Yue Xian Ge sits inside the Sofitel Legend People's Grand Hotel, the 1953 state-guest building on Dong Xin Street that Accor restored and reopened as a Sofitel Legend in 2012. Opening a serious Cantonese kitchen in Xi'an — a city defined by hand-pulled biang-biang noodles, lamb paomo and roujiamo — was a deliberately contrarian move, and it gave the city something it had been missing: a hushed, formal, southern-Chinese dining room pitched squarely at visiting executives and hotel guests who want refinement over regional grit.
The format is classic luxury-hotel Cantonese. Trolleys of hand-folded dim sum at lunch; a roast-and-barbecue section turning out crisp-skinned Peking duck carved tableside and char siu glazed to a lacquer; double-boiled tonic soups; live seafood from the tank; and a wine and tea list with the depth Xi'an's standalone restaurants rarely attempt. Per-head spend runs from around CNY 600 at lunch to CNY 1,400 for a full seafood-and-duck dinner with wine.
What you are paying for as much as the cooking is the discretion: private banquet suites with their own anterooms, staff fluent in the choreography of a host-and-guest seating plan, and a noise level low enough to actually close a deal. It is not where you go to understand Xi'an, but it is where you go when the meal is really a meeting.
The Kitchen
The kitchen runs the full luxury-hotel Cantonese repertoire: a dedicated roast section for Peking duck and char siu, a dim-sum brigade folding har gow and siu mai to order at lunch, double-boiled soups, and a live tank for steamed fish and prawns. Execution is precise and consistent rather than experimental — the point is reliability for a business table, and it delivers.
The Room
Set on the hotel's dining floor, the room is upholstered, low-lit and quiet, with carved screens dividing the main floor from a ring of private banquet suites. Those suites — each with its own anteroom and round table for eight to twelve — are the real draw, giving a host the privacy and seating control that a deal-closing dinner needs.
Best for Impress Clients
Yue Xian Ge is the correct Xi'an booking when the dinner is really a negotiation. Reserve a private suite for a delegation, let the kitchen build a set Cantonese banquet around the Peking duck, and you get the refinement, privacy and service polish that the city's celebrated-but-rustic Shaanxi rooms cannot offer. For a straightforward business lunch, the dim-sum service does the same job in ninety minutes.