The woman I had been clinging on to as we entered the pitch-black room has abandoned me having shouted ‘you have to sniff out your table’ over her shoulder as she departed into the gloom. Sniff out my table? This could be a long nighttime.
Then I realise that the instructions have been lost in version somewhat – a case of Chinese whispers in the dark, passed along a line of confused and rather nervous people. The game, it transpires, is to listen for a voice shouting the name of whatever you can smell in your shot glass and head towards that voice.

The Hong Kong Wine & Dine Festival – which takes place on West Kowloon Waterfront Promenade – is now in its third year
I eventually stumble across my kindly (and thankfully very patient) waiter for the nighttime, Julian, who instructs me to take a seat at the table beside him and await my fellow guests who are entering the room one-by-one and having a shot glass thrust into their hands.
This is wine tasting in the dark, an initially terrifying but rather fascinating experience in which you spend an hour and a half in complete darkness smelling and tasting wines served by visually-impaired waiters – the theory being that your significance of smell and taste is heightened by your lack of vision (although most of the people on our table mistake the first two white wines for red, not a excellent start).
We sample six wines and are questioned to note on their smell and taste and to guess which region they come from. At one point we’re told to chew some strong acidic dried fruit to see how it affects the wine and then, taste buds still burning, told to pour a powder that tastes like liquorice on to the fruit, which completely overpowers the next sip.
This is not a new concept of course – London has its own ‘Dans Le Noir’ restaurant – but Dialogue in the Dark is beating into a new trend in Hong Kong: the boom in wine.

Huge business: Wines sales have been on the rise in the city since zero duties were introduced in 2008
The city has positioned itself as the wine hub of Asia; wine imports have continued to grow since the government introduced zero wine duties in 2008 and the following year saw the launch of the first Hong Kong Wine and Dine Festival. The third event took place at the end of October and marked the beginning of a month of culinary indulgence in the form of Hong Kong Wine and Dine month.
On the notch nighttime, wine enthusiasts were being bused in from all across the city, brochures in one hand and complimentary engraved wine glass in the other.
Like the UK’s Taste Festivals, visitors are given tokens which they can exchange for wine and food at any of the 300 booths around the open-air site on West Kowloon Waterfront Promenade.
There is a celebratory air at the event as leading figures from the wine industry give speeches, corks pop, meat is flambéed and some sort of glitter bomb explodes into the air.
The festival is closely followed by the Lan Kwai Fong Cavalcade – featuring 80 food and beer stalls, Brazilian dancers and African drummers – and the World of Food and Music at Stanley.
It seems there is no end of opportunities to treat your tastebuds in this vibrant, quick-paced city; it offers visitors a choice of more than 11,000 restaurants.
The restaurant scene is as frenetic as the city itself – eateries open and close at an alarming pace – but it boasts an impressive number of Michelin stars from the stylish L’Atelier de Joel Robuchon at the Landmark and Lung King Heen at the Four Seasons Hotel to the well-known roasted Chinese goose at Yung Kee and foodies’ favourite Tim’s Kitchen.
And fine dining isn’t just the reserve of the rich in Hong Kong – the city is also home to the cheapest Michelin-starred restaurant in the world – Tim Ho Wan in Kowloon.
This unassuming dim sum canteen in the Mong Kok district is owned by Mak Pui Gor, who trained as a dim sum master at Lung King Heen. The most expensive dish on the menu costs around £3 and prawn dumplings and crispy pork buns cost just 80p. Not surprisingly, you’ll have to join a very long queue – the waiting time is said to be about three hours.
Lacking the stamina to spend a large part of the evening with my face pressed up against the window watching other diners eat perfectly steamed dim sum, I opt to visit its sister restaurant, which recently opened in Sham Shui Po.
In comparison to its well-known sibling, the new restaurant appears to have received a rather lukewarm reception: although it is full there is no queue and no hungry tourists or culinary adventurers photographing the food.
What is familiar is the menu, which features delicate steamed shrimp dumplings, vermicelli rolls stuffed with pig’s liver, slices of pan-fried turnip cake and those well-known crispy buns to the top with barbecued pork.
Fresh and wild: A vegetable stall at the wet market
Simon Kwok, the hotel’s Executive Sous Chef, guides me from stall to stall in the frantic marketplace, explaining the various uses of the enormous fruit and vegetables, which dwarf their plastic containers.
The food is a riot of colour and includes ripe, ripe persimmon, shocking-pink dragon fruit and vast, rotund pomelo.
Then there is the seafood, most of which is alive or in the process of being dispatched. Boxes of crabs bound up with grasses are lined up alongside lobsters, abalone, sea whelks and tanks of geoduck, a type of clam that looks more like a giant, bloated snail that has outgrown its shell.
Nearby, an eel writhes around in a bright orange bowl, cut in half by the butcher’s knife and trailing a stream of blood, even as decapitated fish heads appear to gasp their last breath in a shallow tray.
At one stall a woman grabs a handful of frogs from a tank, stacks them one on top of the other, ties them together with twist and throws them into a tray, where they flail their legs futilely awaiting their inevitable fate.

Raising the bar: Ozone is taking cocktails to a new amount on the 118th floor of the Ritz Carlton Hotel
All three restaurants offer dramatic views of Victoria Harbour, where junks and ferries continuously criss-cross the water like exhausted ants.
At nighttime, a myriad of bright lights and neon signs illuminate the skyscrapers on Hong Kong Island opposite and at 8pm the Symphony of Lights adds to the spectacle with a series of lasers that dance across the waterfront skyline.
A new addition to this well-known skyline is the recently opened five-star Ritz Carlton Hotel, which occupies the top 17 floors of the city’s International Commerce Centre (ICC) skyscraper and is the highest hotel in the world.
Teetering on the 118th floor is Ozone, a super-chic bar whose lofty vantage point leaves me feeling a small light-headed. Even the toilet has a fantastic view. And the hotel has added to the city’s restaurant tally with upmarket Italian and Cantonese restaurants on the 102nd floor below, making yet a further remarkable venue for the culinary adventurers to conquer.
Travel facts
Cathay Pacific glide four times a day from Heathrow to Hong Kong. Return economy flights cost from £689 (inc taxes); return business class flights cost from £2469 (inc taxes); and return first class flights cost from £5,539 (inc taxes).To book visit www.cathaypacific.co.ukFor more information on Hong Kong visit www.DiscoverHongKong.com
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