It is hard to connect tasty cuisine with a
thoroughfare nicknamed "Ghost Street." But this 1.5-km east-west street in
eastern downtown Beijing has won the hearts of local food lovers.
There are many tales of how Guijie got its name. The
superstitious one is that, according to old people, only restaurants could
survive on this street because business was strong only after nightfall, when
the hungry "ghosts" came out.

The legend might have some roots in history. In
ancient times, this street was a path that people took to bring the deceased to
cemeteries outside the then-walled city. A wholesale grocery fair was set up,
and it usually started at midnight and ended in the early morning. The vendors,
working beneath dim kerosene burners, looked like ghosts. And the coffin shops
and morticians along the street added to the spooky ambience.
Today, there's no remnant of this era. Instead, about
100 restaurants line both sides of the wide street.
A more prosaic explanation comes from Sun Xuejun,
head of Guijie's community committee: the street was named Ghost because it was
the first place in Beijing where restaurants were open round the clock.
In any case, perhaps for luck, the Chinese character
for ghost was replaced by another character that sounds the same but means food
basket.
The busiest time at Guijie is between 6 p.m. and 4
a.m. Spicy foods set the tone. Several old restaurants are well known for dishes
such as hot and spicy crayfish and roasted fish with chili sauce.
Nights here belong to locals. They come in shorts and
slippers, order a full table of red hot dishes or steaming hot pot with bottles
of cold beer and talk as if competing with others at the next table.
According to Sun, the street has undergone some
changes for the sake of the Olympics. Servers were trained to use simple English
and taught about foreign customs, hygiene was improved and English menus were
provided.
It is easy to find the street. Get off subway Line
two at Dongzhimen station and you will find yourself at the east end of the
street. Get off subway Line five at Beixinqiao station to comefrom the west end.
It is about two blocks south of Lama Temple, the famous Tibetan Buddhist temple
and popular tourist site.
The restaurants we list here are unique but not the
only good ones. If you wander along the street, you may find something much more
to your taste.
Huajieyiyuan
The restaurant is one of the oldest and most famous
on the street. It sits in a private courtyard and has a grand traditional
Chinese archway at its gate, painted in red and gold. But it's more expensive
than others on the same street.
It won fame with hot and spicy crayfish but then
developed other dishes in its own style. For instance, it offers roast duck but
serves it with slices of honeydew, pineapple, cucumber and hawthorn fruit as
well as sweet soy sauce and wasabi. That's quite different from conventional
roasted ducks. The plum juice here is strongly recommended.
It also offers evening performances of traditional
Chinese music and drama.
Address: No. 235 Dongzhimennei Street, Dongcheng
District
Telephone: 8610-8407-8288
Open from 10:30 a.m. to 3 a.m. next day
Accepts credit cards and has an English menu.
Cost per person: 60 to 100 yuan (8.7 to 15 U.S.
dollars)
Xiaoshancheng Hot Pot
Spicy, very spicy. That's the common impression of
hot pots here. But you can choose less spicy versions, as it offers seven kinds
of hot pot soup base. You can pick two or three kinds of soup base and the
restaurant will put them into one pot in separate compartments. They have
special pots that have two compartments, which look like the Taichi symbol from
above. The one with three compartments looks like a Mercedes-Benz symbol from
above and it is named Benz hot pot.
What to "rinse" in the hot pot (a term commonly used
by Chinese about boiling raw foods in a soup base) varies widely. It includes
fish, beef, mutton, vegetables, toufu, mushrooms and frogs. Frogs, raised
specially for eating, are strongly recommended by frequent customers here.
Many red lanterns are hung in front of the restaurant
under its huge golden symbol. It is very noisy inside during prime time.
Address: No. 251 Dongzhimennei Street, Dongcheng
District
Telephone: 8610-8402-0856
Open 24 hours.
Accepts credit cards and has an English menu.
Cost per person: 50 to 70 yuan
Yingxiong Shanzhuang, or Hero's Castle
This "theme" restaurant portrays itself as a scene
from China's martial arts tales. Remember in almost every martial arts movie,
there is a fight at a restaurant or inn? You will feel as if you are a Kung Fu
master when stepping into Hero's Castle.
The waiter will greet you with "Come in please,
master" and guide you to a table named after a famous martial arts school, such
as Wudang or Shaolin. The wall is decorated with traditional paintings on
martial arts topics, windows have bamboo grids and wooden tables and chairs are
made in old style.
Chopsticks are called Nanchaku and dishes are also
named after martial arts terms or dishes discussed in famous martial arts works
of fiction. There is no menu -- the owner, or "Lord of Hero's Castle", will
arrange the meal for you.
Round-the-Clock Feast at Beijing's Legendary
Foodstreet
Address: No. 181 Dongzhimennei Street, Dongcheng
District
Telephone: 8610-8403-5851
Open from 11:30 a.m to 2 p.m. and from 5:00 p.m. to
11:30 p.m.
Does not accept credit cards and has no menu in any
language.
Cost per person: 30 to 50 yuan.
(Source: chinaculture.org)