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The selected restaurants have been divided into five categories: Gourmet, Business, Trendy, Budget and Personal Recommendations. The restaurants are listed alphabetically within these different categories, which serve as guidelines rather than absolute definitions of the establishments.

The restaurants below have been classed into four different pricing categories:
$$$$ (over RM75)
$$$ (RM60 to RM75)
$$ (RM45 to RM 60)
$ (up to RM45)
These prices are for a three-course meal for one, including tax but not drinks or service.


Gourmet

Mahsuri
The Caracosa Seri
Negara’s signature restaurant, rated as one of the best restaurants in the country by Malaysian Tatler, serves up a winning combination of Asian and continental cuisine. Guests dine in the refined, air-conditioned dining room or outside on the veranda, which has views of the city skyline. After dinner, residents and diners alike retire to the colonial Titiwangsa Bar, with its cigar divans, ceiling fans and cane chairs.

Taman Tasik Perdana, Persiaran Mahameru
Tel: (03) 2282 1888.
Website: www.carcosa.com.my
Price: $$$$

Seri Angkasa
The bland and functional decor of this 220-seater restaurant is compensated for by its spectacular views from its lofty locale atop one of the world’s tallest towers. Located 282m (925ft) above ground level in the landmark Menara Tower, this revolving restaurant guarantees diners 360-degree panoramic vistas across the city. For both lunch and dinner visits, there is a choice of either a Malaysian buffet, including satay and nasi goreng (mixed fried rice), or a more Western orientated a la carte menu, with such offerings as steak and chips. The edibles may be nothing special, but no one comes here for the food.

Menara Tower, Jalan Punchak
Tel: (03) 2020 5055.
Website: www.menarakl.com.my
Price: $$$

Seri Melayu
A big favorite with foreign visitors, Seri Melayu is unbeatable for traditional Malay cuisine and culture. Set in landscaped gardens, the restaurant can accommodate up to 500 people, with the nightly cultural show and buffet menu being the biggest attractions. Dining from the extensive buffet is a great way to sample traditional Chinese, Malay and Thai dishes.

1 Jalan Conlay
Tel: (03) 2145 1833.
Website: www.serimelayu.com
Price: $$$


Business

Kampachi
Reservations are a must at this award-winning Japanese restaurant. The Kampachi, one of Hotel Equatorial’s signature restaurants, has been serving up staple Japanese dishes from Ginza for more than 25 years. This traditionally decorated restaurant also has a wide selection of set dinners and an impressive Sunday buffet brunch.

Hotel Equatorial, Jalan Sultan Ismail
Tel: (03) 2161 7777.
Website: www.equatorial.com
Price: $$$

Lafite
Lafite is the Shangri-La Hotel’s exclusive French restaurant. The standard of food and service is always high, making the restaurant a popular venue for business lunches and dinners. The chandeliers, the tall windows overlooking the garden, the fresh flowers and the impeccable silver service combine to give the restaurant a refined and classical atmosphere.

Shangri-La Hotel, 11 Jalan Sultan Ismail
Tel: (03) 2032 2388.
Website: www.shangri-la.com
Price: $$$$

Pacifica Grill and Bar
Opened in 1998, the signature restaurant of the Mandarin Oriental Hotel offers diners a cocktail of Asian flavors. The 116-seater restaurant is modern and stylish with an open kitchen. Guests can also book two smaller private dining rooms. There is also a trendy bar area with seating for 22 guests.

Mandarin Oriental Hotel, Kuala Lumpur City Center
Tel: (03) 380 8888.
Website: www.mandarin-oriental.com/kualalumpur
Price: $$$


Trendy

Eest
Opened in 2004, this funky new eatery at the Westin has taken the city by storm. The food tastes as good as the sublime décor, which looks like something from a fashion shoot, in this lounge restaurant suggests with a pan-regional (five country) approach that mixes dim sum with sushi and Tiger beer with Chinese rice wine, with plenty of strong Malaysian influences thrown in for good measure.

199 Jalan Bukit Bintang
Tel: (03) 2731 8333.
Website: www.westin.com/kualalumpur
Price: $$$

Scalini’s La Piccola Italia
Reservations for this contemporary Italian restaurant are essential. Housed in a colonial-style bungalow on a hill overlooking the Golden Triangle, Scalini’s has been transformed into a minimalist restaurant with three distinct dining spaces, ambient lighting and an open pizza kitchen. The stunning decor is by New York design guru Tony Chi.

19 Jalan Sultan Ismail
Tel: (03) 2145 3211.
Price: $$$$

Shook
Shook is a fashionable fusion restaurant, located in the basement of the Starhill Shopping Center, serving grill, Italian, Chinese and Japanese cuisine. Clean lines, open-plan kitchens set up as counters, unpolished stone walls and a glass-fronted walk-in wine cellar, with more than 3,000 bottles, distinguish this stylish venue. The mellow ambience and fine food are complemented by live jazz and flawless service. Grill mains include steak and lamb shank.

Lower Ground Floor, Starhill Shopping Center, 181 Jalan Bukit Bintang
Tel: (03) 2716 8535.
Price: $$


Budget

Chow Kit Market
During the day, the large and buzzing Chow Kit Market, located at the northern end of Jalan TAR, is Kuala Lumpur’s biggest food market, selling fruit, vegetables, tofu, spices, meat and fish, as well as live worms, crabs and lobsters. The hawker stalls dish up tasty roti canai and nasi campur (rice served with an array of meat, fish and vegetable dishes).

Jalan Sultan
Price: $

Jalan Alor
Jalan Alor is a lively street, running parallel to Jalan Bukit Bintang in the heart of the Golden Triangle. It comes alive every night with the sights and smells of hawker cooking and pavement cafés. If the proprietor does not sell the dish or drink ordered, he will often go and purchase it from another hawker.

Jalan Alor
Price: $

Jalan Petaling
Delicious hawker food is served all day in the area around Chinatown’s Jalan Petaling. Early risers can feast on steamed dumplings or porridge. In the evening, the streets close to cars and the night market begins. Tables and chairs pour out onto the streets as cafés and hawker stalls start up.

Jalan Petaling
Price: $


Personal Recommendations

Bon Ton
One of the city’s eating institutions since it opened in 1987, Bon Ton is housed in an old Chinese bungalow and has been renovated with ethnic furnishings. The high ceilings and large windows make this light dining venue the perfect space to indulge in a cuisine that typically combines international and Malacca Straits Chinese or Nyonya flavors.

6 Jalan Stonor, off Jalan Kia Peng
Tel: (03) 2031 3848.
Website: www.bontonkl.com
Price: $$$

Eden Village Restaurant
This award-winning seafood restaurant is located on the edge of the Golden Triangle. Built in the style of a Malay house, it is famous, among other favorites, served by waitresses wearing traditional dress, for its shark’s fin dishes. The sizeable wine list features mainly French, Italian and Australian wines. Tables on the terrace are particularly sought after.

Lot 260, Jalan Raja Chulan
Tel: (03) 2141 4027.
Price: $$$

Tai Zi Heen
Although it has only been open for a few years, the Tai Zi Heen has already established itself as one of the city’s best upmarket Chinese restaurants. The restaurant’s name translates as ’prince’s court’, and this elegant and contemporary dining space does the name justice with gentle beige and cream hues, smooth wood, marble and glass surfaces.

Prince Hotel & Residence, 4 Jalan Conlay
Tel: (03) 2170 8888.
Price: $$$



Nightlife:

With so many different cultures mixing together, the nightlife is anything but dull in Kuala Lumpur. Although Malaysia is a Muslim country, alcohol is freely available in the capital and the nightlife is one of the liveliest in Asia. Strict government controls close many bars by 0100, although some clubs stay open later. The legal drinking age in Kuala Lumpur is 21 years. The average price for a bottle of beer is around RM10-14.

Traditional nightlife for many locals still involves a visit to a bustling pasar malam (night market), where the focus is as much on socialising and people watching as it is on shopping, savouring the excellent hawker food and quaffing ice-cold beer. The Saturday market on Jalan Raja Muda is the highlight, although Jalan Petaling in Chinatown nightly closes itself to traffic and is still a local favorite, despite the presence of many tourists. The main area for bars is in the Golden Triangle, where there are many European-style bars and nightclubs inside the luxury hotels. Over the last few years, the buzzing Jalan Sultan Ismail-Jalan P Ramlee strip has taken over from Jalan Bukit Bintang as the place to be. The dress code veers towards the relaxed side of smart-casual, except in some of the classier establishments frequented by the city’s yuppie brigade. Bangsar, on the city fringe, is now a serious rival to the city center, with half a dozen streets of bars and eating places packed with a younger crowd.

The monthly Vision KL Magazine (website: www.visionkl.com) gives visitors the low-down on the city’s latest hip nightlife spots. The magazine is available free of charge from 4 and 5-star hotels and is also occasionally available in bars.

Bars: Good bars in the Golden Triangle include El Nino, 21 Jalan Mayang, which is themed around Latin-American music and culture, and Citrus Rouge, 19 Jalan Sultan Ismail, where live jazz, a bustling dance floor, fabulous cocktails, cigar divan and stylish restaurant combine to make this one of the hippest places in town. Nearby, Bravo, Crown Regency, Mezzanine Floor, Jalan P Ramlee, is a bar/café with a real buzz, a sprinkling of pool tables and a small dance floor. The Beach Club Café, 97 Jalan P Ramlee, is a wild and nefarious party place that attracts expats, local students and bar girls, with its cheap drinks and buzzing atmosphere. In the Golden Triangle, abstaining Muslims hang out in the numerous cafés on Jalan Bukit Bintang, near the JW Marriott Hotel. In Bangsar, The Roof, 2 Jalan Telawi 4 and Soleil, 7 Jalan Telawi 4, are the bars to look out for. Finnegan’s, 6 Jalan Telawi 5, has emerged as the ’in’ venue and is the bar most locals point visitors towards, although the high density of single males seems to have attracted an informal bar-girl scene. (Visitors should note that Bangsar, unlike the rest of the city, is built on a grid and the addresses have two numbers, indicating how many streets up and in.)

Casinos: There are no casinos in Kuala Lumpur itself. The country’s only casino, the Genting Casino (website: www.genting.com.my/en/casino), is located 51km (31 miles) northeast of the city in the Genting Resort. It is possible to get a bus to the resort from the Puduraya Bus Station, but the easiest way to reach Genting is by taxi. The casino is strictly over 21s only.

Clubs: Nightclubs tend to be quite far out of the city and are normally geared towards Kuala Lumpur teenagers, although a number of dancefloors now grace the Golden Triangle. In the city, the best place for a dance is probably the big hotels’ bars. Planet Hollywood and Hard Rock Café also often have dancing after their live music performances (see below). The Embassy, 26 Jalan Ampang, is a bona fide club in the city center, considered hip by an increasing number of locals and expats. Emporium, 97 Jalan Sultan Ismail, is one of a new breed of clubs in the Golden Triangle, with an outside terrace and both an indoor bar and dancefloor. The KL smart set ease through cocktails on the outdoor terrace, before delving inside to dance to the tunes spun by the ever-changing domestic and international DJ guests.

Live Music: Unfortunately, in Kuala Lumpur, live music still often means one thing - karaoke. The city is overrun with karaoke bars, but a few bastions of live music do survive. The Hard Rock Café and Planet Hollywood may not be considered the epitome of cool in many parts of the world, but in Kuala Lumpur they are where the trendies troop to for some live music, although this is often provided by dubious cover bands. Follow the noise to The Hard Rock Café, Concorde Hotel, Jalan Sultan Ismail, and Planet Hollywood, Ground Floor, Kuala Lumpur Plaza, 179 Jalan Bukit Bintang. Often a better bet is TM2, Mutiara Hotel (formerly the Hilton Kuala Lumpur), Jalan Sultan Ismail, which hosts a wide range of live music acts as well as DJs.


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