ROOMbeijing ROOM北京
Restaurant and bar from former Blu Lobster chef Brian McKenna. The colorful decor may be too much for traditionalist diners, but the food is fantastic on its day. Try the Indonesian cod or McKenna's trademark 42-ingredient salad.
Location
- CBD CBD
- Rm 301-302, 3/F, Park Life, Yintai Centre, 2 Jianguomenwai Dajie, Chaoyang District
- 朝阳区建国门外大街2号银泰中心301-302室
- Sun-Wed 11am-2am (kitchen closes midnight), Thu-Sat 11am-4am (kitchen closes 2am)
- 8517 2033
Contact

- Login or register to add a review
- report listing mistake
Map of ROOMbeijing
Current events at ROOMbeijing
- Feb 12 2012 14:00pmFeb 12 2012 17:00pmFeb 14 2012 18:00pm
User reviews of ROOMbeijing ROOM北京
Overrated
Food: overpriced, tiny portions, mediocre. Creative food does not mean throw in everything you can find and making them into weird textures. The signature 42-ingredient salad was just odd.
Ambiance: it was SO dark in there I had to use the light on my cell phone to see the menu. While the singer was not bad, I think it's weird to have someone sing while you eat, I think that kind of entertainment is more for bars and lounges. During dinner-time it was just distracting.
Service: probably the only good thing about this place, but just good service does not make me want to go back to a restaurant.
- 295 views
- Login or register to post comments
- Comments (0)
Room for rent
Im sure this place will be out of business in a short period of time!
Was there with a group of friends in the weekend........the place was empty. Still we stayed and tried the food, that was a big mistake. First they were not able to serve all appetizers at once so we had to wait 10 min. to start our dinner with half the dishes on the table. After talking to several waiters that apparently had nothing to do we got our food. The 42 ingredient salad is a joke, the picture in the menu looks nice but the actual dish came out without any inspiration. It were leaves trown in a soup bowl.........not what you expect of a 100RMB salad.
We waited for the maincourse and were not to happy about that too, Small portions and lack of flavor.
Overall a bad experience.
- 347 views
- Login or register to post comments
- Comments (0)
Good food, clientele - eh.
Previously wrote a review of this place and it vanished, though I can see it in my MY REVIEWS section. Odd. So here it is:
---------
Had dinner here last night and it was a pretty decent affair...
Given the time, effort and hype associated with the design of ROOM, I expected something really unique. That said, I was pretty underwhelmed. Its an odd melange of pop-art and kitsch. In some areas of the place it works (I think the 3d posters are pretty cool) and in other it feels like an upscale hotel lobby (i.e. the lounge area). Kinda like they wanted to go the LAN route, but be classy and hip (LAN's just gaudy), and somewhere along the way ran out of money and decided to just throw some stuff on the otherwise sparse walls. I'd say, based on design alone, it'd rate an even B, and most of that's for the amusing "hidden-behind-the-bookshelf" bathrooms.
Speaking of design, I'm curious how well the space will work for the events they're throwing (DJs, etc). Its a large circular room, but there's a big room in the middle of it (unsure if its a serving station or a private room) that would obscure any view for roughly 40% of the patrons looking from any direction.
On to the food.
Started with the 42 ingredient salad. It was quite good though, at times, a bit bland. It came out at room temp (I tend to prefer a salad have a bit of a chill at least) and considering how many ingredients there were, I was surprised at how it lacked any "zing." There were some interesting elements to it... the semi-cooked egg... the little gelatin cubes of someflavororanother... overall, also a B.
Moved onto the Rabbit/pistachio/bacon terriine, which was quite good. The thin bacon "crust" gave it a nice flavor. In general, ROOM's charcuterie offerings looked quite good, though the cheese menu was less impressive. I'd give this an A-.
Next was an item from the specials page - black cod in a curry sauce. Very good... the fish was perfectly cooked and the sauce, though very rich, was the perfect accompaniment. Also an A-.
Lastly, the shrimp risotto with avocado ice cream, lemongrass & tempura. I went into this mostly out of curiousity, having read some good reviews of it, but was skeptical. Its fantastic. The combined flavors of the avocado ice cream and the risotto works perfectly and was a surprising hit for both Chinese and American palates. Really loved this dish. A+
Cocktails were solid - an apple martini and a lemon martini both served ice cold and well mixed, though a bit sweet. B+
Service was attentive but not obtrusive.
Prices are on the expensive side - for example, despite how great the charcuterie options look, you could get similar or identical selections at Scarlett for a fraction of the price. As others have mentioned, there are 3 sizes. If you intend to share and get more than a couple of dishes, I'd suggest small will do the trick for 2-3 people.
In addition - and I almost hate to mention this - the douchiness quotient of the clientele here was VERY high when we ate there. The place was populated with folks who talk loudly on their cellphones while eating and have no clue what they're ordering. One side of us was a young couple, bedecked in high-end fashion, who literally ordered the most expensive things on the menu but had no clue what they got. They had a huge plate of iberico ham that they took home in a doggy bag because it "wasn't cooked." I wanted to scream (it was like ¥800 worth of ham, wasted).
The other side was a girl - maybe 20, and her date, at least 50, who literally asked for "the most expensive ham, lobster, steak, pasta and wine" by way of ordering. Had no clue what they actually were getting. Made me mental. In short, ROOMBeijing is apparently VERY popular with the city's nouveau riche... and should be making a killing selling them $100+ plates of acorn-fed-pork and Maine lobster.
All in, an interesting place, worth a stop, but I'm still debating how much of a "return visit" destination it is. I'd be inclined to not go again soon, but there were still a number of interesting dishes on the menu I'd like to try, and that shrimp risotto is haunting me...
- 283 views
- Login or register to post comments
- Comments (0)
ROOMbeijing @ The Yintai Centre
Having heard ROOM described as everything from a “psychedelic trap for the Michelin-star obsessed” to “quite simply the most fascinating venue on Beijing’s dining scene”, I felt the controversy alone was enough to merit a visit. ROOMBeijing is a true foodie’s adventure, not just for the tongue, but for eyes and ears as well. The soundest advice would be to simply step in with a sense of adventure – to expect the unexpected.
The Irish-born, Michelin-starred chef Brian McKenna is known for “having a thing for test tubes, beakers and other culinary experiments that seem to involve spare parts of a chemistry set.” Formerly of the Shangri-La’s Blue Lobster, McKenna’s fun and experimental approach to cooking is similarly evident at ROOM. The menu is absolutely enormous, but is an admirable attempt to try to cater to any possible kind of dining situation from light tapas, lunches and midnight snacks over to a several-course romantic meal. Apart from a few recommendations in categories like “pates and terrine”, as well as desserts, the mains are assorted by size: RMB 50 for S, RMB 80 for M and RMB 100 for L.
Though served in a rather inexplicable order (at least dessert came last!), we were able to sample a nice selection of ROOMbeijing’s offerings.
We started off with a rabbit, pistachio and bacon terrine, which was accompanied by pickles and sour silver onions. Though it took a while for the accompanying bread to be served, this dish was delicious and reminded me a little of the traditional German leberwurst. The texture of the terrine was not overly smooth, and was nicely complemented by the unexpected tanginess of the pickles and sour onions.
The tuna tartar with ruminated avocado, crispy potato and Asian dressing was served soon after, and was nicely plated and tasty, though rather simple. The tuna tasted wonderfully fresh, though its lightness was masked by the avocado. The crispy potato, however, proved to be quite the challenge: it was so crispy that any touch with a fork caused the potato pieces to snap and fly – food fight-style – across the table. Not exactly a desired quality for fine dining!
Next up was the interesting and extremely well-presented pan-fried scallop with cauliflower puree and Moroccan-spiced sugar with fresh apple. (pictured) Bedded on a solid slab of stone, the scallops were perfectly fried, slightly golden on the outside and very fresh-tasting. The cauliflower was slightly bizarre, but the foam in which the scallops lay was sprinkled with delicious pieces of rich, spiced sugar and an almost imperceptible note of apple.
Our first “main course”, as far as these can be named as such in the tapas-style presentation of the food, was a baked rack of Australian lamb coated in dukkah (an Egyptian spice and nut blend), couscous and aubergine salad and saffron yoghurt. We had chosen to order medium or small servings of everything to be able to try the greatest possible variety, but the serving size of this was rather diminutive. Though the lamb was in fact baked and not braised, I found the lamb itself to be rather remarkable, not to mention that it was a little fatty. The dukkah marinade however, was delicious, and somehow evoked images of camels and spice-markets to my overly imaginative tongue, while the saffron yoghurt was a lovely neutralizer to the veritable attack of tastes. The couscous was a little dry, unfortunately.
This was followed by an Asian-spiced shrimp risotto with avocado ice cream, lemongrass and tempura. This was the most interesting dish by far. While shrimp risotto is rather common and unremarkable, it is an absolute stunner when paired with something as unique as avocado ice cream. The avocado ice cream, which tasted extremely odd on its own, especially to an avocado skeptic such as me, gave the perfect touch to the well-spiced shrimp risotto. Blended together with a refreshing and visually appealing note of lemongrass froth, these seemingly disparate ingredients were absolutely fabulous when eaten all together.
We ordered two desserts to finish off. The milk chocolate pop tart with flavours of raspberry and herbs, was tasty but a little sickly sweet – quite the achievement to somebody with a tooth as sweet as mine! It bore no resemblance whatsoever to an actual pop tart – instead of a sugary, calorie-laden microwave pastry with a sweet filling, it was a sugary, calorie-laden piece of cake. Sweet, chocolatey, filled with unhealthiness – and all the more delicious for it!
What was perhaps the most anticipated part of the meal for me came last. With as much excitement as apprehension, we had ordered the white chocolate and coconut spaghetti with red berries and raspberry sorbet. Whether it was the anticipation or the fact that white chocolate and spaghetti do not really belong in the same sentence, this promising-sounding dessert was an absolute disappointment. The “spaghetti” did not taste of white chocolate or of coconut – it felt like tasteless strings of some hard, unidentifiable substance. The berries – blueberries and raspberries – had clearly come straight from the freezer and were shapeless and cold, in part still with a frozen center. The only redeeming quality was the raspberry sorbet, which was refreshing and light.
Overall, an extremely interesting dining experience. With a sense of interest and open-mindedness, dining at ROOM can be an event to remember. The trippy decorations certainly do not strike everyone’s fancy, and even though I love pop art, it was still slightly unsettling to be eating opposite of sculptures of grinning dogs with red-tipped penises alongside ceilings lined with multi-coloured plastic balloons. Along the far walls sprawls a brightly coloured mural by Hugo Dalton , which is supposed to represent Beijing. When I asked the waiter who had enthusiastically been showing us around what exactly the meaning of the mural was, he was unable to answer. ROOM also features two private rooms, one HIS and one HERS room, with absolutely incredible interior design – fun, crazy and unique locations for private events. These are decked out with funky features like by fingerprint-only access.
I recommend ROOM therefore first and foremost as a night spot, where one can enjoy great cocktails such as my ROOMtini – vodka, passionfruit puree, lime and Sprite, and an extensive new world wine list in a young, hip and ambitiously artsy location. Judging not only by Bob Sinclar and Supperclub, Dimitri from Paris, the star DJ from Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Mansion, who made an extremely well received appearance there last Tuesday, accompanied by a fair selection of Playboy Bunnies, ROOM is bound to become a rising star on Beijing’s ever-improving nightlife scene.
Perfect for: : lovers of everything funky: funky food, funky people, funky design and funky music (interpret the word funky as negatively or positively as you desire…)
Order recommendations: terrines and pates, Asian-spiced shrimp risotto with avocado ice cream
Honourable mentions: Interesting design and extremely good House music
Not-so-honourable mentions: Awful “white chocolate spaghetti” dessert, and the same interesting design as mentioned above.
- 472 views
- Login or register to post comments
- Comments (1)
Remarkable Dining Experience
Our favorite Chef, Brian McKenna, is back and better then ever with ROOMbeijing. A great space, room for dining alfresco, dining with friends, dining with a loved one, dining with the family, partying with friends. It is all you want in rolled into one restaurant. Just when you think you have seen it all, he comes up with the new and different experiences.
Every menu item comes in small, medium and large sizes and is designed for sharing. We recommend trying the fresh oysters, tuna tar-tare and the lamb chops. Not to be missed is the 42 ingredient salad.
Staff is attentive yet unobtrusive. Single Malt selection is generous and the wine list is extensive.
A great place for dining out!
- 256 views
- Login or register to post comments
- Comments (1)