Review: The stars align at Cyra at The Houghton Hotel by Chef Candice Philip
Curated by
IYP User South Africa
in 11 minutes
Arrive at Chef Candice Philip’s fine dining destination Cyra before sunset, and you’ll be charmed by what is surely one of Joburg’s ultimate restaurant sunset views. The honeyed glow that spreads across the room while you enjoy a vista over the green expanse that is Houghton golf course is offset by the delicate interiors of the restaurant, with its palette of warm pastel colours.
Day into evening is our favourite time of day, with Joburg’s sunsets throwing shades of golden amber, blush pink, muted coral, and dusky lavender. There’s a sense of calm and quiet as the colours shift and then fade into the velvety blues of approaching dusk.
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The delicate palette of Cyra at the Houghton Hotel is a perfect complement to the artfully presented dishes. Photo Supplied.Â
Tucked into The Houghton Hotel, Cyra, named for a star, is Chef Candice Philip’s latest venture. An award-winning fine dining chef, Philip is a standout in Joburg, and this visit is our third experience of Philips at work. We first met when she opened Grei at Saxon Hotel, Villa and Spa some years ago. She followed that up with a residency at The Peech Hotel that turned their restaurant space Basalt, around, making it a notable dining destination. Today that restaurant is now the The Pot Luck Club at The Peech, a Luke Dale Roberts restaurant. It’s all come full circle as Philip's star rose when she was head chef at Luke Dale Roberts X the Saxon restaurant in 2017.Â
Her latest accolade is “chef of the Year” at the recent Luxe Awards (2025), where Cyra also picked up “Fine Dining Restaurant of the Year”. This is Joburg, a city that is not always kind to fine dining establishments, with patrons often demanding heaped plates of familiar foods, revealing this place's rough and ready mining town roots. This makes Philip’s standing and continued success mean so much more. Â
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An absolute standout dish. Candice Philips' take on meat and potatoes at Cyra at The Houghton Hotel. Photo: Supplied. Â
Philip's has a signature style that she has honed over the years. Her plating is delicate and exquisite, a play on colour and texture, with each dish bringing a symphony to the plate, mixing crunchy and silky smooth, with rich flavour and pops of tartness or sweetness.Â
Sommelier Solly Mmethi is also a conductor. We ordered the wine pairing, sharing between two of us. His knowledge is vast and his way of imparting it entirely enjoyable to the listener, regardless of your knowledge of wine. He jokes about being part of Philip’s furniture, having travelled with her from restaurant to restaurant, along with many of the team working at Cyra. His work involves tasting and more tasting, isolating whether to complement flavours in a dish or to heighten contrasts. It starts with many bottles, to get it down to the one wine that will pair with a dish. “There are no rules, he says, "at the end of the day they need to pair well together.”Â
It’s a wonderful dance, as he mentions that Philip's work is with the creating the dishes. And while she is working on the menu, the sommelier’s job has already started, thinking through the key ingredients and finding the perfect pairings. Two unique creative approaches to tastes.Â
Dinner here is an eight-course experience, starting with an amuse-bouche. Translated from French, it means the equivalent of “mouth amuser” and is the chef’s play on setting the scene. A small bite, it is usually served before the first course.Â
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One of the most extraordinary restaurant views in Joburg, at Cyra at The Houghton Hotel.
Photo: Supplied.Â
The main menu that follows is seven courses of beautifully served dishes. We started with lemon bread served with miso butter. The dishes on the menu are listed by their core ingredients, making them appear simplistic. However, that’s nowhere near the case. First up is a wild mushroom tartare served on a savoury doughnut with parmesan and parsley, and paired with a Silverthorn River Dragon Brut.Â
The tomato with cucumber, ginger and fennel resembled a glorious little garden in a dish. What sounds like a plain salad has a base of rich and juicy marinated tomatoes and cucumber in a ceviche-style dressing topped with smoked tomato jelly, with texture and crunch provided by a wonton crisp, and the creaminess from an aioli crema. Mmethi paired it with a fermented Chardonnay from Zevenwacht, intending to counter the acidity of the tomato, while maintaining the freshness of the dish. It was a perfect combination to start.Â
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An extraordinary salad dish at Cyra at The Houghton Hotel. Photo: Supplied.Â
What followed was a dish of spiced ostrich, beetroot, spicy quinoa and a duck liver cream. A dish of richness paired with a lighter style Oak Valley Sounds of Silence Pinot Noir, with notes of sour cherry. It’s always fun to discover the flavours in a wine with some guidance. Mmethi says he started with a wide selection but settled on a wine with soft tannins. “I went for something opposite with this pairing”. It’s up to the sommelier to find the magic. Â
A study in elegance. Every detail has been carefully thought through. Cyra at The Houghton Hotel.
Photo supplied.
The portions are perfectly paced. It’s a stretch to taste the dessert, but it looks too good to miss out on, with its suggested freshness of nectarine, cardamom, coconut and lemon verbena. The coconut is in the sorbet. The experience closes on a high note with a cheese dish unlike any other. It resembles a work of art, and the cheese arrives in dollops of creaminess in a melange of crispy biscuits, with dashes of fruity flavours as a complement.
So much thought and care has gone into each dish – and that’s the hallmark of fine dining. A deceptively simple set of ingredients has been prepared in ways no home cook could replicate, and it’s amazing to think about how much artistry and creativity has gone into making each of the ingredients shine uniquely.Â
The pace of the evening is warm and unhurried, and the service is suitably personalised. There is a feeling of exclusivity at Cyra, without the stiffness often associated with upscale dining. Tables are spaced generously, allowing for intimate conversations and uninterrupted enjoyment of the culinary theatre unfolding course by course.
At the heart of Cyra is a menu that blends global influences with a modern sensibility. Each dish is a study in balance – visually striking, technically precise, and deeply satisfying. What started at 19:00 ends after 22:00, but we are totally satisfied customers. We take a walk between courses to the wraparound balcony to enjoy the night view over the Houghton Hotel, with its beautifully lit swimming pools and sumptuous manicured expanse across the golf course.Â
Candice Philip does her rounds as dessert is served, and it’s a treat to have time with the chef. The restaurant opened in October 2024 and as she says, it hit the ground running. As well as presiding over Cyra, Philip also is at the helm of the private dining and selected functions at the hotels. About her team she says, “I can't do what I do without them”. They have moved as a pack since first working together many years ago, while new members have joined them at Cyra.Â
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Much-awarded Chef Candice Philip of Cyra at The Houghton Hotel. Photo: Supplied. Â
Cyra means star says Philip, and in the week we visited the planets had truly aligned. The wine list is extensive, leaning into South African estates while offering a well-curated selection of international labels. For those looking for something different, the cocktail menu adds a playful, modern twist, featuring ingredients like hibiscus, rooibos, and lemongrass.
It’s a joy to encounter staff who are so are well-versed in the menu and unobtrusively attentive, adding to the sense that every detail has been carefully considered. It’s in the small touches – the perfectly folded napkin, the quiet replacement of cutlery, the chef’s note accompanying the amuse-bouche – that Cyra truly shines.Â
Full vegetarian and pescetarian menus are also available.
Tasting menu (eight courses) is R1,250 per person. With a wine pairing, it's R1,995 per person. The menu is subject to change with seasonal availability of produce. A discretionary 12.5% service charge will be added to the bill.Â