![]() There are soft banquettes and downlighters and staff who appear genuinely pleased to see you. A few years ago it had a makeover, creating a clean space of whitewashed curving vaults as if in a set of space-age railway arches. It’s still run by the next generation of the Cheung family and this year will celebrate its 45th anniversary. It first opened in 1978, a project between restaurateur Helen Li and seafood trader Stephen Cheung. In a city where restaurants come and go, Mandarin Kitchen has thrived. It’s all sweet, tense fillet, slipping off the frame, like a silk dressing gown off a comely shoulder. And oh my: the cooking of that fish was perfect. Currently it’s £38, as compared to £48 at Scott’s and £65 at Wiltons. Don’t be embarrassed about asking them what that price is, because they won’t be embarrassed to tell you. It’s listed on the menu at “market price”. No, it was the whole steamed Dover sole in ginger and spring onion that caused the stains, as I filleted it off the bone, spraying fin and sauce hither and yon. You can get a lot of adhesion between a fat finger pad and that stuff, especially off a linen tablecloth. ![]() The salty rubble of fresh red chilli and garlic went, too. If any crumbs fell off the rustling pile of crisply battered tentacle and ring, I had ’em. ![]() ![]() It wasn’t the deep-fried baby squid with garlic and chilli. ‘A banging ginger and spring onion sauce’: lobster noodles Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer ![]()
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