Priced at HK$300 for one and HK$580 for two, the tea set includes seven dim sum plates and your choice of tea. Holt Café’s Dim Sum Afternoon Tea is available daily from 2:30pm to 6pm. The restaurant’s most popular brew, coconut vodka white peony tea is constantly sold out and it’s easy to see why––crafted with evaporated coconut rum and vodka, its nutty aroma and sweet aftertaste freshens up your palate, making it the perfect tea to sip on throughout the meal. Harvested in the spring of 1996, the chunjian tea leaves have been carefully aged and pressed for 24 years––making the tea leaves highly desireable due to the limited production. Standing out from the four, the coconut vodka white peony tea and the 1996 jiangcheng chunjian tea are not to be missed. It matches perfectly with what we are offering now - elevated Cantonese dim sum classics,” says Leung. My selection of teas for this menu have green & white tea bases. “Our tea selections pair perfectly with these dim sum and Chinese desserts. Staying true to the traditional yum cha experience, tea master, Alan Leung selected four premium brews to go alongside the tea set: 1996 jiangcheng chunjian tea, coconut vodka white peony tea, an earthy honey orchid phoenix dan cong Oolong and an amino acid-packed Chinese green tea, Anji Bai. See also: Restaurant Review: Nathan Green’s Chops Are Not The Only Things Worthy Of Your Consideration At Rosewood’s Henry The meal ends with the city’s favourite mango sweet treat: mango pomelo sago served chilled in a delicate Chinese tea cup. The meal begins with a warming cup of moonlight white tea, followed by four savoury bite sized dim sum including the caviar-topped har gow, braised abalone siu mai, traditional prawn toast and Iberico pork-filled BBQ pork puff.įor those who can’t escape their sweet tooth, mini egg tarts topped with bird’s nest will be served next, followed by butterfly shaped Rolling Donkey made with red bean paste. Turning yum cha staples such as har gow and siu mai into edible art pieces, Hong Kong’s favourite shrimp dumpling is carefully topped with premium Kaluga caviar while the siu mai features a whole South African baby abalone. Rosewood’s latest offering––a dim sum afternoon tea experience at the hotel’s Cantonese-driven all-day dining restaurant, Holt’s Café, is a refreshing take on traditional high tea, offering visitors a break from sweet pastries, sandwiches and Earl Grey, and instead replacing them with an elevated dim sum experience and Chinese brews. From the picturesque afternoon tea at The Butterfly Room, refined Indian food at Chaat, to Hong Kong’s first women-only speakeasy XX, most of Rosewood’s dining outlets are usually fully booked-out and require reservations from a month in advance. Aside from being known for their luxurious suites and staycation packages, Rosewood Hong Kong’s food and drink offerings have also racked up a cult following.
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