T'ang Court
On the third floor of a Surfers Paradise tower, this contemporary Cantonese dining room takes its cues, and its name, from the artistic legacy of the Tang dynasty, and from the hotel group's celebrated Hong Kong sibling of the same lineage. The cooking is southern-Chinese refined for a fine-dining setting: xiao long bao served three ways, Cantonese duck breast, steamed coral trout, and a seven-course chef's tasting for those who want the kitchen to lead. Where the older Chinatown houses trade on volume, this is the opposite proposition, a 76-seat room, smart-casual but hushed, with an in-house sommelier and an award-minded cellar that runs to collaborations with Australian producers such as Henschke. Dinner only, and paced for the evening rather than the quick turnaround. The result is Cantonese cooking positioned as occasion dining, precise in its dumpling work and considered in its wine pairings, set within one of the coast's more polished hotel addresses. It suits an anniversary, a considered business dinner or a night when the point is the wine as much as the food. For the Gold Coast, it offers a rare thing: serious, craft-driven Cantonese in a genuinely fine-dining register, without the trolleys and the clatter.