The Royal Smushi House

This new Danish design hub in the heart of Beijing’s Sanlitun district boasts a shop, a café, a restaurant, a bar and a bakery.

The Royal Smushi House Beijing Cafe

There’s no denying the fact that to step into the Royal Smushi House is to enter a different world. Perched at the crossroads of Dongzhimenwai and Sanlitun’s chaotic bar street, a sense of calm pervades its various outlets and there’s something reassuring about its neat Danish design and coolly exquisite interior.

The Monocle Shop inside The Royal Smushi House, Beijing

Transplanted from Copenhagen (with a few additions in the form of a bakery, a Georg Jensen boutique and a Monocle Shop), The Royal Smushi House is a recreation of that city’s popular café, which purports to sell sushi, Danish style. In practice, that means sushi-sized, delicately prepared culinary creations deriving their ingredients from the Scandinavian smørrebrød (open faced sandwich). Typically Nordic flavours such as dill and salmon and red cabbage feature heavily, and each ‘smushi’ takes several minutes to prepare. Perhaps given this café’s pedigree, it goes without saying that all are delicious, and often more of a mouthful than they first appear.

Smushi from The Cafe at The Royal Smushi House Beijing

Our tip? Pop by one morning to grab some freshly baked bread and pastries from the Bakery or enjoy afternoon tea in the Café, and then go and explore the rest of the venue. From the Monocle Shop with its carefully designed lifestyle products to the fabulous upstairs restaurant, The Royal Smushi House may be peddling a pricier experience than most, but in a city more accustomed to fast paced cooking and low quality products, it makes a delightful change. And no one minds paying for that.

The Royal Smushi House Beijing

Which way to the Smushi!?

The Royal Smushi House12 Dongzhimenwai Dajie, Chaoyang district, Beijing (tel: 6416 9664).


 

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Zajia Bar

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Located inside an ancient Daoist temple, this hip little bar has the perfect combination of a great locale and that atmosphere of laid-back cool Beijing does so well.

Not only are the local guys who run it friendly, welcoming and bilingual, but they’ve created an intimate bar you’ll want to spend the whole evening in. Just two hefty wooden tables populate the space, and an old staircase leads up into the rafters if you can’t find a perch downstairs.

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The bar has already become something of a hangout for the cool crowd (we spotted fashion designer Xander Zhou and half of Hanggai when we visited) so you won’t be surprised to see ‘accidentally’ kitsch odds and ends dotted about. From Taschen erotica tomes to a farmer’s weighing scales and artfully melted candles, it’s all been arranged in a hip wusouwei manner. Perhaps, dare we say it, thanks to the Italian wife of one of the owners.

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Meanwhile Zajia’s cute, hand-written menu features everything from Boddingtons beer to Mai Tai cocktails. We’d obviously prefer to keep this place a secret, but it’s probably already too late for that. So go, enjoy, and if you see us feel free to buy us a Mojito….

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Zajia Bar: Hong En Daoist Temple (behind the Bell Tower), Dongcheng District (+86 8404 9141)

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We Love… Secret Earl Grey Cocktail at Apothecary

 

Where would we be in this town without a brilliant mid end of week cocktail to look forward to? Beijing’s traffic can be especially infuriating, so we suggest you hop on your Penny Farthing after work and head straight to Apothecary for the most refined of all alcoholic beverages: The Secret Earl Grey MarTEAni. A daring mixture of Earl Grey tea-infused gin, sugar, fresh lemon and grapefruit lavender bitters, shaken with a deliciously frothy egg white and garnished with finely grated lemon zest, it’s luxuriously silky and light. Forget High Tea and cucumber sandwiches, we’ll take one of these instead.

 

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