of underseasoned asparagus with quail eggs cooked to hard, chalky yolks. Better was the tuna tartare – piquant with a pleasant, chunky texture. To follow, a perfectly cooked chicken breast was betrayed by a mushroom ragout lacking the deep, woody flavor chicken craves, resulting in a dish not rustic and rich but flighty and forgettable. Admittedly, there’s nothing so broken here that can’t be fixed, but a lunch menu should be a tasty, value-for-money showcase for potential evening customers. And on our visit, Juliette’s fell short.
Juliette’s
Daily 8am-11pm. 1/F, Tongli Studio, 43 Sanlitun Beilu (southwest of 3.3 Mall), Chaoyang District (6417 8188)
Search for more Beijing restaurants by name, category and neighborhood or let the rest of Beijing know about your favorite place to grab a bite by adding a user review of any of the restaurants in our online directory. Every week we'll award the best review with vouchers to some of Beijing's best restaurants, see the newsletter sidebar for more details. Can't see your favorite restaurant in there? Submit a suggestion and we can add it to our database.
You might also be interested in :
Gao Gao Spicy Hot Pot: Cook-It-Yourself With a Taiwanese Twist

Beijing isn’t lacking for hot pot spots, so when a new one appears, even enthusiasts might ask “Why bother?” Gao Gao answers that question with high-quality ingredients and a commitment to recreating the freshest Taipei hot pot.
Fit For a King: Feast Offers a New All-You-Can-Eat Option

The first thing that strikes you about Feast is that it’s a fine-looking restaurant. Of course, nobody really comes to a place like this to enjoy the design, so it’s just as well that the all-you-can-eat offerings deliver. Mix up your own salad to ease yourself in, and try not to overindulge in the bread and cheese selection – you’re going to need every inch your stomach allows.
Malay Day: Malaysian Cuisine at Little Nyonya

Since the term nyonya refers to the women of Chinese communities in Malaysia and Singapore, pretend with me for a second that Little Nyonya, the restaurant, is an actual woman. She’d be the kind of gal you could take home to meet your mom: reliable and demure, not the most glamorous, but someone you can settle down with. She does, after all, know how to cook.
Stylish Sichuan: Syringa Opens at China Central Place

If you love the food at Chuan Ban, but find the environment a little too “authentic” for out-of-town visitors or a date, Syringa may be your best new alternative. The kitchen is staffed with Chuan Ban alumni, but the setting is cleaner, fresher and has a certain rustic-chic meets cliché-contemporary-art charm.
Back in the Flo of Things: The New Brasserie Flo

Brasserie Flo opened the doors of its new location on Xiaoyun Lu in late March, but the team got off to a quiet start as it settled into its new home. We dropped by for dinner last week and were awed by the restaurant's ability to act as a haven from the pressures of the city.
The walk up to the new Flo sets the tone. On the way in, you pass the windows of the main dining room, looking in on the diners you're about to join. It's an uncanny experience that's augmented by the hazy glow of the lighting and the classic decorations. I know it sounds dramatic, but if you let yourself get caught up in the nostalgia of it, entering Brasserie Flo feels a bit like time traveling or teleporting to another reality.





posbj
Re: New Openings: Juliette’s
I had a most enjoyable meal there the day after they opened. The service was friendly and good. The restaurant was full. The flavours subtle. I would go back in an instant. Your review I felt was pretentious and negative and not truely reflective of an excellent new restaurant. I wish them well.