Restaurant in Taichung, Taiwan
YUENJI
650Pearl PointsMichelin-starred Taiwan heritage. Book the Chef's Menu.

About YUENJI
YUENJI holds a Michelin star (2024) and ranks #127 in OAD's Asia list (2025), making it Taichung's most externally validated fine-dining table. Chef Lin Ju-Wei's kitchen reconstructs Taiwan's regional food heritage using hyperlocal sourcing — book the omakase Chef's Menu if you want the full picture. At $$$$ in Taichung, the absolute spend is lower than equivalent-tier restaurants in most major Asian cities.
YUENJI, Taichung: The Verdict
If you have already visited YUENJI once, the question on a return trip is not whether the kitchen holds up — it does, backed by a Michelin star (2024) and an Opinionated About Dining ranking of #127 in Asia (2025) — but whether the Chef's Menu reveals something new. It will. Lin Ju-Wei's team builds the menu around Taiwan's food heritage in a way that rewards familiarity: the more you know about the source ingredients and regional traditions, the more precisely you can read what is happening on the plate. First-time visitors eat well; repeat visitors eat with understanding.
The Space
YUENJI occupies a basement-level address in Taichung's Xitun District, entered via the parking structure of the Bao Yuan Ji building on Anhe East Road. That understated approach is deliberate. Inside, the room combines East-meets-West eclecticism with a level of finish that positions it firmly in Taichung's top tier. The spatial register is formal without being stiff: think polished surfaces, considered lighting, and a layout that gives tables enough separation to make this a workable choice for private conversation. For the explorer-minded diner, the room itself signals that something considered is about to happen , this is not a casual neighbourhood restaurant that happened to earn a star.
The Menu and What Drives It
Two menu formats are available. The Tasting Set Menu allows you to select from the main menu for each course, which gives flexibility if you are dining with guests who have strong preferences. The Chef's Menu operates omakase-style and requires pre-ordering. For anyone serious about the kitchen's sourcing philosophy, the Chef's Menu is the better call: Lin Ju-Wei's team works with Taiwanese ingredients and regional food culture as primary material, and the omakase format gives that sourcing work its full context.
The kitchen's treatment of heritage ingredients is where the price justification becomes clearest. The documented example , Lukang roasted wheat flour soup, a sweet regional preparation from central Taiwan's historic port town, reworked with almond milk for a creamy, nutty result , illustrates the approach precisely. Lukang's roasted wheat flour (香糕粉) is a hyperlocal product tied to temple culture and Taiwanese festival tradition. Bringing that ingredient into a Michelin-starred tasting menu format without flattening its identity requires sourcing discipline and real culinary knowledge of where it comes from. At the $$$$ price point, that kind of ingredient research is what you are partly paying for. For comparison, restaurants at the same tier in Taipei, including logy in Taipei, apply similar rigour to local-ingredient sourcing , but the specific regional Taiwanese material that YUENJI draws on is specific to the central Taiwan pantry.
Taiwan's food culture is among Asia's most layered, blending Hokkien, Hakka, Japanese colonial, and Aboriginal influences into an ingredient vocabulary that is still underexplored at the fine-dining level. YUENJI is one of the kitchens in Taiwan actively doing that excavation work. For the food-oriented traveller, that is meaningful context. If you are already exploring the country's dining scene, GEN in Kaohsiung and Fujin Tree Taiwanese Cuisine & Champagne (Songshan) in Taipei offer different takes on the same inheritance worth comparing.
Value and Price Positioning
At $$$$ in Taichung , not Tokyo, not London , the absolute spend is significantly lower than an equivalent Michelin-starred tasting menu in a higher cost-of-living city, even if the price tier signal reads the same. That gap matters for planning. A diner who would hesitate at a $$$$ restaurant in a major European capital may find YUENJI sits comfortably within a considered travel budget. The OAD #127 Asia ranking (2025) places it in genuine regional company, which means the quality ceiling has been externally validated, not just locally claimed. The 4.5 Google rating across 275 reviews provides additional, crowd-sourced corroboration.
Within Taichung's dining options, YUENJI sits at the leading of the price band. For context on what the city's broader restaurant scene offers across different budgets and formats, see our full Taichung restaurants guide. For those building a longer Taiwan itinerary, A Cun Beef Soup (Baoan Road) in Tainan and A Gan Yi Taro Balls in New Taipei show how well Taiwan's food culture performs at completely different price points.
Know Before You Go
Know Before You Go
- Price tier: $$$$ (Taichung pricing , expect meaningfully lower absolute spend than equivalent-tier venues in major Western cities)
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024); OAD Leading Restaurants in Asia #127 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.5 / 5 (275 reviews)
- Menu formats: Tasting Set Menu (diner selects per course) and Chef's Menu (omakase, pre-order required)
- Booking difficulty: Hard , plan well in advance, particularly for the Chef's Menu
- Location: Basement level, Bao Yuan Ji building, Anhe East Road, Xitun District, Taichung , enter via the building's parking structure
- Chef: Lin Ju-Wei
- Dress code: Not formally stated, but the room and price tier suggest smart casual at minimum
- Groups: Contact the restaurant directly; the format and setting are better suited to smaller parties
- Phone / website: Not listed in current data , book through your hotel concierge or a reservation platform
Around YUENJI: Taichung and Beyond
Taichung has a genuinely interesting food scene at every tier. For traditional Taiwanese cooking in the city, Chef Ah-Hsi's Old Time Restaurant and Chin Chih Yuan (Central) offer local context without the fine-dining commitment. Chien Wei Seafood, Feng Chi Goose, and Fu Din Wang (Central) cover different corners of the city's everyday eating. For hotel options to anchor your stay, our full Taichung hotels guide and our full Taichung bars guide are useful companions. Wider Taiwan exploration is covered in our Taichung wineries guide and our Taichung experiences guide.
For those tracking Taiwan's fine-dining output more broadly, Ang Gu in Hsinchu County, Golden Formosa in Taipei, and Volando Urai Spring Spa & Resort in Wulai District round out a picture of what Taiwanese cuisine looks like when kitchens take its heritage seriously.
FAQ
- How far ahead should I book YUENJI? Book at least four to six weeks in advance, and earlier if you want the Chef's Menu omakase format, which requires pre-ordering. YUENJI holds a Michelin star and an OAD Asia top-150 ranking , at the $$$$ tier in Taichung, availability is limited and demand is consistent. A hotel concierge is your most reliable booking channel given no phone or website is currently listed in public data.
- Is YUENJI good for a special occasion? Yes, clearly. The combination of a formal, polished room, Michelin-starred Taiwanese fine dining, and a tasting menu format makes it a strong choice for anniversaries, milestone birthdays, or a significant business dinner. The basement setting gives the room a sense of occasion and separation from the street. At $$$$ in Taichung, the cost is lower than comparable special-occasion venues in most major cities.
- Is YUENJI worth the price? At $$$$ in Taichung, yes , the absolute spend is considerably lower than Michelin-starred equivalents in Tokyo, Hong Kong, or London, and the kitchen's OAD #127 Asia (2025) ranking confirms it is performing at genuine regional level. The value case strengthens if you choose the Chef's Menu: Lin Ju-Wei's sourcing of hyperlocal Taiwanese ingredients is the intellectual core of the restaurant, and the omakase format delivers that most completely.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at YUENJI? The Chef's Menu (omakase, pre-order required) is the format that leading expresses what Lin Ju-Wei's kitchen is doing with Taiwan's regional food heritage. If you are visiting specifically because of the Michelin recognition or the OAD ranking, book the Chef's Menu. The Tasting Set Menu offers more flexibility per course but gives you less of the kitchen's through-line. For a first visit, the Chef's Menu is the better bet.
- What should I wear to YUENJI? No dress code is formally stated, but at the $$$$ price tier with Michelin-star and OAD recognition, the room will read formal. Smart casual is the floor , jacket optional but not out of place. Arriving underdressed relative to the setting will be noticeable.
- Can YUENJI accommodate groups? The venue's tasting menu format and fine-dining setting suggest it is leading suited to parties of two to four. Larger groups should contact the restaurant directly before booking , no phone or website is currently listed in public data, so approach through a hotel concierge or local reservation service. The omakase Chef's Menu in particular is a format that works leading for smaller, aligned groups.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book YUENJI?
Book at least 4 weeks out, longer if you want the Chef's Menu, which requires pre-ordering and fills first. YUENJI holds a Michelin star (2024) and an OAD Asia Top Restaurants ranking (#127, 2025), so demand is real. Walk-in availability at a $$$$, reservation-driven tasting format in Taichung is unlikely.
Is YUENJI good for a special occasion?
Yes, it's one of the stronger special-occasion cases in Taichung. The basement setting in the Bao Yuan Ji building is polished and intentional rather than casual, the Chef's Menu runs omakase-style for a structured progression, and the Michelin star (2024) gives it external credibility when you're taking someone you want to impress. The Tasting Set Menu offers more flexibility if your group has mixed preferences.
Is YUENJI worth the price?
At $$$$ in Taichung, the absolute spend is almost certainly lower than what a Michelin-starred equivalent would cost in Tokyo or London. Chef Lin Ju-Wei's kitchen is OAD Asia-ranked (#127, 2025) and Michelin-starred, so the credential-to-cost ratio holds up well. If you're comparing within Taiwan's fine dining tier, YUENJI is a strong value case rather than a stretch.
Is the tasting menu worth it at YUENJI?
The Chef's Menu is the stronger pick if you want the full kitchen statement — it runs omakase-style and requires pre-ordering, which signals it's designed as a single cohesive experience. The Tasting Set Menu, where you pick from the main menu course by course, is worth considering for groups with specific preferences or dietary restrictions. Either format anchors around Lin Ju-Wei's approach to Taiwan's food heritage, including dishes like the Lukang roasted wheat flour soup with almond milk.
What should I wear to YUENJI?
The venue description references a polished, East-meets-West setting with modern elegance, so dress accordingly: neat, presentable clothing is appropriate. There's no confirmed dress code in the available data, but a $$$$, Michelin-starred basement dining room in Taichung reads as smart-casual at minimum. Avoid overly casual attire.
Can YUENJI accommodate groups?
Groups are possible, but the format matters: the Chef's Menu requires pre-ordering, which makes coordination easier for parties dining together. The Tasting Set Menu's per-course flexibility is better suited to groups with mixed tastes. No private dining room is confirmed in the available data, so check the venue's official channels for parties larger than 4-6.
Location
40765, Taiwan, Taichung City, Xitun District, Anhe E Rd, 5號地下停車場入口位於安和一街-寶元紀大樓停車場
Taichung, Taiwan
Compare YUENJI
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| YUENJI | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #127 (2025); The swanky setting seamlessly melds East-meets-West eclecticism with modern elegance. The chef team revisits Taiwan’s food heritage and culture, adding a sophisticated spin to family favourites. The Tasting Set Menu allows diners to pick from the main menu for each course, whereas the Chef’s Menu, served omakase style, needs pre-ordering. The iconic sweet Lukang roasted wheat flour soup is creatively mixed with almond milk imparting a creamy, nutty kick.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | $$$$ | — |
| JL Studio | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Sur- | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| L'Atelier par Yao | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Oretachi No Nikuya | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Chin Chih Yuan (Central) | $ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between YUENJI and alternatives.
Also Consider
- JL Studio — Modern Singaporean, Singaporean, $$$$
- Sur- — Taiwanese contemporary, $$$
- L'Atelier par Yao — French Contemporary, $$$
- Oretachi No Nikuya — Barbecue, $$$
- Chin Chih Yuan (Central) — Taiwanese, $
How YUENJI Compares in Taichung
YUENJI and JL Studio are the two venues in Taichung operating at the $$$$ tier with serious international recognition. JL Studio's format is rooted in Modern Singaporean cooking and has its own award pedigree; YUENJI draws from Taiwanese food heritage. The choice between them is a matter of which culinary tradition you want to explore — both are hard bookings, and neither is a casual decision. If your reason for being in Taichung is specifically Taiwanese cuisine at the highest level of technical ambition, YUENJI is the more directly relevant choice.
At the $$$ tier, Sur- and L'Atelier par Yao offer strong alternatives for diners who want a fine-dining experience without committing to the $$$$ spend. Sur- works in Taiwanese contemporary and is worth considering if YUENJI is fully booked or if you want to spread a budget across more than one meal. L'Atelier par Yao takes a French Contemporary approach and suits diners who prefer European technique as the frame. Oretachi No Nikuya at $$$ covers barbecue and is a different evening entirely — more casual, lower pressure, better for groups.
For diners on a tighter budget who still want to eat Taiwanese food well in Taichung, Chin Chih Yuan (Central) at $ is the sharpest contrast: traditional Taiwanese at a fraction of the price. It will not give you the sourcing depth or the tasting menu format, but it will give you honest local cooking. If your itinerary allows for both ends of the spectrum, pairing a lunch at Chin Chih Yuan with a dinner at YUENJI on the same day is a practical way to read Taichung's food range in a single visit.
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