


Beta holds a Michelin star and a La Liste 90-point score for its progressive take on Malaysian cooking. Chef Raymond Tham's 'Tour of Malaysia' tasting menu moves through the country's regional traditions with modern technique and precise plating. The theatrically designed dining room on Jalan Perak opens Tuesday to Sunday from 6 PM, with cocktail pairings available in the lounge before dinner.

The Room Before the Menu
The dining room at Beta on Jalan Perak is not an accident of interior design. It is a deliberate argument: that Malaysian cooking, in its full regional breadth, deserves the same theatrical frame that contemporary French or Japanese cuisine has long occupied in cities like Paris or Tokyo. The open kitchen sits visible from the main room, the space appointed with enough drama to signal that what follows is considered, not casual. Guests are directed to the lounge first, where cocktails and appetisers set a pace that slows the meal down before it properly begins. This sequencing — lounge, then dining room — is increasingly common at Kuala Lumpur's serious tasting-menu addresses, and it reflects a broader local shift toward hospitality architecture that earns the time it asks of its guests.
Within KL's current fine-dining tier, Beta sits at the intersection of two movements: the post-pandemic maturation of Malaysian modernist cooking, and a growing appetite among international visitors for cuisine that is rooted in local tradition rather than approximating European models. Alongside Dewakan , which holds two Michelin stars and operates at the $$$$ price tier , Beta represents the more accessible end of KL's Michelin-recognised Malaysian table, priced at $$$ and focused squarely on the country's own ingredients and culinary heritage rather than imported frameworks.
What the Menu Architecture Reveals
The structure of Beta's menu is where its editorial position becomes clearest. The 'Tour of Malaysia' format is not a loose theme or marketing shorthand. It is a sequencing decision: the menu moves through Malaysia's regional cooking traditions in a way that treats geography as a narrative device. A meal here is organised around the idea that the country's cuisine , Malay, Chinese, Indian, Peranakan, Sarawakian, Sabahan , is too varied and too specific to be collapsed into a single register.
That editorial commitment shows up most clearly in the documented add-on dish: abalone Lawas rice, built on a creamy heirloom rice from Sarawak, finished with abalone, caviar, and kaffir lime oil. The choice to anchor a premium add-on to a Sarawakian ingredient is pointed. Lawas rice is not a pan-Malaysian staple; it is regional, specific, and not widely available in the capital. Placing it at the leading of the menu's optional tier signals that the kitchen is not simply modernising the familiar but reaching into underrepresented parts of the country's larder.
This approach places Beta in a distinct peer set from restaurants that take a single regional cuisine and refine it. The 'Tour' format demands range, and range demands that the kitchen can execute across different flavour systems , the fermented and aromatic profiles of Malay cooking, the fat and clarity of Chinese-Malaysian preparations, the layered spice logic of Indian-influenced dishes. La Liste's 2026 assessment, which awarded Beta 90 points, specifically noted that the menu celebrates 'the breadth and depth of the country's culinary heritage,' which is as close to a formal endorsement of the menu's structural premise as the guide's language allows.
Raymond Tham's deployment of modern technique in this context is worth reading as a curatorial choice rather than a stylistic preference. Meticulous plating and contemporary methods serve to slow the diner's attention, to make visible things that street-level or hawker presentations move past at speed. Whether that mediation adds to or distances the cooking from its sources is a question that serious diners in KL debate actively. Beta's Michelin star , awarded in 2024 , and its La Liste score together suggest the answer, at least by the metrics those guides apply.
Beta in Kuala Lumpur's Fine-Dining Conversation
Kuala Lumpur's Michelin-starred Malaysian restaurants now occupy a clearer competitive tier than they did when the guide arrived in the city. At the leading, Dewakan operates with two stars and a $$$$ price point, with a research-heavy approach to indigenous ingredients. Beta sits one tier below in price and one star behind in Michelin terms, but its Google rating of 4.8 across 1,257 reviews indicates consistent execution at high volume , a signal that the experience translates reliably rather than peaking on review nights.
The restaurants that cluster around Beta in the $$$ Malaysian category , including Akar, which also works with Malaysian produce and tradition at a comparable price point , suggest that this middle tier of serious Malaysian cooking is deepening. Guests choosing between these addresses are not trading down from a $$$$ option; they are choosing between different editorial positions on what Malaysian fine dining should do. Beta's position is the most nationally expansive: the whole country as subject, not a single state or ethnicity.
For context on what this style of progressive Malaysian cooking looks like in other cities, the conversation extends beyond KL. Fiz in Singapore and Communal Table by Gēn in George Town each approach the Malaysian repertoire with similarly considered technique, while further afield, Azalina's in San Francisco and GaGa in Glasgow represent the diaspora end of the same conversation. For grounding in Malaysia's less mediated traditions, addresses like Ah Hei Bak Kut Teh in KL, Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town, and Bee See Heong in Seberang Perai offer the regional specificity that Beta draws on but does not replicate. Elsewhere in Malaysia, The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi and Anak Baba approach Peranakan and heritage cooking from different angles. And for those exploring KL's other recognised addresses, Congkak in Bukit Bintang rounds out the picture of how the city's Malaysian dining scene is currently positioned.
Planning a Visit
Beta is located at Lot 163, 10 Jalan Perak, in the Kuala Lumpur city centre. The restaurant is closed on Mondays. Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday, service runs from 6 PM to 10 PM. Friday and Saturday extend to 11 PM. Given the tasting-menu format and the lounge-first sequence, an evening here typically runs two to two-and-a-half hours; the later Friday and Saturday close reflects this. The cocktail and wine pairing option is worth considering alongside the food , La Liste's assessment specifically identified it as complementary to the menu's structure rather than incidental. The abalone Lawas rice add-on is documented as a separate supplement and worth requesting when booking if it is available for your date.
For a wider view of what KL offers across categories, EP Club's guides cover the full range: see our full Kuala Lumpur restaurants guide, our full Kuala Lumpur hotels guide, our full Kuala Lumpur bars guide, our full Kuala Lumpur experiences guide, and our full Kuala Lumpur wineries guide. For Food Terminal in Atlanta, the Malaysian diaspora dining conversation extends to the United States as well.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do people recommend at Beta?
The restaurant's tasting menu, titled 'Tour of Malaysia,' draws the most consistent attention from guests and critics. La Liste's 2026 assessment specifically highlighted the abalone Lawas rice add-on , Sarawakian heirloom rice finished with abalone, caviar, and kaffir lime oil , as worth ordering separately. The cocktail and wine pairings are equally well-regarded, with La Liste noting they complement the menu's structure rather than run parallel to it. Chef Raymond Tham's Michelin star (2024) and La Liste 90-point score give external grounding to what the 4.8 Google rating across over 1,250 reviews reflects in volume: the kitchen delivers consistently across sittings.
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