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CuisineCantonese
Executive ChefCheung Siu Kong
LocationSingapore, Singapore
Michelin
Black Pearl
The Best Chef
Wine Spectator
Opinionated About Dining
World's 50 Best

Occupying the third floor of The Ritz-Carlton, Millenia Singapore, Summer Pavilion has held a Michelin star since 2024 and ranked among Asia's 50 best restaurants in 2025. Chef Cheung Siu Kong leads a broad Cantonese menu where seasonal seafood takes precedence, supported by a wine list of 370 selections across 1,780 bottles. A garden-enclosed dining room and attentive service set the tone for formal Cantonese dining in the Marina Bay corridor.

Summer Pavilion restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
About

Cantonese Fine Dining at the Marina Bay End of the Spectrum

Singapore's hotel dining rooms have long occupied a distinct position in the city's Chinese restaurant hierarchy. The combination of international service standards, controlled sourcing channels, and the kind of procurement budgets that support live seafood tanks and premium dried goods has produced a cluster of Cantonese kitchens that operate at a level most standalone restaurants cannot match on ingredient quality alone. Summer Pavilion, on the third floor of The Ritz-Carlton, Millenia Singapore, sits squarely in that tier. It ranked 95th among Asia's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and carries a Michelin star (2024), placing it within the same competitive conversation as Jiang-Nan Chun and Jade Palace Seafood Restaurant at the upper end of Singapore's Cantonese dining bracket.

The wider context matters here. Singapore's premium Cantonese scene operates in a different register from Hong Kong, where decades of accumulated technique and a larger competitive field have produced institutions like Forum and T'ang Court with deep roots in the canon. Singapore's strongest Cantonese kitchens tend instead to compete on sourcing range and execution discipline, and Summer Pavilion has earned recognition on both fronts. The Opinionated About Dining Asia ranking placed it at 124th in 2025 (up from 147th in 2024), a trajectory that reflects both consistent kitchen output and growing awareness among the regional dining audience.

The Room and What It Signals

The dining room occupies a position that feels deliberately removed from the hotel's lobby energy. A garden borders the space, softening the contemporary architecture in a way that places the room at some distance from the harder-edged luxury registers favoured by some Singapore hotel restaurants. The effect is calming rather than demonstrative, which suits the tempo of a serious Cantonese meal. Long banquets and multi-course lunches are less about spectacle than about sustained attention, and the room supports that rhythm.

Service at Summer Pavilion has drawn repeated notice in dining guides. The Opinionated About Dining commentary describes staff delivering service with "vim and vigour" — a precise distinction in a category where many hotel dining rooms prioritise formality over engagement. The general manager is Gery Lee, and the front-of-house approach reflects the kind of coordination between floor and kitchen that multi-award-recognition tends to require. Sommelier Alessandro Furfaro oversees a wine program of 370 selections and a cellar inventory of 1,780 bottles, which for a Cantonese dining room in Singapore is a serious depth of commitment.

Ingredient Sourcing as the Editorial Through-Line

Cantonese cuisine's reputation for technical precision can sometimes overshadow its equally strong preoccupation with ingredient sourcing. At the highest tier of the tradition, the sourcing question is not peripheral; it is where quality is actually determined. Abalone provenance, the size and freshness of grouper and sea whelk, the quality of fish maw — these are the markers that distinguish a kitchen operating at the leading of the category from one operating a tier below. The menu at Summer Pavilion draws directly from this sourcing-first orientation. The dishes noted in dining guide commentary include double-boiled sea whelk soup with fish maw, sautéed Dong Xing grouper fillet, and braised abalone, each of which involves premium dried or live ingredients whose sourcing determines the ceiling of the dish's quality.

Dong Xing grouper (also known as coral trout in some markets) sits among the more prized reef fish in Cantonese cooking, valued for its firm flesh and clean flavour that responds well to wok technique. Sea whelk prepared in a double-boiled format requires patience and ingredient integrity in equal measure. These are dishes that reflect what premium Cantonese cooking looks like when sourcing and technique are aligned. The same argument holds for abalone, which at this tier will typically involve dried abalone from premium origins rather than canned alternatives, prepared over extended braising periods that compress weeks of preparation into a dish that arrives at the table without visible drama.

For comparison within the broader Cantonese canon across Asia, the sourcing-first philosophy surfaces consistently at high-performing kitchens: Jade Dragon in Macau, Le Palais in Taipei, and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau all operate within a framework where ingredient origin is treated as a primary editorial decision in menu construction. Summer Pavilion's positioning within that peer set reflects the same logic applied to Singapore's supply chains and dining expectations.

The Menu Breadth and Seasonal Structure

The menu spans Cantonese classics alongside seasonal dishes, with seafood representing the kitchen's primary emphasis according to guide commentary. This structure is consistent with how serious Cantonese restaurants handle the tension between accessibility and ambition: the classic dishes provide a reference frame, while seasonal inclusions signal the kitchen's active engagement with what is available and at its peak at any given time.

Chef Cheung Siu Kong leads the kitchen. Without overstating the role of individual biography in what is fundamentally an ensemble operation, his leadership sits within a tradition of Cantonese kitchen discipline where mastery is demonstrated through precision in familiar territory rather than novelty in unfamiliar territory. The Black Pearl 1 Diamond recognition (2025), which operates on a different but complementary evaluation framework to Michelin, corroborates the consistency that makes a restaurant worth tracking across multiple visits rather than a single occasion.

The Cantonese dining category in Singapore also includes Majestic and Min Jiang at Dempsey, each operating with different format and price-tier orientations. Shisen Hanten sits in a Sichuan-inflected Chinese register rather than strict Cantonese. Summer Pavilion's position is defined by its hotel-backed sourcing infrastructure and the multi-award recognition that has accumulated across OAD, Michelin, and the 50 Best Asia ranking simultaneously, a combination few Singapore Chinese restaurants hold at once.

The Wine Program in Context

A 370-selection wine list with 1,780 bottles of inventory is substantial by any Singapore restaurant standard, and notable specifically for a Cantonese kitchen where the default pairing expectation has historically been tea or Chinese spirits rather than wine. The program's strengths run through France, with particular depth in Champagne and Bordeaux, plus Italy. Pricing sits at the $$$ tier, with corkage at SGD 44 for those who prefer to bring a bottle from outside. This is the kind of wine infrastructure that the hotel context enables and that standalone Cantonese restaurants rarely match; the analogous program at Cantonese venues in Shanghai such as 102 House or Bao Li Xuan, or in Hong Kong, tends to reflect similar hotel-adjacent investment levels.

For those planning a Singapore visit that crosses categories, the full Singapore restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide provide broader coverage. The Canton 8 (Huangpu) listing in Shanghai also offers a reference point for how Cantonese cooking in a major Chinese city compares in format and price positioning to the Singapore hotel-dining tier.

Planning Your Visit

Address: Level 3, The Ritz-Carlton, Millenia Singapore, 7 Raffles Avenue, Singapore 039799. Hours: Monday through Sunday, lunch 11:30 AM to 2:30 PM, dinner 6:30 PM to 10:30 PM. Cuisine pricing: $$$ (two-course meal without beverages SGD 66 and above). Wine: $$$ list, 370 selections, 1,780 bottles; corkage SGD 44. Reservations: Contact the restaurant directly or through The Ritz-Carlton reservations system; bookings are advisable, particularly for weekend lunch and dinner given the recognition level. Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024), Asia's 50 Best Restaurants #95 (2025), OAD Leading Asia #124 (2025), Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025).

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at Summer Pavilion?

Go directly to the seafood section. The double-boiled sea whelk soup with fish maw, braised abalone, and sautéed Dong Xing grouper fillet are the dishes that have drawn the most specific praise from Michelin and OAD evaluators. Chef Cheung Siu Kong's kitchen operates in the sourcing-first tradition of serious Cantonese cooking, where these premium dried and live seafood preparations represent the clearest expression of what the kitchen does at its ceiling. Seasonal additions are worth asking the floor about on the day.

How would you describe the vibe at Summer Pavilion?

Calmer than most hotel restaurants at its price point in Singapore. The garden-adjacent dining room creates a different atmosphere from the harder-edged luxury of some Marina Bay properties, and the service is described in guide commentary as engaged rather than ceremonial. With a Michelin star, a top-100 Asia ranking from both OAD and 50 Best Asia, and a cuisine price tier of $$$, this is positioned as formal dining, but without the rigidity that sometimes accompanies that designation in this city.

Is Summer Pavilion suitable for children?

At the $$$ cuisine price tier in a Michelin-starred hotel dining room, it is a considered choice for younger children, though the format and menu are entirely accessible to older children comfortable with a multi-course Cantonese meal.

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