Chang-I has been around for nearly two decades and has built a solid reputation in the Museum Quarter. The Peking duck takes center stage, and that's no coincidence: the restaurant uses only high-quality fresh meat, never frozen. That may sound obvious, but in the world of Chinese restaurants in the Netherlands it is not. You notice that choice on the plate.
The menu is a tour of three cuisines at once. Chinese influences, Japanese precision, and South Asian flavors intertwine without feeling cluttered. The menu offers dim sum in steamed assortment, Japanese wagyu dumplings and sashimi side by side. That's ambitious, but Chang-I has the years to back it up. The wine list here is as serious as the cuisine, and that's exactly the point. Some restaurants treat wine as an appendix; here it is a full part of the evening.

The property sits right next to a parking garage, within walking distance of Vondelpark and P.C. Hooftstraat. Its location right behind the Concertgebouw is no coincidence: Chang-I offers special packages for concertgoers, before or after a performance. That combination attracts an audience that knows what it wants: good food, no fuss, and leaving on time if they have to.
Chang-I's wine list is as serious as its cuisine, and that's exactly the point.
The Museum Quarter is a neighborhood accustomed to quality. The P.C. Hooftstraat within walking distance, the Concertgebouw as a neighbor, Vondelpark around the corner. Chang-I fits that bill, but without the stiffness you sometimes find in this kind of neighborhood. For nearly twenty years, the establishment has run on the same principle: good ingredients, a broad menu that is cohesive, and a wine list that takes the meal seriously. That it works is proven by its long track record.