Restaurant in New York City, United States
YingTao
450Pearl PointsOne Michelin star. Hard to book. Worth it.

About YingTao
A Michelin-starred (2024) contemporary Chinese restaurant in Hell's Kitchen where Chef Jakub Baster applies French fine-dining technique to Chinese ingredients. Dishes like soy milk custard with doubanjiang and reimagined nian gao reward attention rather than appetite. At $$$$ with a 4.7 Google rating, it earns its price — book 4 to 6 weeks out and request counter seating.
Book the counter if you can get it — here's how
YingTao at 805 9th Ave in Hell's Kitchen is one of the harder reservations to land in its price tier right now, and counter seats are the move. Request bar or counter seating when you book: you get a closer read on the kitchen's technique, and the pacing tends to feel more personal than the main dining room. For the main room, plan 4 to 6 weeks out minimum. If you're flexible on date, mid-week openings appear more frequently and are worth targeting. This is a Michelin-starred restaurant with a 4.7 on Google across 151 reviews — it does not go unbooked.
What YingTao is
YingTao is a contemporary Chinese restaurant that applies French fine-dining technique to Chinese ingredients and flavor traditions. Chef Jakub Baster leads the kitchen, composing a menu where the reference points are recognizably Chinese , doubanjiang, soy milk, nian gao, crab noodles , but the execution draws on classical Western methods. Silky textures, restrained seasoning, and careful plating are the throughline. This is not a restaurant chasing bold, punchy Chinese-American flavors. The approach tilts toward subtlety: you are meant to notice what's happening in each component, not be overwhelmed by the whole.
The result sits in a specific lane. If you are looking for the emphatic, umami-forward register of a traditional Sichuan or Cantonese kitchen, this is not that. If you are interested in how Chinese culinary language translates through a fine-dining frame , with all the precision and restraint that implies , YingTao makes a strong case for the approach. A soy milk custard paired with celery root and savory doubanjiang is the kind of dish that rewards attention rather than appetite. Rich crab noodles with egg yolk and smoked tobiko push things in a more direction, but the flavors remain calibrated. The nian gao dessert, a reinterpretation of the traditional sweet rice cake, is the most purely pleasurable moment on the menu.
The editorial angle at counter seats sharpens all of this. Watching the kitchen compose dishes built around this kind of textural and flavor precision is genuinely instructive , not in a didactic way, but in the sense that seeing the work clarifies why a dish lands the way it does. For food enthusiasts who eat at this level regularly, the counter at YingTao offers the same dividend it does at any serious kitchen: you understand the meal better for having watched it made.
Why Hell's Kitchen, and why now
9th Avenue address is notable precisely because YingTao does not feel like a neighborhood restaurant. Hell's Kitchen has a real dining scene , see César, Acru, and Barawine for other options in the area , but a Michelin-starred contemporary tasting format at this level is not what the block announces. That incongruity is partly why the restaurant rewards commitment: you have to know to go. It also keeps the room from feeling like a destination-dining performance. The energy is more focused than theatrical.
2024 Michelin star is the most current trust signal available, and it matters here because it confirms the kitchen's consistency rather than just its ambition. Michelin inspectors visit multiple times; a star reflects repeatability. For first-time visitors, that reduces the risk inherent in a $$$$ commitment to a relatively young, independently-operated project.
Who should book, and under what conditions
Book YingTao if you eat at this price point regularly and want something that is doing genuinely distinct work. The Chinese-French synthesis is not a concept that many New York kitchens are pursuing at a serious level, and Baster's execution earns the Michelin recognition. This is the right call for a date dinner where food is the point, for solo diners who can get the counter and want an attentive, paced experience, and for anyone whose frame of reference includes contemporary kitchens like Smyth in Chicago or Lazy Bear in San Francisco and is curious what that register looks like applied to a Chinese culinary lens.
If you are comparing YingTao against other cross-cultural fine-dining projects internationally, the most useful reference points are Jungsik in Seoul, which runs a similar French-Korean synthesis at a higher level of resource, or Smoked Room in Dubai for a sense of what contemporary tasting menus look like in other markets. Within New York, the peer comparison is covered in the section below. For a broader look at where YingTao fits in the city's dining landscape, see our full New York City restaurants guide.
Do not book YingTao if you are bringing a large group (the format does not suit it), if you need guaranteed dietary flexibility without advance notice, or if the $$$$ price point requires a clear justification beyond the meal itself. The value case is real, but it is built on the quality of the cooking, not on spectacle or setting.
Practical reference
Address: 805 9th Ave, New York, NY 10019. Price range: $$$$ (Michelin-starred contemporary tasting, Hell's Kitchen). Booking: hard , allow 4 to 6 weeks minimum; counter seats require a specific request and fill fast. Google rating: 4.7 from 151 reviews. No phone or website confirmed in current data , book via third-party reservation platforms. For more on the area, see our New York City hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide. Nearby alternatives worth knowing: Bridges and Café Mars.
For further context on the New York dining scene, see our New York City wineries guide and comparisons to similar tasting-format restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, or Emeril's in New Orleans.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at YingTao?
Counter seats exist and are the preferred booking at YingTao — request them specifically when you reserve. They fill fast and the room is small, so this is not a walk-in situation. Plan 4 to 6 weeks out to have a realistic shot at the counter at this Michelin-starred $$$$ price point.
Is YingTao good for solo dining?
Yes — the counter format makes YingTao one of the better solo fine-dining options in Hell's Kitchen. A single seat is easier to land than a table for two, and the tasting progression works well without a group to coordinate around. Atomix also does counter dining at a comparable price point if YingTao is fully booked.
Is the tasting menu worth it at YingTao?
At $$$$ and with a 2024 Michelin star, YingTao earns its price if you are looking for something doing genuine creative work rather than a conventional tasting format. The Chinese-French synthesis — soy milk custard, crab noodles, reinterpreted nian gao — is not window dressing; it shapes the entire menu. If you want French technique without the Chinese-ingredient angle, Per Se is the comparison; if you want Chinese fine dining at a lower price tier, look elsewhere.
Can YingTao accommodate groups?
YingTao is a small, reservation-heavy room, which makes large groups logistically difficult. Parties of two to four are the practical ceiling before the format starts to strain. For corporate dinners or celebrations of six or more, Eleven Madison Park has the infrastructure; YingTao is better suited to intimate groups who are there for the food.
What are alternatives to YingTao in New York City?
Atomix is the closest peer — Korean-French fine dining at a similar price point with comparable reservation difficulty. For straight French technique at the top of the market, Per Se or Le Bernardin are the reference points. If budget is the concern, YingTao's $$$$ positioning means there are lighter-commitment Chinese fine-dining options in the city that do not require a Michelin-tier outlay.
Is YingTao worth the price?
For the $$$$ price tier, YingTao holds up: a 2024 Michelin star at a Hell's Kitchen address means you are getting genuine kitchen ambition without Midtown markup. The cuisine — Chinese ingredients, French technique, contemporary plating — is doing something specific rather than expensive-for-its-own-sake. It is not worth it if you want a traditional Chinese meal or a classic French tasting; it is worth it if the synthesis is the point.
Is YingTao good for a special occasion?
Yes, with caveats. The Michelin star and intimate format make it a credible special-occasion booking, and the tasting menu structure suits a celebratory pace. Book 4 to 6 weeks out and request counter seats or specify your party size when reserving. For occasions where a more established room and longer track record matter, Eleven Madison Park or Le Bernardin carry more institutional weight.
Location
805 9th Ave, New York, NY 10019
New York City, United States
Compare YingTao
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| YingTao | $$$$ | , |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | , |
| Atomix | $$$$ | , |
| Per Se | $$$$ | , |
| Masa | $$$$ | , |
| Eleven Madison Park | $$$$ | , |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Le Bernardin, French, Seafood, $$$$
- Atomix, Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$
- Per Se, French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Masa, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Eleven Madison Park, French, Vegan, $$$$
YingTao sits in the same $$$$ tier as New York's most demanding tasting-menu tables, but its profile is distinct enough that direct substitution rarely makes sense. Atomix is the closest peer: both run a cross-cultural tasting format (Korean-French at Atomix, Chinese-French here), both hold Michelin recognition, and both reward a diner who is specifically interested in the culinary synthesis rather than prestige dining as a general category. Atomix has a higher global profile and a harder reservation; YingTao is the better call if you are specifically drawn to the Chinese culinary frame and want a room that is slightly less performance-oriented.
Le Bernardin and Per Se both outrank YingTao in institutional weight, three Michelin stars each, with decades of consistent recognition. If technical mastery and formal production are the priority over conceptual ambition, either of those tables is a safer spend at the same price tier. Eleven Madison Park is the right choice if you want maximalist production value and a grand-occasion setting; it delivers more room presence than YingTao, though at a higher price point. Masa is the pick if Japanese precision is the draw, it is among the most expensive tables in the city, and it operates in an entirely different register to YingTao's composed, multi-component dishes.
For value within the $$$$ tier, YingTao is a stronger argument than most. You are paying for a Michelin-starred kitchen doing specific, accomplished work in an intimate setting, not for a marquee address or a legacy brand. If you are deciding between YingTao and its peers, the question is straightforward: book YingTao when the Chinese-French synthesis is the point, book Atomix when you want the most globally recognized version of that format, and book Le Bernardin or Per Se when you want technique over concept and institutional reliability over novelty.
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