Restaurant in Guangzhou, China
Haizhu District Yue Cai

石湾·福 粤菜馆 on Qianjin Road in Guangzhou's Haizhu District is a Cantonese restaurant suited to group celebrations and family dining away from the hotel-corridor mainstream. Booking is straightforward, making it a lower-friction option for a special occasion meal. Verify hours, pricing, and private room availability directly before visiting, as detailed records are limited.
If you are planning a celebration meal in Guangzhou's Haizhu District and weighing up where to spend it, 石湾·福 粤菜馆 on Qianjin Road is a candidate worth considering. The venue sits in a part of the city that rewards those willing to move away from the more heavily trafficked dining corridors, and for a special occasion — a birthday, a business dinner, a family gathering — the combination of location and Cantonese focus positions it differently from the hotel-based options that dominate the high-end end of the market. Booking here is reported to be direct, which matters when you are coordinating a group around a fixed date.
For Cantonese restaurants in Guangzhou, the lunch and dinner distinction is genuinely consequential. Lunch in this format typically means yum cha or dim sum service: shorter, more social, easier on the wallet, and a very different rhythm from a multi-course dinner. If your priority is value and a relaxed pace, lunch is the stronger case. If you are marking a milestone , an anniversary, a significant birthday, a corporate dinner , the evening service at a venue of this type generally allows for a more composed, unhurried meal where the kitchen can give fuller attention to the table. For a special occasion reader, dinner is the call. For a first visit or a family lunch with a wider age range, the midday service is the lower-risk entry point.
The address at 146 Qianjin Road in Haizhu District places the restaurant outside the central business districts that cluster around Tianhe and Zhujiang New Town. Haizhu has a more neighbourhood character, and restaurants in this part of the city tend toward larger floor plates and private room configurations suited to group dining. For a special occasion, that physical setup matters: the difference between a semi-private banquet room and an open dining room at the next table is significant when you are marking something important. Without confirmed seating data, it is worth calling ahead to ask specifically about private or semi-private arrangements if your group is four or more.
Against the broader Guangzhou Cantonese field, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine operates at a comparable price tier and brings a cross-regional pedigree from its Singapore origins. If documented brand consistency matters to your group, Imperial Treasure is the safer institutional choice. Jiang by Chef Fei carries named-chef credibility and a hotel setting that suits business entertainment. For a pure Cantonese experience in a neighbourhood context rather than a hotel dining room, 石湾·福 粤菜馆 is a plausible alternative , though the trade-off is less verifiable track record from public data.
If you are open to stepping outside Cantonese entirely, Taian Table and Chōwa both operate at ¥¥¥–¥¥¥¥ and offer modern tasting-menu formats better suited to a couple celebrating an anniversary than to a family banquet. For groups of six or more who want a traditional Cantonese banquet structure, BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) is the dominant local reference point and worth comparing directly on capacity and private room availability before committing here.
Address: 146 Qianjin Road, Haizhu District, Guangzhou. Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-in or same-week reservation is likely viable for most dates, though for a group or a key occasion, advance notice is still advisable. No confirmed phone, website, hours, or price range data is available in Pearl's records at time of publication; verify current details directly before visiting. For broader dining options in the city, see our full Guangzhou restaurants guide. For hotels nearby, our Guangzhou hotels guide covers the main options across districts.
If your plans extend beyond dining, our Guangzhou bars guide and our Guangzhou experiences guide are useful starting points for building a full evening or weekend itinerary.
Quick reference: Haizhu District address; easy to book; verify hours and pricing directly before visiting.
Group dining is plausible given the neighbourhood restaurant format and Haizhu District location, where larger floor plates are common. Call ahead to ask about private room availability for parties of four or more. No confirmed capacity data is available in Pearl's records. For a guaranteed large-group Cantonese banquet experience in Guangzhou, BingSheng Mansion is a documented alternative worth checking in parallel.
Bar seating is not a standard feature of traditional Cantonese restaurants in Guangzhou. This venue, based on its format and location in Haizhu District, is unlikely to offer bar dining in the Western sense. Expect table-based service. If counter or bar seating is important to your visit, our Guangzhou bars guide covers venues where that format is the focus.
No confirmed dietary accommodation data is available for this venue. Cantonese cuisine generally uses shellfish, pork, and soy extensively; advance communication is advisable for significant restrictions. Without a confirmed website or phone number in Pearl's records, your leading option is to contact the restaurant directly via the address at 146 Qianjin Road before visiting. If dietary flexibility is a priority, venues with English-language booking platforms may offer more transparent options.
No confirmed signature dishes or menu data are available in Pearl's records for this venue. Cantonese restaurants in Guangzhou of this type typically anchor a menu around roasted meats, steamed seafood, and classic dim sum at lunch. For a special occasion dinner, whole fish and whole poultry preparations are conventional ordering anchors. Confirm the current menu directly with the restaurant. For comparable Cantonese reference points elsewhere in China, see Xin Rong Ji in Beijing or Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau.
Solo dining at a traditional Cantonese restaurant in Guangzhou is workable but not the format's strong suit. Menus are typically built around sharing portions, and single diners can find both value and variety harder to access. If you are dining alone and want a Cantonese experience, a lunch dim sum service is a better fit than a dinner booking , you can order individual items and the social atmosphere is more forgiving of solo tables. For a solo dinner with a tasting menu format that is designed for individual diners, Taian Table or Chōwa are more natural fits.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ç³èÂ·ç¦ æè¶ç´ | Easy | — | ||
| Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine | Cantonese | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Taian Table | Modern European, European Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Song | Sichuan | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Chōwa | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Rêver | French Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how ç³èÂ·ç¦ æè¶ç´ measures up.
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