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    Restaurant in Fuzhou, China

    Jing Li

    350pts

    Fujian classics, Bib Gourmand value, no splurge required.

    Jing Li, Restaurant in Fuzhou

    About Jing Li

    Jing Li holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024–2025) and delivers creative Minnan cooking in a formal-leaning room at a mid-range price. The red yeast rice wine lees dishes — particularly the deep-fried marinated eel and braised pork trotter noodles — are the reason to book. Easy to reserve, appropriate for business dining, and among the stronger value propositions in Fuzhou.

    The Verdict

    Jing Li is not a fine-dining splurge — and that is the point. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what the price tag suggests: this is where you get serious Fujian cooking at a cost that does not require a business expense account. If you have already visited once and ordered safely, come back with a clear brief: go straight for the red yeast rice wine lees dishes, which are the reason this restaurant earns its recognition. Everything else is context.

    What Jing Li Actually Is

    A common assumption about Bib Gourmand restaurants in China is that they occupy a casual, slightly rough-edged register. Jing Li corrects that immediately. Opened in 2020 as the premium offshoot of a longstanding Fuzhou institution, it was designed from the start to pull a business clientele — the kind of dinner where the table matters as much as the food. Burgundy seating, warm wood paneling, and a composed interior give it a formality that sits above its price tier. You are not eating in a canteen. You are eating in a room that takes Minnan cuisine seriously enough to dress it up.

    That positioning matters when you are deciding whether to book here over [Min Shi Fu](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/min-shi-fu-fuzhou-restaurant) or [Longkushan Eatery](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/longkushan-eatery-fuzhou-restaurant). Jing Li is the choice when the setting has to do some work alongside the food , a client dinner, a reunion, a meal where the room signals effort without signaling extravagance.

    The Food and Why the Wine Lees Dishes Are the Priority

    Jing Li's kitchen works within Minnan (southern Fujian) culinary tradition, then pushes outward , folding in influences from other regional cuisines to produce a menu that feels contemporary without abandoning its roots. The technique is orthodox; the combinations are not always.

    The dishes built around red yeast rice wine lees are where Jing Li's identity is clearest. Red yeast rice wine lees , the fermented solids left after pressing Fujian rice wine , carry a deep, faintly sweet, funky character that functions almost like a seasoning base. At Jing Li, two preparations stand out from the venue record: deep-fried wine lees-marinated eel, and longevity noodles with pork trotter braised in wine lees. The eel preparation uses the marinade to drive flavor into the fish before it hits the oil, producing something more complex than a straight fry. The pork trotter with longevity noodles takes the braising route , slower, richer, the wine lees working into the collagen-heavy cut over time. Both are Fujian cooking at a register you will not find at every table-cloth restaurant in the city.

    For diners returning for a second visit, these two dishes should anchor the order. For first-timers, they are the clearest signal of what makes Jing Li worth choosing over a generic regional restaurant. If you want to understand what Fujian cuisine tastes like at its most distinctive, this is the shortcut. For comparison, [Hokklo , Fujian in Xiamen](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hokklo-xiamen-restaurant) and [Hokkien Cuisine , Fujian in Chengdu](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hokkien-cuisine-chengdu-restaurant) offer related regional traditions , but Jing Li's wine lees focus gives it a more specific, harder-to-replicate angle.

    On the Drinks Program

    The venue data does not confirm a dedicated wine list or curated beverage program. Given the ¥¥ price positioning and business-dining orientation, it is reasonable to expect baijiu and local rice wine options alongside the food , but specific bottle selections, by-the-glass offerings, or pairing recommendations are not confirmed here. If drinks pairings are a deciding factor for your booking, call ahead or check with the restaurant directly. What is clear is that the food , particularly the wine lees preparations , already carries its own fermented-grain depth, so the beverage program does not need to work hard to complement the cooking. For wine-forward dining with a similar regional approach, [Ru Yuan in Hangzhou](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/ru-yuan-hangzhou-restaurant) or [Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) in Beijing](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/xin-rong-ji-xinyuan-south-road-beijing-restaurant) may offer more curated pairing experiences.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy , Bib Gourmand status and a business-dining focus means tables turn; booking a day or two ahead is sufficient for most visits, though weekend evenings may warrant more lead time. Dress: Smart casual at minimum; the interior and clientele skew business, so dress up a level from what you would wear to a street-food stop. Budget: ¥¥ , mid-range for Fuzhou, reasonable given the Michelin recognition. Address: 106 Nanhou St, Gulou District, Fuzhou. Getting There: Nanhou Street sits within the historic San坊七巷 (Three Lanes and Seven Alleys) district , walkable from central Fuzhou hotels and well-served by taxi and rideshare.

    How It Fits the Fuzhou Picture

    Jing Li sits at a specific intersection in Fuzhou's dining options: more formal than [Longkushan Eatery](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/longkushan-eatery-fuzhou-restaurant), more focused than [Fuyuan](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/fuyuan-fuzhou-restaurant), and more affordable than the top-tier options. For visitors working through the city's restaurant options, it belongs on the shortlist alongside [Wenru No.9](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/wenru-no9-fuzhou-restaurant) and [Harmony Garden (Xierhuan North Road)](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/harmony-garden-xierhuan-north-road-fuzhou-restaurant). Browse the [full Fuzhou restaurants guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/fuzhou) for context on where Jing Li sits relative to the full field. If you are planning a longer stay, the [Fuzhou hotels guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/hotels/fuzhou), [bars guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/bars/fuzhou), and [experiences guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/experiences/fuzhou) fill out the picture.

    FAQ

    • What should I order at Jing Li? Start with the deep-fried wine lees-marinated eel and the longevity noodles with pork trotter braised in wine lees. These are the dishes that earned the Bib Gourmand recognition and the clearest expression of what the kitchen does well. Build the rest of your order around whatever the server recommends as seasonal.
    • What should I wear to Jing Li? Smart casual. The restaurant targets business diners, the interior is formal by Fuzhou mid-range standards, and jeans-and-sneakers will feel slightly out of register. Think: what you would wear to a moderately serious client lunch.
    • How far ahead should I book Jing Li? One to two days is usually sufficient. Booking is easy relative to the Michelin recognition , this is not a 30-seat counter with a six-week waitlist. Weekend dinner is the tightest window, so book 48 hours out for those slots.
    • What are alternatives to Jing Li in Fuzhou? For Fujian cuisine at a similar price tier, [Min Shi Fu](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/min-shi-fu-fuzhou-restaurant) is the closest direct comparison. For a cheaper, more casual Fujian meal, [Longkushan Eatery](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/longkushan-eatery-fuzhou-restaurant) works well. If you want to spend more and try Huaiyang cooking, [Jiangnan Wok‧Rong](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/jiangnan-wokrong) moves up a tier. For regional Fujian comparisons outside the city, [Hokklo in Xiamen](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hokklo-xiamen-restaurant) is worth noting.
    • Is Jing Li worth the price? Yes, clearly. Two Bib Gourmand awards at a ¥¥ price point is one of the better value propositions in Fuzhou's mid-range. You are getting a formal room, Michelin-recognised cooking, and a focused regional menu at a cost well below what a comparable experience would run in Shanghai or Beijing. For context, [102 House in Shanghai](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/102-house-shanghai-restaurant) or [Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/chef-tams-seasons-macau-restaurant) operate in a different price bracket entirely.
    • Is Jing Li good for a special occasion? Yes , with the right group. The interior and positioning make it appropriate for a business dinner, a family celebration, or a meal marking something specific. It is not a white-tablecloth occasion restaurant, but it reads as considered and deliberate. For larger groups or more elaborate occasion dining, check whether a private room is available when booking.
    • Does Jing Li handle dietary restrictions? The menu centres on Fujian pork, seafood, and fermented-grain preparations , not a cuisine that bends easily toward vegetarian or allergen-free requests. No confirmed information on dietary accommodation is available. Call or message ahead if restrictions are a factor; do not assume flexibility.
    • What should a first-timer know about Jing Li? Order the wine lees dishes , that is the whole point. The restaurant is the premium arm of an older Fuzhou institution, designed for business dining, and the Minnan classics on the menu are creative rather than strictly traditional. At ¥¥ with two Bib Gourmands, it is low-risk and high-reward for a first visit. Arrive with a reservation, dress one step up from casual, and let the wine lees eel anchor your meal.

    Compare Jing Li

    How Jing Li Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Jing LiFujian¥¥Opened in 2020 as the premium version of a longstanding Fuzhou institution, Jing Li targets an upmarket business clientele. Burgundy seats and details grace the elegant wood-rich interior. On the menu, local Minnan classics are creatively melded with other cuisines. The dishes made with red yeast rice wine lees, such as the deep-fried wine lees-marinated eel, and longevity noodles with pork trotter braised in wine lees, are particular standouts.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024)Easy
    Hou Jie Lao Hua (Yadao Lane)Noodles¥Unknown
    Longkushan EateryFujian¥Unknown
    Min Shi FuFujian¥¥Unknown
    Mei Ya Bo Hua Sheng TangSmall eats¥Unknown
    Jiangnan Wok‧RongHuaiyang¥¥¥Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    A quick look at how Jing Li measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Jing Li?

    The wine lees dishes are the priority. The deep-fried wine lees-marinated eel and longevity noodles with pork trotter braised in wine lees are both flagged as standouts in Jing Li's Michelin recognition. Red yeast rice wine lees cooking is a distinctly Fujianese technique, and Jing Li is one of the better places in Fuzhou to try it at this price point.

    What should I wear to Jing Li?

    Jing Li's wood-rich interior with burgundy seating and a business-dining clientele puts it firmly in polished-casual territory. Neat, presentable clothing is a reasonable baseline — think business casual rather than formal. There is no evidence of a strict dress code, but the setting is more composed than a neighbourhood canteen.

    How far ahead should I book Jing Li?

    One to two days ahead is usually sufficient for most visits, though weekday business lunches can fill faster given the corporate crowd it targets. Michelin Bib Gourmand status has raised Jing Li's profile, so weekend evenings may warrant slightly more lead time. Same-day availability is plausible but not guaranteed.

    What are alternatives to Jing Li in Fuzhou?

    Longkushan Eatery is a more casual option if the business-dining register at Jing Li feels like too much for what you want. Min Shi Fu and Jiangnan Wok·Rong are worth considering if you want a different angle on regional Chinese cooking in the city. Hou Jie Lao Hua (Yadao Lane) and Mei Ya Bo Hua Sheng Tang round out the Fuzhou options for those who want local-focused meals at a similar or lower price point.

    Is Jing Li worth the price?

    At ¥¥ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025), Jing Li delivers clear value — Bib Gourmand is specifically awarded to places offering good food at moderate prices. If you want Fujian wine lees cooking in a setting that skews upmarket without a fine-dining price tag, this is one of the stronger cases for spending your money in Fuzhou.

    Is Jing Li good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. Jing Li's polished interior and business-dining positioning make it more occasion-appropriate than most Bib Gourmand spots, but it is not a tasting-menu venue built around a special-night format. It works well for a meaningful business dinner or a low-key celebration — less so if you want a multi-course event with ceremony.

    Does Jing Li handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary accommodation policy is documented for Jing Li. Given the kitchen's focus on Minnan classics — including pork-heavy dishes like the braised trotter noodles — the menu skews meat-forward. Guests with strict dietary requirements should check the venue's official channels before booking, as the available data does not confirm vegetarian, vegan, or allergen-specific options.

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