Beijing Boyce

A Somewhat Young China Hand on the Local Drinking Scene

Dragon Fruit, Rickshaws and Wine

The all-male crowd seems to have abandoned Q Bar as its Thursday night watering hole. The place was lightly populated tonight (last night), which meant peace and quiet as I sipped my Horse Neck (Bourbon, ginger ale and lemon) and chatted with bartenders-owners George and Echo. The Q will add frozen dragon fruit margaritas to the menu tomorrow night (tonight), a drink Echo and I first made during my only foray behind the bar in Beijing, at a birthday party last year. They’ll go for 55 kuai.

I walked to Q from The Rickshaw, which opens tomorrow night (tonight). Patrons of the spot’s former bar, Midnight, are in for a surprise - co-owner Kris Ryan has stripped the place down, to the cement floor at some points, and replaced the unbearable heaviness of the sofas with light furniture and open space. With a pool table, several flat-panel TVs and a balcony that offers views up and down Sanlitun South, the place has a new vibe - an unpretentious spot that fits the BJ psyche.

In the pigeonhole game, The Rickshaw hints at The Den, The Goose and Duck, and, of course, COX and Saddle (same owners), with a splash of old Sanlitun South, though it quickly enough it’ll find its own identity. Qingdao draft is 15 kuai a pint (10 kuai during happy hour) and the kitchen will open soon, if not tomorrow night. Patrons now have a new spot to get COX-style wings and Saddle-style burritos, as well as mini pizzas, while avoiding Sanlitun North’s roving gangs of teenagers, beggars and substance sellers. That alone is reason enough for me to go; we’ll see if others feel the same. (For more on The Rickshaw, check out this interview of Kris.)

I dropped into The Rickshaw on my way home from Torres China’s tenth-anniversary celebration at the Ritz Carlton. The party was from 6 to 10 PM, and I managed to squeeze in at 9:52 PM - yep, it’s been one of those work weeks. That left enough time to chat with Torres North China GM Galia Stern (among the first people I met when I arrived in Beijing way back when), have a glass of wine, and meet Miguel Torres, who ranks among the world’s bigwigs of wine. Congratulations to Torres and good luck on the company’s anniversary party in Shanghai this weekend.

4 Comments so far

  1. Yan Xishan April 20th, 2007 1:36 pm

    55 kuai… that is a 7 dollar US drink. How many of those do you think your readers need before they get carried out the door?

  2. boyce April 20th, 2007 6:09 pm

    YX,

    I can’t speak for everyone, but my guess is 4.2 - might help to slip a lychee martini in there to mix things up. Or an Alphonso’s Special…

    Cheers, BB

  3. k.chan April 22nd, 2007 12:25 pm

    i just have to say (in a completely non-creepy way), after reading so many of your reviews (research for my own job), i am eagerly anticipating running into you at some joint or another during my stay here.

  4. admin April 27th, 2007 12:03 am

    k,

    no worries, it’s only slightly, not completely, creepy.

    seriously, some people seem quite disappointed when they meet me. i guess they expect a james bond type who zips about town in a burgundy cashmere smoking jacket trying exotic cocktails and amusing the ladies when in reality i’m more of a cross between john cusack and winnie the pooh (with a bit of brad pitt thrown in, some might say - if they’d had enough to drink, that is). as long as you’re not one of *those* people, and as long as by “run into” you don’t envision yourself behind the wheel of a car, then, yes, it would be interesting…

    Cheers, BB

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