14 December, 2022
Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Caprice
Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Caprice
Eat & Drink

Top Fine Dining Restaurants In Hong Kong

14 December, 2022
Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Caprice

Feeling fancy? Hong Kong isn’t short on premier culinary experiences! From VEA to Caprice, Gaddi’s, Roganic and more, here’s your guide to fine dining restaurants in Hong Kong…

Once a rarefied luxury reserved only for aristocrats, today fine dining not only enjoys a wider audience but also features a broader range of flavours and sensibilities than ever before. So, what defines contemporary fine dining? A meal laid out as a many-chaptered story. Exquisite attention paid to the terroir and provenance of ingredients. A zest for the experimental. An overall experience both grand and gleeful. Here’s our guide to fine dining restaurants in Hong Kong…

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Christmas Dining In Hong Kong: Amber, Landmark Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong

Amber – Progressive fine dining at The Landmark Mandarin Oriental

Since first opening at the Mandarin Oriental in 2009 under the direction of revered chef Richard Ekkebus, Amber has gained a reputation for being consistently cutting-edge. Flipping the traditional notion of fine dining on its head, the restaurant’s most recent revamp sees sustainability threaded through every aspect — from employment practices in the kitchen to the ethics of eating what comes out of it. The new menus completely forgo dairy, prioritise plant-based and keep sugar to a minimum, favouring purer expressions of organic produce.

Amber, The Landmark Mandarin Oriental, 15 Queen’s Road Central, Central, Hong Kong, 2132 0066, www.mandarinoriental.com

Read More: Your Guide To Vegetarian & Vegan Restaurants In Hong Kong


Arbor – Innovative Nordic-Japanese cuisine

A city within a forest, or a forest within the city? Although Hong Kong is dense with country parks and reserves, it can often be difficult to feel in touch with nature amidst its bright lights, skyscrapers and winding walkways. Arbor, a two-Michelin-starred urban sanctum in H Queen’s, brings a subtle yet sensuous approach to fine dining with its Nordic-Japanese innovative cuisine. Finnish chef Erik Raty and his team import ingredients primarily from Japan to achieve their distinctive vision.

Arbor, 25/F, H Queen’s, 80 Queen’s Road Central, Central, Hong Kong, 3185 8388, www.arbor-hk.com

Read More: The Best Japanese Restaurants For Sushi In Hong Kong


Arcane – Seasonal dishes from Final Table Chef Shane Osborn

Seasonality is the keyword at one-Michelin-starred hideout Arcane, the brainchild of award-winning chef Shane Osborn of Final Table fame. This sanctuary away from the often chaotic lanes of Central showcases seasonal, high-quality produce from places like Japan, France and the UK, delighting the palate with modern European cuisine executed to perfection. The menu is perpetually fresh as the offerings change with the seasons. The lunch set comes highly recommended.

Arcane, 3/F, 18 On Lan Street, Central, Hong Kong, 2728 0178, www.arcane.hk


Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: BELON

Belon – Black Sheep’s “Pearl of Soho”

Billed as the Pearl of Soho, Black Sheep concept Belon brings Parisian “je ne sais quoi” to lower Elgin Street. After a period of quiet relocating and renovating, this neo-Parisian “bistro” reopened in March 2021 with decorated chef Matthew Kirkley at the helm. Ranked among the best restaurants in Asia and even the world(!), expect soothing decor and food that’s manifestly French in taste and technique, without any of the stuffy formality endemic to haute cuisine. The menu, updated and evolved, retains some favourites from the old Belon.

Read our review of Belon here.

Belon, 1/F, 1–5 Elgin Street, Soho, Central, Hong Kong, 2152 2872, belonsoho.com


Caprice – Three-Michelin-starred fine dining at Four Seasons

Uninterrupted harbour views, iridescent crystal chandeliers and top-tier ingredients flown in from all over the world—– at the Four Seasons’ three-Michelin-starred Caprice, more is more. But in spite of the luxurious environs and indulgent ingredients, it would be a mistake to believe it’s all about keeping up appearances here. When you pull back the Swarovski curtain, you’re bound to be surprised: the classic French menu crafted by chef de cuisine Guillaume Galliot integrates global flavours with remarkable technique and restraint.

Caprice, Four Seasons Hotel, Hong Kong, 8 Finance Street, Central, Hong Kong, 3196 8882, www.fourseasons.com

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Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Écriture

Écriture – French nouvelle cuisine with Japanese influences

Named after Korean contemporary artist Park Seo-Bo’s iconic series of paintings (one of which hangs in the private room), fine dining venue Écriture is a destination unto itself. Using Japanese produce to articulate French nouvelle cuisine, the offerings here are colourful and complex. Forget your standard menu and staid cutlery set — at Écriture, guests get to venture into the Library of Flavours and encounter each course with a selection of hand-carved knives. The 4.5–metre library wall is filled with antique copies of the Michelin Guide.

Écriture, 26/F, H Queen’s, 80 Queens Road, Central, Hong Kong, 2795 5996, ecriture.squarespace.com


Épure – Contemporary fine French cuisine

Maintaining a Michelin star since 2017, Épure has proven a steady command over French fine-dining cuisine, championing the finest seasonal ingredients flown in from France. Headed by Chef Nicolas Boutin, impeccably executed contemporary plates exit the kitchen, best paired with the restaurant’s rare collection of vintage wines. The venue, designed by internationally renowned Yabu Pushelberg, exudes a sophisticated sense of French heritage with a touch of rustic charm.

Épure, Shop 403, Level 4, Ocean Centre, Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, 3185 8338, www.epure.hk


Gaddi’s – Old school fine dining at The Peninsula

Hong Kong’s first French restaurant? Check. First chef’s table in the city? Check. Kristal caviar, crystal chandeliers and a Chinese Coromandel lacquerware screen from the 17th century? Check, check and check. There’s no fine dining haven quite like Gaddi’s. Opened in 1953 and named after Leo Gaddi, a former general manager of The Peninsula, chef Albin Gobil serves “modern-classic” French cuisine with superior ingredients and an artistic eye.

Gaddi’s, The Peninsula Hong Kong, Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, 2696 6763, www.peninsula.com


Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Hansik Goo

Hansik Goo – Modern Korean culinary delights

The international debut of Mingoo Kang (the award-winning chef behind two Michelin-starred Seoul restaurant Mingles), Hansik Goo is one of the newer fine dining additions to grace the Hong Kong culinary scene. This shrine to authentic modern Korean cuisine received rave reviews upon opening and has thrived ever since. The restaurant delivers on its promise of a bold interpretation of diverse Korean culinary culture, with dishes inspired by everything from home-cooked fare to traditional delicacies once reserved for royalty.

Read our review of Hansik Goo here.

Hansik Goo, 1/F, The Wellington, 198 Wellington Street, Central, Hong Kong, 2798 8768, www.hansikgoo.hk


Noi – Contemporary Italian fare with Japanese and French influences

Joining the ranks of Four Seasons’ three-Michelin-starred Caprice and award-winning cocktail bar Argo is renowned Chef Paulo Airaudo’s new Asian flagship restaurant, Noi. Serving as Chef Paulo’s outlet to showcase his diverse repertoire, Noi’s tasting menu is heavily inspired by the Italian traditions he grew up with, drawing also from Japanese and French influences he’s absorbed throughout his culinary journey. Featuring light fixtures inspired by his tattoos, pop culture figurines hidden throughout the space, and a throwback playlist personally made by Chef Airaudo himself, expect a touch of fun to be injected into your fine dining experience at Noi.

Noi, Podium, Level 5, Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, 8 Finance Street, Central, Hong Kong, 3196 8768, www.instagram.com/noihongkong

Read More: Your Guide To The Best Italian Restaurants In Hong Kong


Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: Roganic

Roganic – Sustainable fine dining with British Flair

The only restaurant in the city to be awarded a prestigious Green Star for sustainable gastronomy by the Michelin Guide, this environment-conscious establishment roots its polished contemporary British cuisine in Hong Kong’s own soil. The kitchen cultivates microgreens, salad leaves and herbs in-house, while local suppliers like Zen Organic Farm, Wah Kee Farm and New Age Organics provide produce. At this temple to nose-to-tail, no-waste eating, even a humble bulb of celeriac becomes a thing of beauty.

Read our review of Roganic here.

Roganic, UG08, UG/F, Sino Plaza, 255 Gloucester Road, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, 2817 8383, www.roganic.com.hk

Read More: Your Guide To Vegan & Vegetarian Restaurants In Hong Kong


TATE Dining Room – Aesthetically beautiful fine dining dishes

Two-Michelin-starred establishment TATE refutes any simplistic association with a cuisine or regional focus. Integrating multicultural influences with careful lyricism, a deft and (and no doubt a pair of precise kitchen tweezers!), it’s a restaurant truly of Hong Kong. Vicky Lau frames each dish as an eloquent paean to produce. Here, food is treated as fine art: the plate elevated to a jumping-off point for intellectual exploration.

TATE Dining Room, 210 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan, Hong Kong, 2555 2172, tate.com.hk

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Fine Dining Restaurant Hong Kong, Nice Restaurants, Fancy Restaurants: VEA

VEA – Refined Chinese and French fusion cuisine

Be it macaroni soup or daan tat, borscht or curry, Hong Kong abounds in so-called “fusion” food hidden in plain sight. At one Michelin-starred restaurant VEA, the principle of fusion is interpreted through a fine dining lens. Abiding by its core philosophy of blending Chinese influences with French techniques, dishes draw from the heritage and childhood memories of acclaimed French-trained chef Vicky Cheng and pay tribute to the culture and history of Hong Kong.

VEA, 30/F, The Wellington, 198 Wellington Street, Central, Hong Kong, 2711 8639, vea.hk

Read More: The Best Al Fresco Restaurants In Hong Kong


Editor’s Note: “Top Fine Dining Restaurants In Hong Kong” was most recently updated by Team Sassy in December 2022.

Main image courtesy of Caprice via Instagram, image 1 courtesy of Amber, image 2 courtesy of BELON via Instagram, image 3 courtesy of Écriture via Instagram, image 4 courtesy of Hansik Goo via Instagram,  image 5 courtesy of Roganic via Instagram, image 6 courtesy of VEA via Instagram.

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