Restaurant in Hangzhou, China
Three awards. Book it before Hangzhou catches on.

Wild Yeast is Hangzhou's most decorated contemporary Chinese restaurant, holding a Michelin Star, Black Pearl Diamond, and an OAD Asia ranking for 2025. Chef Lin Zihan's ¥¥¥¥ tasting menu is built around sourcing precision and fermentation-led thinking. Booking is genuinely hard — plan well ahead and go through a concierge.
Wild Yeast holds a Michelin Star (retained from 2024 into 2025), a Black Pearl Diamond, and an Opinionated About Dining ranking of #185 in Asia for 2025. That triple-stacking of credentials across three independent rating bodies puts it in a different tier from most of Hangzhou's fine dining scene. Chef Lin Zihan runs the kitchen at the Shangcheng District address on Xiaosao Bay, and the contemporary Chinese format here is built around ingredient provenance rather than classical technique as spectacle. If you've eaten here once and are weighing a return, the answer is yes — assuming the format worked for you the first time.
The ¥¥¥¥ price tier is the right bracket for what Wild Yeast is doing. At this level in Hangzhou you are paying for sourcing decisions that are made before the kitchen even starts , produce, proteins, and fermentation inputs chosen for specificity rather than convenience. The name itself signals the kitchen's orientation: wild fermentation and natural leavening run through the menu's logic, connecting the contemporary Chinese framework to a broader philosophy about ingredient transformation over time. This is not a venue where the price is driven by room size or imported luxury goods alone; it reflects the cost of sourcing at the level the kitchen demands.
Visually, the plates at this price point in Hangzhou's contemporary scene tend to be minimal and precise , fewer garnishes, more attention to the primary ingredient's own color and texture. If that's your register, Wild Yeast is the right call. If you want the more theatrical plating and tableside service of a larger-format luxury room, Ru Yuan or Guiyu (Xihu) may suit your expectations better.
Booking is hard. A Michelin Star combined with what appears to be a small-format room means availability moves fast. There is no published online booking channel in our data, and no phone number is listed. Your leading route is through your hotel concierge if you're staying locally , see our Hangzhou hotels guide for properties with strong dining access , or through a reservation service that operates in the Hangzhou market. Do not assume you can walk in. Plan at minimum two to three weeks ahead for a weekend table, and longer if your dates are fixed.
For context on where Wild Yeast sits in Hangzhou's broader dining scene: Hangzhou House and Ambré Ciel are both worth knowing if you want alternatives at different price points or formats. For the full picture of what's available across the city, our Hangzhou restaurants guide covers the category in detail. If you're planning a broader trip, Hangzhou bars, wineries, and experiences are also covered.
For Chinese contemporary at a comparable level elsewhere in China, Da Dong (Xuhui) and Gastro Esthetics at DaDong in Shanghai represent the format at scale, while 102 House in Shanghai and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau offer useful reference points for regional fine dining ambition. La Lune is another Hangzhou option worth considering if your evening calls for a different cuisine direction.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wild Yeast | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #185 (2025); Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Xin Rong Ji | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| 28 Hubin Road | ¥¥¥ | — | |
| Ru Yuan | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Jin Sha | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Song | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
A Michelin-starred, Black Pearl-recognised restaurant at ¥¥¥¥ pricing signals smart dress as the floor expectation. That means no sportswear or casual streetwear. Lean toward business casual or above — think what you would wear to a formal dinner with a client, not a weekend lunch.
With an address in a boutique commercial block in Shangcheng District, Wild Yeast is unlikely to have large private dining rooms suited to parties above six. Smaller groups of two to four are the natural fit for a Michelin-starred contemporary Chinese format like this. check the venue's official channels to confirm availability for larger tables before planning a group booking.
Jin Sha and 28 Hubin Road are the comparisons to make if you want established Hangzhou prestige with more conventional formats. Song and Ru Yuan skew toward atmosphere-led dining where setting carries as much weight as the plate. Xin Rong Ji is the safer all-rounder for groups who want regional Chinese cooking without the tasting menu commitment Wild Yeast requires.
Wild Yeast is a sourcing-led contemporary Chinese restaurant under chef Lin Zihan, carrying a Michelin Star in both 2024 and 2025, a Black Pearl Diamond, and an OAD Asia ranking of #185 for 2025 — three distinct credentialing bodies, which is not common at this price point. Expect a tasting menu format rather than à la carte, and book well in advance given the recognition it has accumulated in a short window.
If ingredient provenance and chef-driven contemporary Chinese cooking are what you are after, yes. Wild Yeast has earned its Michelin Star in consecutive years alongside OAD and Black Pearl recognition — that consistency across three independent bodies suggests the kitchen is delivering, not coasting on early hype. If you prefer ordering freely or want a more social, shared-dishes format, Xin Rong Ji or Jin Sha will suit you better.
At ¥¥¥¥ with a Michelin Star, Black Pearl Diamond, and an OAD Asia Top 200 ranking all in the same year, Wild Yeast is priced where its credentials sit. For Hangzhou specifically, there are few contemporary Chinese options that have earned this level of independent recognition. The price is hard to argue with if fine dining is the intent — it would be a stretch only if you are looking for a casual or à la carte evening.
No specific dietary policy is documented for Wild Yeast. In a tasting menu format at this level, most kitchens will accommodate restrictions when notified at the time of booking — communicate any requirements clearly and in advance. Severe allergies or highly restrictive diets should be confirmed directly with the restaurant before committing.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.