The waiter looks like a monster from another planet but he asks that you trust him.
He requires you to put your hand on his shoulder while your companion’s hand goes on your shoulder. As soon as you pass through the two sets of heavy curtains you know why it’s necessary. The dinning hall is pitch black.
The waiter in his night-vision goggles leads you to your chair and your first task is to grope around the table for a fork, a spoon and a pair of chopsticks.
It’s a restaurant that deprives you of your sense of sight with the idea of enhancing your sense of taste and smell.
The “Touch Touch Special ” provides an interesting challenge for three of your remaining senses. There are eight different side dishes and you’re offered a prize if you can guess them all.
Something that feels like it’s breaded and fried and should be a meat dish ends up tasting like watermelon. Another dish that is served in what feels like the shell of a crab isn’t at all seafood. It smells like mashed potatoes but your companion insists it’s pumpkin.
“We’ve not only deprived people of their sight, but we’ve asked our chefs to disguise the shape and texture of the food too. You’ll never know what you are eating,” said He Zaijian, one of the owners.
The Whale Inside has become the latest trendy place to eat in Beijing and claims to be the first dark restaurant in Asia.
The experience is not only a bit of a shock to the senses it can also be a very sensual experience, and the owners have a special for that sensation too.
The Lovers Set is designed to get lovers to feed each other.
“I smeared something that tasted like mashed potato on her faceby accident and she did that to me in revenge. It was fun,” said a man named Jackie.
The waiters in their night-vision goggles are the kings of the dinning hall as only they have the power of sight.
“Besides guiding diners to their table and helping them find the utensils we’ll sometimes creep up to someone and pat them on the back,” said 24-year-old Chen Yawei, one of the restaurant’s mischievous waiters.
“We were inspired by a story on the Internet about the world’s first dark restaurant in Zurich, Switzerland, which was opened in 1999 by a blind priest. His idea was to get sighted people to experience how non-sighted live,” said Chen Long, another partner.
Not only is the Whale Inside a new culinary experience the darkness changes the social aspect of dinning out.
“We feel much closer to each other after dinner,” said 24-year-old Wang Bin who has come a second time with his girlfriend.
“It’s easier to make friends in the restaurant where you don’t judge a person by the way they look or how they are dressed, all you can do is talk,” he said.
The owners of the Whale Inside say they will open franchises in Shanghai and Guangzhou and hope to open 20 franchises across Asia by 2008.
The restaurant is not without its critics. Some have complained the food isn’t that good and worry about sanitary conditions. Others go for the novelty and not many say it’s an experience they’ll often repeat.”I would rather go home, turn off the lights, close the curtains and enjoy my dinner,” said a man surnamed Cao.
“The food tastes just so so. It was a fun experience but the food is not the main attraction,” said another diner who’s appearance can’t be described because you never saw him.