Bo Innovation is one of those places you go to for a special treat. Bo Innovation holds 3 Michelin stars and it's where rebel chef Alwin Leung fuses Hong Kong food history with molecular gastronomy. The lunch tasting menu has around 8 courses so definitely one where you need a couple of hours.
First, let's appreciate the place setting. My hot water came in a unique porcelain cup and the napkin was tied with ma lian grass (used to tie Dragonboat Festival sticky rice dumplings).
The place setting |
Instead of a bread basket, we were presented with a take on Hong Kong street food - a crispy waffle called "gai daan tsai" or little eggs. The interior was filled with a savory scallion and dried shrimp concoction. This was fun to eat while hot.
Hong Kong street food elevated |
We started with Bo Innovation's famed deconstructed "xiao long bao" as the amuse bouche along with a savory mochi bite. The "xiao long bao" looked like a dragon's eye with a strip of red ginger. When eaten, the room-temperature sphere burst into flavors of pork unami with ginger. Although interesting, it wasn't as satisfying as eating a real soup dumpling. The mochi which was presented in a wrapper, redolent of Hong Kong dried plum snacks was even less successful. The savory filling didn't seem to marry well with the mochi exterior.
Amuse bouche |
The next course was one of the best - diced Brittany lobster with caviar and on a bed of crispy noodles and dried shrimp floss with chinese bonito vinegar. The crispy was made from egg tart pastry.
Lobster and caviar |
The next course presented the Japanese kinki fish in a blander preparation with barley, spring onions and ginger. Although I thought I would like this course, the flavors did not compare so well with the lobster or scallop courses. The plate was beautiful though!
The next course was one of the best and full of punchy flavors. It was foie gras "3 cups style" with bamboo shoot and onion. In chinese cuisine, 3 cups is sesame oil, soy sauce and chinese rice wine which is used often to flavor meat. I particularly enjoyed the smooth mashed potato in this dish which carried the sauce perfectly.
Corn in Pat Chun vinegar |
Next course was the main course where we selected some different options to try. Elsa opted for the wild cod which was sitting in a sauce base made from chinese almonds. Along with a slice of iberico ham, termite mushrooms and drizzled with vintage mandarin peel oil, this was a beautiful rendition of cod. The soothing almond sauce was particularly special and paired well with the delicate cod. |
Wild cod in almond sauce |
I selected a more expensive main (HK$150 supplement) which was a Carabinero prawn with hand-crafted noodles, West Australian black truffle and fermented shrimp oil. Alas, this dish should have been delicious but it was far too salty. The noodles were a perfect al-dente texture and you can't go wrong with truffle except when you are too heavy-handed with the salt.
Extra shrimp oil - illuminated for extra theatrics |
We finished with a fruity "shark's fin" dessert where strands of pomelo stand in for shark's fin. The broth was sweet and cold with chunks of white and magenta dragonfruit. The sweet soup was also housed in a soup container, traditionally used in chinese banquets.