Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Cantonese precision for occasions that count.

Yun House is the right call for a formal dinner or celebration in Kuala Lumpur. Holding a Michelin Plate (2025) and set inside the Four Seasons with KLCC park views, this Cantonese kitchen runs a pork-free, seafood-forward menu with serious plant-based options. Pre-order the signature duck. Book one to two weeks out for a standard table.
If you are planning a formal celebration, a client dinner, or a considered date night in Kuala Lumpur, Yun House at the Four Seasons on Jalan Ampang is the right call at the $$$ price tier. The room is built for occasions: high ceilings, views over KLCC park, and a format that handles both casual lunches and formal banquets without feeling mismatched. If you have already been once and ordered from the main menu, the next visit should be structured around the signature duck — which requires an advance order , and the daily Inspirational Soup, both of which represent the kitchen at its most deliberate.
Book at least one to two weeks out for standard tables. The signature duck must be reserved ahead of time, so if that is part of your plan, contact the restaurant when you make your reservation rather than at arrival. Weeknight dinners are more accessible than weekends, when the KLCC location draws both hotel guests and KL residents for special occasions. If your group has specific dietary requirements, flag them at booking , the menu is pork-free across the board, which is a considered sourcing decision rather than an afterthought, and a meaningful one for diners who need it.
Yun House's menu is concise by design, and that conciseness reflects a deliberate sourcing philosophy. Chef Jimmy Wong, who has spent years cooking in Southeast Asia, does not pad the menu with filler dishes. The seafood selection is fresh and changes with availability; the fresh prawns simmered with glass noodles is the kind of dish that works because the prawn quality carries it. The dim sum selection is tight rather than exhaustive, which means what is on offer is worth ordering rather than being spread thin across a long list of mediocre options.
The menu is entirely pork-free, which opens the kitchen to a wider range of diners in Kuala Lumpur's mixed dining context. More importantly, it means the kitchen has committed to building its Cantonese repertoire around seafood, poultry, and vegetables rather than relying on pork as a default protein. Chef Wong's vegetable dishes are specifically noted for their precision , not a common claim for Cantonese restaurants at this tier, where plant-based cooking is often treated as an accommodation rather than a strength. A full range of plant-based dishes is also available, making Yun House more genuinely flexible than most comparable venues in the city.
The crispy red bean pancake is the dessert to finish on. It is the kind of detail that signals the kitchen is paying attention to the full arc of a meal rather than letting dessert be an afterthought. The daily Inspirational Soup changes, so repeat visits will not be identical , a practical reason to return.
Four Seasons setting matters here. You are getting KLCC park views, high ceilings, and a contemporary dining room that does not feel like a hotel restaurant trying to be something it is not. The space works for two people on a quiet Tuesday and for a ten-person table on a Saturday without either feeling awkward. The 4.4 Google rating across 359 reviews is consistent with a venue that delivers reliably rather than occasionally , no spikes, no significant drops. Michelin awarded it a Plate in 2025, which signals food worth seeking out without the full-star expectation of a tasting-menu-format kitchen.
For Cantonese dining in Kuala Lumpur at this price point, the comparison set is meaningful. Elegant Inn, Li Yen, and Restoran Pik Wah all serve Cantonese in KL, but none of them offer the combination of a luxury hotel setting, KLCC views, and a Michelin-recognised kitchen at the same tier. Foong Lian and Sek Yuen are better options if you want traditional Cantonese at a lower price point without the hotel context. Yun House is the choice when the occasion requires both the food and the room to be working together.
If you are travelling through Malaysia more broadly, the standards at Yun House sit comfortably alongside destination restaurants elsewhere in the country. The Dining Room at The Datai Langkawi and Christoph's in Penang are the closest comparators in terms of hotel-anchored fine dining outside KL. For Cantonese cooking at a regional level, 102 House in Shanghai and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau give a sense of where Yun House sits within the broader Cantonese fine dining category across Asia.
See the comparison section below for how Yun House stacks up against KL's broader restaurant field.
For more on eating and staying in KL, see our full Kuala Lumpur hotels guide, our full Kuala Lumpur bars guide, and our full Kuala Lumpur experiences guide. If you are travelling beyond KL, Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town, Lavo and Lavo Gallery in Petaling Jaya, and BM Cathay Pancake in Seberang Perai are worth adding to your itinerary. Full regional context is in our full Kuala Lumpur wineries guide as well.
Yes, and the room is well suited to it. The high-ceilinged dining room at Four Seasons Jalan Ampang is designed for both casual and formal gatherings, making it a practical choice for corporate dinners or celebrations. If your group wants the signature duck, order it in advance — it is not available on demand.
It is one of the stronger choices in KL for a formal occasion. The Four Seasons setting, KLCC park views, and Michelin Plate recognition (2025) give it the gravitas that occasion dining requires. The concise, pork-free Cantonese menu keeps the focus on quality over spectacle, which suits a client dinner or anniversary better than a large group celebration.
Bar seating is not documented in the available venue information. Yun House is described as a formal dining room rather than a bar-forward space, so counter or bar dining is unlikely to be a standard option. Contact Four Seasons Kuala Lumpur directly at Jalan Ampang to confirm seating configurations before your visit.
Manageable, but not the obvious choice. The dining room is pitched at gatherings rather than solo guests, and at $$$ per head the format lends itself better to sharing. That said, the concise menu and dim sum selection mean a solo diner can eat well without over-ordering. For a solo Cantonese meal at this price point, go in knowing the signature duck requires advance ordering and may not be practical alone.
The menu at Yun House is described as concise rather than structured around a formal tasting format, so a traditional tasting menu may not be the primary offering. The Michelin Plate recognition signals consistent cooking rather than multi-course theatrics. Dishes like the daily Inspirational Soup and fresh prawns with glass noodles are specifically flagged — ordering selectively from the menu is likely the better approach than expecting an omakase-style progression.
At $$$, it earns its price for the right booking. The 2025 Michelin Plate, Four Seasons location, KLCC park views, and a kitchen focused on quality sourcing across seafood and dim sum justify the spend for occasions where setting and consistency both matter. For everyday Cantonese, there are better-value options in KL. For a formal dinner where the room needs to do some of the work, the price holds up.
Dewakan and DC. by Darren Chin are the natural comparisons at a similar price tier — Dewakan for modern Malaysian with stronger tasting-menu credentials, DC. by Darren Chin for French-influenced fine dining. Beta is worth considering if you want a more experimental local kitchen. Molina suits Mediterranean-leaning diners. Aliyaa is a sharper choice if you want South Asian cooking rather than Cantonese. Yun House is the clearest pick specifically for Cantonese cuisine with a hotel-quality setting.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.