EZTrip.com Logo
Google
 
Google EZTrip.com
Hawaii Discount Hotels
Cars | Hotels | Flights | Hotel Directory | Car Directory | Destination Guides
 
  Looking for cheap or discount hotels? Want to find special internet only room rates? EZTrip.com has great hotel specials, including discount hotels in Anaheim, Hawaii, New York, London, Memphis, Paris, Las Vegas, Orlando, San Francisco, Sydney, Toronto - anywhere you want to go! For the best hotel discounts click on Hotels to begin your search.

Current Hotel Deals
Palm Springs, California
Nashville, Tennessee
El Paso, Texas
South Padre Island, Texas
Durango, Colorado
Branson, Missouri
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Greensboro, North Carolina

More Specials
 

 

EZTrip.com International Destination Guide and Hotel Listings

Hotel Listings & Destination Guide for Asia - China - Beijing


Search For A City: 


Beijing
History
Orientation And Arrival
Information And Maps
Moving On From Beijing
Eating
 
·Breakfast, Snacks And Fast Food
·Restaurants
Entertainment
Best Of
Listings
City Transport
Travel Details
Hotels in Beijing
EATING
Hotels in Beijing
 Beijing Zhong'an Hotel Beijing from  $44.00  USD  
 Xi Jiao Hotel Beijing Beijing from  $53.13  USD  
 Exhibition Centre Hotel Beijing from  $64.00  USD  
More Hotels in Beijing >>
Vacation Rentals in Beijing
 Luxury Serviced Residence Beijing Beijing from  $87.00  USD  
 Daniel's B&B Beijing from  $71.00  USD  
More Vacation Rentals in Beijing >>
Read It Here
Nowhere on the Chinese mainland has the culinary wealth of Beijing, with every style of Chinese food available, just about any Asian, and a smattering of world cuisines. Amongst all this abundance it's sometimes easy to forget that Beijing has its own culinary tradition - specialities well worth trying are Beijing duck ( Beijing kaoya) and Mongolian hotpot . Beijing duck appears in Chinese restaurants worldwide and consists of small pieces of meat which you dip in plum sauce, then wrap with chopped onions in a pancake. It's very rich and packs a massive cholesterol count. Mongolian hotpot is healthier, a poor man's fondue, involving a large pot of boiling stock, usually heated from underneath the table, into which you dip strips of mutton, cabbage and noodles, then if you're really committed, drink the rest as soup.

There's ample opportunity to eat Western food in Beijing, though it generally costs a little more than Chinese. French food is currently fashionable with the nouveaux riches, though it's pretty mediocre and expensive. An exception is the excellent DeliFrance chain, which has brought great French baking to Beijing at a fraction of what it costs in the West - and no praise is high enough for their coffee, about the only decent stuff in the whole country. German food is better, though again expensive, with a number of outlets in the more exclusive parts of town. If you really want the comforts of the familiar, try international places such as the Hard Rock Café - everything just like at home, including the prices. Japanese and Korean cuisine is mainly available from restaurants in upmarket hotels, though it's possible to eat both without breaking your budget, and they're well worth trying.

Fast food comes in two forms: the Chinese version, a canteen-style serving, usually of noodles in a polystyrene packet, which you find in department stores or buy from street stalls; and Western imports such as Pizza Hut, McDonald's and KFC, which have made a considerable impact and are now greatly imitated. McDonald's arrived in 1992 and there are now more than fifty branches, often so packed that getting served is an experience not unlike that of buying a train ticket. Prices are cheaper than in the West, but expensive by Chinese standards. Street food , mostly noodle dishes, is widely available, though not in the centre, where vendors are shooed away by the police; your best bet is at one of the designated night markets. Avoid the ice cream vendors who hang around the parks as their home-made wares are often of a dubious standard.

If you want to get a picnic together, or have the facilities to try some self-catering, the capital is well stocked with supermarkets . The Wellcome Supermarket - part of the Hong Kong chain - in the basement of the World Trade Centre is the most impressive, though everything costs about fifty percent more than you would pay in Hong Kong. The supermarket on the first floor of the Friendship Store is not nearly as good, but it does sell butter, cheese and Western beers, as do the supermarkets in the basements of the Parkson Store and the SCITECH shopping centre. Head for Sanlitun to find speciality shops catering to homesick Westerners; Jenny Lou's on Gongrentiyu Bei Lu is renowned, but not cheap.

Breakfast, snacks and fast food
Many visitors find the Chinese breakfast of dumplings and glutinous rice served in canteens bland and unappealing, but jian bing guozi, the classic Beijing breakfast snack - vegetables wrapped in an omelette wrapped in a pancake -...
read more >>

Restaurants
All the expensive hotels have several well-appointed restaurants, where the atmosphere is sedate but prices are sometimes not as high as you might expect; look out for their special offers, advertised in the city's listings magazines. Local...
read more >>

EZTrip.com Daily Destination Picks
Every day we show you new and exciting destination guides to some of our favorite locations as well as great discounts on hotels available in that area.

Thirty minutes' train ride north of Bologna, FERRARA was the residence of the Este dukes, an eccentric dynasty that ranked as a major political force throughout Renaissance times. The Este kept the main artists of the day in commissions and...
more

Alexandria, princess and whore. The royal city and the anus mundi. - Lawrence Durrell, The Alexandria Quartet ALEXANDRIA turns its back on the rest of Egypt and faces the Mediterranean, as if contemplating its glorious...
more

Once ranked as the strongest fortress in all Europe, PALMANOVA is a massive Venetian garrison town built in 1593 in the form of a nine-pointed star, its symmetrical streets converging on a large hexagonal piazza. Guided tours are conducted...
more


Copyright Rough Guides Ltd as trustee for its authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved.
The Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd.