About Labyrinth
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Cuisine
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More about the restaurant: Labyrinth
Labyrinth focuses not only on the diner but also the passion that our chefs bring to a plate. Labyrinth’s creations centers on the 5 taste sensations of Sweetness, Sourness, Saltiness, Bitterness, and Umami. With Labyrinth’s never-ending quest for culinary perfection,diners experience a gastronomical adventure that challenges their perceptions,while holding quality to the highest standard Do note that Labyrinth’s main dining area is a Gastro-Bar where guests are seated along our open kitchen concept. Table seating is only available for group bookings of 6-8 guests. For any further enquiries or special requests, do kindly contact the restaurant directly.
Frequently asked questions
Does Labyrinth serve Chinese food?
Does the restaurant Labyrinth have parking?
Thinking about making a Labyrinth booking?
Labyrinth’s approach to gastronomy is elemental, almost achemical. Chef Han
Liguang treats his kitchen, to be found down the unassumingly-named Neil Road in
Singapore’s Chinatown and Tanjong Pagar, as a kind of laboratory. Peer through the
steam and smoke, lit from within by the orange bursts of expertly controlled flambés,
and you might get a glimpse of the prandial professor himself manipulating the five
elements at his disposal: sweet, sour, salt, bitter, and – that most enigmatic of taste
sensations – umami. In fact, Labyrinth’s open, counterside dining experience
means you can indeed get ringside seats for this experimental culinary performance.
The bewilderment the timid might feel trying to navigate Labyrinth’s diverse
cuisines is thankfully mitigated by the much-recommended degustation menu. This
list is not exhaustive, and the menus are set to change at any moment (labs often
present explosive hazards) but from the squid ink paella, through the Labyrinth chilli
crab (involving chilli crab ice cream and sturgeon caviar!), and on to
the ‘molecular’ chendol xiao long bao, it’s clear that Labyrinth is pushing the
boundaries of Asian fusion cuisine. And, situated appropriately along Neil Road at
the borderlands of Singapore’s Chinatown and Tanjong Pagar, it’s evident that
whatever the philosophers’ stone of cooking might be, Labyrinth puts an atom of it in
every dish. The results are award-winning, exciting, and unmissable.