Eating Out in Hong Kong, Cantonese, Fusion Food

How to Choose from the Asian Food Capital's Eleven Thousand Eateries

© Kate Nivison

Jun 22, 2009
Hong Kong Street market Seafood, Kate Nivison
Hong Kong now claims to be the new culinary capital of Asia. The range is stunning, from street stall to Pacific Place mall, and snake meat to thousand-year-old eggs.

If shopping is Hong Kong’s national sport, eating is the national hobby or obsession. With 7 million people crammed into a built-up area about the size of Manhattan, average living spaces are so small (450 sq ft) that cooking at home can be a problem. The solution is to eat out – anywhere, from street stalls and family-run eateries to giant malls and exclusive pent-house restaurants with sky-high bills to match.

How to Make Sense of Hong Kong’s Eating Paradise

The choice of places to eat is almost overwhelming. Competition is fierce, and the range reflects this British ex-colony’s past, its future as part of China (Hong Kong SAR) and the claim of the Hong Kong Tourism Board that HK is Asia’s culinary capital.

Eating Out in Hong Kong by District

  • Kowloon for hotel restaurants, family-run walk-in restaurants and fast-food outlets.
  • Hong Kong Central (HK Island) for high-end mall eating – often at basement or walkway level, but the sky's the limit for penthouse restaurants with amazing harbour views, especially in the evenings.
  • Nathan Road and the Golden Mile (West Kowloon) for a huge range of good value restaurants, many of which are on second or third floors above the street level shops where the touts will escort customers through a maze of corridors and elevators.

Hong Kong Eating by Nationality and Region

  • ‘Chinese’ just doesn’t cover it – think mainly spicy Cantonese, but also Shanghainese, Hunan, Szechuan and Beijing.
  • ‘Mediterranean’ can cover Italian, Greek, Turkish, Spanish and Portuguese individually or several at a time.
  • Spanish influence is reflected in Filipino food, and so onto Mexican and Argentine, with a preference for beef.
  • Portuguese influence comes from nearby Macao, with a prevalence of fish dishes.
  • No one need feel left out – Japanese sushi bars are very trendy, British pub food is still available (The Bull and Bear, Wan Chai), Korean, Russian, Kosher, Halal – Hong Kong will probably have it.

Upmarket and Hong Kong Fusion Food

  • The best of practically everything is available in Hong Kong – for a price.
  • Go for the speciality restaurants of five-star hotels such as the Peninsula or the Landmark Mandarin Oriental, or Pacific Place.
  • Fusion food is the latest craze, produced by top chefs who use great ingenuity to reflect the way East meets West and North meets South in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Street Food

  • For a huge selection of stalls, try Mongkok, on Kowloon.
  • Most markets have stalls with seating areas and are liveliest in the evenings.
  • Local people like to see their food being cooked to make sure it’s fresh.

Hong Kong Speciality Eating

  • Bird’s nest soup – made from the nests of swifts, collected from sea caves.
  • Shark fin soup – has seriously reduced shark numbers in the South China Seas and elsewhere.
  • Snake meat – choose the snake from a writhing boxful, and see it skinned.
  • Thousand-Year-Old-Eggs – only a few months old in fact, and no issues here except the smell.

Some people prefer to avoid the first three because of endangered species issues or cruelty involved. They are believed to promote good health or have medicinal value, but such claims are unsubstantiated – so who needs these with so much fantastic choice around?

More information:

Hong Kong Shopping

Hong Kong Public Transport


The copyright of the article Eating Out in Hong Kong, Cantonese, Fusion Food in Island Destinations is owned by Kate Nivison. Permission to republish Eating Out in Hong Kong, Cantonese, Fusion Food in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Hong Kong Street market Seafood, Kate Nivison
Eating out, Hong Kong Style, Kate Nivison
Fusion Menu, The Landmark, Hong Kong, Kate Nivison
Russian Caviar and Seafood, Hong Kong, Kate Nivison
Stylish Eating, Hong Kong Central Mall, Kate Nivison


Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo