Picture of Bright Courtyard, W1U 8EW

Historical version 1 of Bright Courtyard, W1U 8EW (view current version)

Upscale Chinese restaurant on Baker Street, a couple of minutes' walk from Baker Street Station. It specialises in Cantonese and Shanghainese food, including dim sum and Shanghai xiǎo chī (small plates).

Ewan, Kake, Kerry, and two friends visited for a Sunday dim sum lunch in August 2013. We'd booked in advance, and were placed in one of their two private dining rooms. Hot towels were provided straight away, along with small dishes of edamame and marinated cucumber.

Our table was fairly large for the five of us, a nice change from the usual Chinese restaurant system of jamming as many chairs around the table as possible. Music was playing throughout the restaurant, perhaps slightly louder than ideal, and not particularly relaxing.

We asked for a tea menu, but after some faffing with a general drinks menu our server finally decided that they didn't have one. We ended up with a fairly delicate oolong (and failed to discover anything more specific about it). The tea cups were British-style with handles, and the staff were in and out of our private room throughout our meal to make sure we never had to pour our own tea.

We ordered a couple of rounds of dim sum, plus a cold dish (five-spice beef) from the main menu. The first round arrived soon enough; the second took longer, though not long enough to be annoying, and the staff apologised for the wait, explaining that we'd hit peak time and the kitchen was very busy.

Five-spice beef was good, with plenty of depth of flavour and good texture.

Xiao long bao were disappointing; the skins were too thick and a touch undercooked, and there wasn't all that much soup inside. Scallop siu mai were OK but nothing special. Har gao were fine. Prawn and chive dumplings were lovely, with plenty of flavour from both prawns and chives, and we wished we'd ordered a double portion.

Sea bass rolls were good, with the fish retaining a good texture and not overcooked. The broth had a little chilli bite without being overly spicy.

Deep-fried almond prawn balls were excellent in concept: prawn paste wrapped around a savoury liquid broth centre and coated with sliced almonds. The individual components of these were all fine, but overall the pieces were just too big, taking several bites to eat. Turnip puffs were slightly greasy, but the turnip filling had great flavour and texture.

Cheung fun with XO sauce was a little too sanitised for the taste of some of our party — a lack of "wok hei" was mentioned — but the cheung fun themselves were nicely silky with no stodginess, and the XO sauce was well-flavoured.

Lotus leaf rice was disappointing; the rice itself was undercooked, and the overall flavour was very bland. Pork and preserved egg congee was fine, though some of the pork was a little too chewy, and it came with the chopped doughsticks already in, so they got soggy. Egg custard buns could have done with more custard, but were otherwise OK.

Our final bill was £22/head including service. Service was very attentive in general, bordering on hovery at times, but mostly not too intrusive.

Accessibility: No step to get inside, and there are a few tables on this level, but there's a step to get to the private dining rooms, the toilets, and much of the rest of the seating. The journey from the private rooms to the toilets is a bit of a faff and involves crossing the path of the staff carrying dishes from pass to diners.

Kake's verdict: Too many "misses" for me; I'd not prioritise a revisit over other places in the area.

See also:

Last visited by Ewan, Kake, Kerry, and friends, August 2013. Opening hours taken from the Bright Courtyard website, August 2013.
OS X co-ord: 528044 OS Y co-ord: 181542 (Latitude: 51.517786 Longitude: -0.154357)
This is version 1 (as of 2013-08-19 13:06:57). View current version.