Bōl
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A Michelin Plate–recognised set-menu restaurant in Bukit Bintang, Bōl applies Nyonya culinary tradition through a Singaporean-Malaysian lens. Opened in 2022 by chef-owner Kian Liew and partner Patrick, it operates on a format of seasonal and vegan tasting menus built around herbs, spices, and the flavour logic of Peranakan cooking. A Google rating of 4.8 from 345 reviews signals a loyal following that has formed quickly.
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- Address
- 15, Jln Sin Chew Kee, Bukit Bintang, 50150 Wilayah Persekutuan, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- Phone
- +60 10-283 8869
- Website
- linktr.ee

Where Bukit Bintang Gets Serious About Peranakan
Jalan Sin Chew Kee sits in the older, less polished edge of Bukit Bintang, a short distance from the neighbourhood's more commercially dense strips. The street retains a mid-century shophouse character that sits at odds with the glass-and-steel towers a few blocks away. Bōl is a restaurant in Kuala Lumpur that serves Modern Nyonya & Peranakan with Malaysian Twists at a roughly $75 per person price point.
The set-menu-only format is now well established among Kuala Lumpur's more considered dining addresses. Restaurants like Dewakan at the $$$$ tier and Beta at $$$ have demonstrated that KL diners will commit to a structured tasting experience when the kitchen has a clear point of view. Bōl operates at the $$ price point, which makes its Michelin Plate recognition, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, more notable: the inspectors found the cooking worth flagging at a price tier where kitchen ambition often thins out.
The Nyonya Framework
Nyonya cooking, the cuisine that emerged from Peranakan communities across the Malay Peninsula, is one of the most technically demanding regional traditions in Southeast Asia. The flavour architecture relies on rempah, spice pastes built from fresh aromatics like galangal, lemongrass, candlenut, and dried chilies, that require time and technique to develop correctly. It is not a cuisine that benefits from shortcuts, and the use of fresh herbs throughout distinguishes a kitchen that is working from scratch rather than from premixed bases.
Bōl frames this tradition through a Singaporean and Malaysian cross-border lens, which makes sense given that Peranakan culture itself is a hybrid: Chinese mercantile communities who settled in the region and absorbed Malay culinary and cultural influences over generations. The approach here is not archaeological recreation but active interpretation, with seasonal ingredients cycling through a menu that changes to reflect what is available rather than locking in a fixed sequence. A separate vegan menu runs in parallel, which is structurally unusual at this price tier and signals a kitchen confident enough to run two distinct programmes simultaneously.
For a broader orientation to the Asian Contemporary category across the region, the approaches at Willow in Singapore and Blackitch in Chiang Mai offer useful comparative reference points. Further afield, Banyan in Istanbul and Ce Soir in Singapore show how the Asian Contemporary format travels and adapts to different urban contexts, as does Correspondance in Brussels.
Booking Bōl: What to Know Before You Plan
A Google score of 4.8 across 384 reviews points to a loyal local following rather than a high-volume tourist crowd. The regulars who return to a format-driven menu know the booking rhythm; first-time visitors often do not.
In KL, this typically means contact through the restaurant's social media presence or through a platform-based listing. Reservations are essential, particularly for weekend sittings. The neighbourhood address on Jalan Sin Chew Kee is not heavily trafficked by casual walk-ins, which reinforces that the majority of covers are held by guests who planned ahead.
Because Bōl runs two menu formats, the seasonal tasting menu and the vegan alternative, it is worth specifying your preference at the time of booking rather than at the table. Kitchens running parallel programmes need that information in advance to mise en place correctly. Arriving without a declared preference at a set-menu restaurant is a structural imposition that affects the kitchen's ability to deliver the meal as intended.
The $$ price positioning places Bōl meaningfully below the $$$$ tier occupied by DC. by Darren Chin and Molina, and below the $$$ level of Beta. For context, Michelin Plate recognition does not carry the same weight as a star, but it does indicate that inspectors found the cooking technically sound and worth a visit, a meaningful signal when the kitchen is working at the lower end of the tasting-menu price band.
Elsewhere in Malaysia, the Peranakan tradition has deep roots in Penang, where Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town represents the more traditional, hawker-adjacent end of Nyonya cooking. Bee See Heong in Seberang Perai offers another regional perspective. Bōl's Singaporean-Malaysian framing occupies different ground: it is a contemporary tasting-menu interpretation of the same tradition rather than a preservation of it.
For a more complete picture of Nyonya and Malaysian-heritage dining outside the capital, The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi offers a resort-context contrast worth knowing about.
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Cuisine and Awards Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| BōlThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Asian Contemporary | $$ | |
| Dewakan | Malaysian | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star |
| Beta | Malaysian | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star |
| Molina | Innovative | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star |
| DC. by Darren Chin | French Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star |
| Ah Hei Bak Kut Teh | Malaysian | $ |
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