Advertisement

Good Eating Edit: The new Palace Garden at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau presents opulent chinoiserie-inspired interiors and multifaceted Cantonese cuisine

  • The opulent restaurant features a series of individually themed private rooms, including the Flower Room, Butterfly Room, Pagoda Room and Li Bai Room
  • Its farm-to-table dining concept focuses on seasonally driven Taishi dishes with a Western touch, offering a wonderful fusion of Eastern and Western cuisine

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
1
The Palace Garden at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau is a stunning sight indeed. Photos: Handout
Hearkening back to the chinoiserie period of China’s trade history – when the East was viewed through a romanticised, rose-tinted lens – Palace Garden is the new crown jewel of the Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau, an opulently designed restaurant serving exceptional Cantonese cuisine. A magnificent fusion of East and West, Palace Garden takes its inspiration from imperial gardens, each element designed to evoke a feeling of grand nobility befitting of the elegant banquet-style dishes.
The Palace Garden Fan Room at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau.
The Palace Garden Fan Room at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau.

Past the ornate front gate lies a lush European-style garden, where a fragrant canopy beckons guests to enter the restaurant. Along one corridor, a series of private rooms are rendered in the style of palatial residences and individually themed with rare artwork and antiques. Sip on botanical cocktails in the Flower Room; let your imagination soar in the Butterfly Room against a kaleidoscope of colours; or find tranquillity in the Pagoda Room, lined with arched shelves to mimic a tiered temple. In the Li Bai Room, a bespoke bar caters to thirsty patrons, with signature cocktails served against a moving digital landscape.

The Palace Garden main dining room at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau, which serves Taishi cuisine in a regal setting.
The Palace Garden main dining room at Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau, which serves Taishi cuisine in a regal setting.
Taking pride of place in the main dining room is a 35-metre-long silk mural, along with an installation of six custom-made, double-sided embroidery fans, replicating the imagery of birds and flowers. In this captivating setting, diners are invited to discover the rich, multifaceted layers of Taishi cuisine – so named after Jiang Taishi, a prominent figure in the history of Cantonese cuisine known as the “first man of the hundred Cantonese foods”. A forerunner of farm-to-table dining, Palace Garden honours the same vein of seasonally-driven dishes, with Western ingredients woven into the menu for a contemporary take on Taishi classics.
Pomelo and mango cream with ginger ice cream at Palace Garden, Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau.
Pomelo and mango cream with ginger ice cream at Palace Garden, Grand Lisboa Palace Resort Macau.
Advertisement