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Four Seasons Queensway

84 Queensway, London, England, W2 3RL, United Kingdom

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  • (020) 7229 4320
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Four Seasons has been plying its trade in Queensway for many years, serving conventional Cantonese food. The narrow, long dining room has a preparation area in the window with roast ducks on display. Tables are tightly packed, and the room has a blue carpet, cream walls, matching table linen, and a low ceiling.  On this Monday night there was a steady queue of people waiting for a table.

The lengthy menu covers the usual Cantonese favourites, and there was a supplementary specials menu with photos of the dishes, and a short, two page wine list. The wines started at £14.50 and included choices like Boulder Bank Sauvignon Blanc at £18 for a wine that you can pick up in an off-licence for £6, Domaine Thibert Pouilly Fuisse at £30 for a wine that retails at £18, and Apalagua Pinot Noir Reserva 2010 at £18.50 for a wine that costs £8 in the shops.

Prawn dumplings (£4.50) were good, the prawns tender and resting on a bed of spicy sauce (13/20). Hot and sour soup (£3.30) had a bit too much sourness from the vinegar and for me could have done with a little more chilli heat, but it was enjoyable enough (12/20).

Gal lan was excellent, lightly steamed with garlic, the stems tender (easily 14/20). Whole steamed sea bass was cooked from scratch and brought to the table whole, then filleted, for the most part competently. The fish itself was tender, and I liked the black bean sauce with the fish, which was quite thick and really tasted of black beans, the fish garnished with fresh coriander (14/20).

Spicy prawns with cashew nuts were competently cooked but needed more spicy flavour, the stir-fried vegetables with them not enough to lift the dish beyond ordinary (12/20). Singapore noodles had that hint of powderiness that comes from when they use curry powder to enliven the noodles, but have not mixed it in sufficiently well, though the texture of the noodles was decent (12/20). Egg-fried rice was well made (13/20).

Service was efficient despite the completely full house, with refills of drinks brought quickly and no problems getting attention. The bill came to £42 a head including some beer and jasmine tea. Overall, while nearby Royal China has the edge, this was still very good Cantonese food.

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  • Sanjeev Varma

    I'm surprised you didn't try the roast duck which this place is known for. The minced pork aubergine hotpot is a great dish here as is the pork belly with preserved vegetables, not the healthiest but certainly tasty.