Back for More: Dependable Duck Dinners at Jing Zun
Around
once a month or so, the call will go out on WeChat: "Duck at Jing Zun?"
Being my friendship group's resident food snob, this is my cue to sigh
exaggeratedly and say "but the food there is so basic." However, basic
reliable food is exactly what keeps the dining room at Jing Zun full pretty much every night of the week even after more than eight years in business.
Find Jing Zun on Chunxiu Lu opposite the Holiday Inn
Duck is
the main billing here and while it is perhaps not the most refined in
town, it is certainly great value at RMB 138 per bird. The ducks are
particularly juicy and the skin fattier than some other versions we've
tried, which we enjoy but some may not. Our only gripe is that the
pancakes can sometimes be a little doughy.
Carving up that duck
Elsewhere,
the menu (in English and with pictures) is chock full of tried and
tested dishes, mostly northern Chinese-style, such as kungpao chicken 宫保鸡丁(RMB 30), stir-fried broccoli with garlic 蒜蓉西兰花 (RMB 26), and dry-pot potatoes 干锅豆角土豆片 (RMB 28). Among the best dishes are the jingjiang rousi 京酱肉丝 (strips of pork in sweet bean sauce, served with tofu skin wrappers; RMB 32), the dry-fried green beans 干煸四季豆 (supremely salty – in a good way; RMB 26), and the culiu muxu 醋溜木须 (RMB
36), a surprisingly addictive traditional Beijing dish of pork,
scrambled eggs, and wood ear mushrooms in a gloopy, vinegary sauce.
The kind of table we like to see – messy, and full of food and drink
Drinks
wise, the restaurant brews its own beer, which comes in a light and
dark version, and there is a surprisingly varied (if not very exciting)
wine list. However, the smart move here is to stock up on the bottles of
your choice at the April Gourmet around
the corner and pay the nominal corkage fee (if they charge you corkage
at all). This accommodating attitude to drinks and the consumption
thereof is what keeps us going back to Jing Zun for every celebratory
dinner, from birthdays to "we made it halfway through the week."
That and the street-level terrace, which makes this a pretty good
summer dining spot. Be sure to book in advance if you want to guarantee
an outside seat as the terrace isn't all that big, and be sure to bring
plenty of mosquito repellent.
Photos: Robynne Tindall, Dianping
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