Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Chiu Ka Banquet
125ptsChiu Chow Banquet Tradition

About Chiu Ka Banquet
A Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient on Des Voeux Road Central, Chiu Ka Banquet brings Chiu Chow banquet cooking to an eighth-floor dining room in Champion Building. With a Google rating of 4.0 from 191 reviews and mid-range pricing, it occupies a specific tier in Hong Kong's Chiu Chow dining scene: recognized cooking at accessible prices, without the formality of a full Michelin-starred room.
Chiu Chow Cooking in Central: Where Bib Gourmand Recognition Meets Banquet Tradition
Hong Kong's Chiu Chow restaurants divide into two broad camps. The first is the casual, plastic-stool tier of Sham Shui Po and Sai Ying Pun, where cold crab and oyster omelettes arrive without ceremony and the room fills with neighbourhood regulars. The second is the formal banquet house, where the food is the same in spirit but the context shifts toward celebration, extended tables, and dishes ordered by the round rather than the plate. Chiu Ka Banquet sits firmly in that second camp, operating from the eighth floor of Champion Building on Des Voeux Road Central, a building whose address places it at the commercial edge of Hong Kong Island's most transited corridor.
The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded in 2025, locates the restaurant within a specific quality bracket: good cooking, at prices that don't require the outlay of a starred room. In Hong Kong's context, that distinction matters. The city has a long tier of Bib Gourmand recipients where value-to-quality ratios hold up against restaurants charging two or three times more. Chiu Ka Banquet earns its place in that tier through the cuisine itself, a cooking tradition that resists simplification and rewards the diner who understands what they're ordering.
The Chiu Chow Tradition: What the Cuisine Actually Demands
Chiu Chow cooking, which originates in the Chaoshan region of eastern Guangdong province, sits in a different register from the Cantonese cooking most visitors associate with Hong Kong. The flavor profile is leaner, built around cold preparations, seafood, preserved vegetables, and a distinctive use of soy sauce and fish sauce that gives the cuisine a saline depth without heaviness. Iron Buddha tea, served in thimble cups before and after meals, is a ritual marker of the tradition rather than an optional add-on.
The banquet format reinforces these qualities. Chiu Chow banquet cooking is calibrated for shared eating across multiple courses: cold starters including marinated goose, braised tofu, and cold crab; a middle section of heavier braised and wok-fried dishes; then congee or noodles to close. The sequence is intentional, not arbitrary, and experienced diners navigate it accordingly. Venues like Chiuchow Delicacies and Hung's Delicacies occupy the same culinary tradition in Hong Kong, each holding Bib Gourmand recognition and drawing diners who treat Chiu Chow cooking as a primary destination rather than a secondary option.
The Location: Champion Building, Eighth Floor
Champion Building on Des Voeux Road Central is not a dining destination address in the way that IFC or Pacific Place might be. It is a working commercial block, the kind of mid-century building that Central still contains in reasonable number between the towers, and the restaurant's position on the eighth floor removes it from the street-level foot traffic that drives casual walk-in dining. This is not incidental. Upper-floor restaurants in Hong Kong, particularly in older commercial buildings, tend to run on return visits and word-of-mouth rather than passers-by. The room is reached by elevator, which means the people in it chose to be there.
That demographic reality shapes the atmosphere. Chiu Chow banquet houses in these locations often function as extensions of community and family networks, filling with multigenerational tables for birthdays, post-funeral meals, and seasonal celebrations. The food arrives within that social context, which affects pacing, volume, and the implicit expectation that nobody is in a hurry.
Planning Your Visit: What to Know Before You Go
The mid-range price point, indicated by the $$ designation, places Chiu Ka Banquet in a different bracket from the $$$$ rooms that dominate Central's restaurant conversation. Venues like 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana and Amber occupy the formal end of Hong Kong's dining spectrum, where tasting menus and wine pairings drive spend into four figures per head. Chiu Ka Banquet operates at a fraction of that outlay, which, combined with the Bib Gourmand, makes it one of the more considered options in Central for a group lunch or dinner that prioritizes cooking quality over theatrical presentation.
Because phone and website details are not publicly confirmed, the practical approach is to arrive during standard lunch and dinner service windows or to make contact through the building directory. Upper-floor banquet restaurants in Hong Kong occasionally operate reservation systems that are primarily telephone-based and not reflected in any online booking platform, so direct contact with the restaurant is the most reliable method. A Google rating of 4.0 from 191 reviews suggests a consistent dining experience, with the volume of reviews indicating regular traffic rather than occasional visits.
Groups of four or more will get the most from the format. Chiu Chow banquet cooking is designed for the table rather than the individual plate, and a larger party allows the full sequence of cold, hot, and closing courses to unfold at appropriate scale. Smaller parties can eat well, but the logic of the menu is built around sharing and variety across the full run of dishes.
The address, 287-291 Des Voeux Road Central on the eighth floor of Champion Building, is accessible from the Central MTR station and the broader Sheung Wan corridor. The building entrance is noted as coming from Jubilee Street (急庇利街正入口), which is the more practical approach from street level. For visitors building a broader Hong Kong itinerary, the full Hong Kong restaurants guide covers the complete range of the city's dining from this tier through to three-Michelin-star rooms. The Hong Kong hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide provide parallel coverage across accommodation, drinking, and cultural programming.
Where Chiu Ka Banquet Sits in the Broader Peer Set
Within Hong Kong's Chiu Chow dining tier, the Bib Gourmand provides useful triangulation. The award operates as Michelin's signal that a restaurant delivers food quality comparable to starred rooms at substantially lower prices. Across the city's recognized Chiu Chow options, including Tak Kee, the pattern is consistent: these are not compromise restaurants but specialists whose food quality sits above their price tier. The distinction between Chiu Ka Banquet and a three-Michelin-star room like those found in Paris at Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or in Chicago at Alinea is not one of aspiration but of genre: banquet cooking in a tradition-bound format is not trying to be a tasting menu, and the Bib Gourmand recognizes it on its own terms.
That framing matters for how you approach the booking. You are not coming to Chiu Ka Banquet for a progression of precisely plated courses with tableside commentary. You are coming for Chiu Chow cooking in its intended social format, in a room that operates by the logic of its own tradition. For Hong Kong diners who already understand that tradition, the Bib Gourmand is confirmation. For visitors building their first encounter with the cuisine, it is the most reliable entry point this part of the city offers at this price level.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the leading thing to order at Chiu Ka Banquet?
Chiu Chow banquet cooking has a recognizable core sequence, and the cold starters are where the cuisine announces itself most clearly. Marinated goose, a signature preparation across Chiu Chow restaurants throughout Hong Kong, is the standard reference point for quality: the braising liquid, built from soy, spices, and stock accumulated over time, is what separates a kitchen that takes the tradition seriously from one that does not. Cold crab, when in season, and braised tofu round out the cold section. For the hot courses, wok-fried dishes with preserved vegetables and seafood preparations reflect the cuisine's emphasis on clean, saline flavors rather than heavy saucing. Close with Chiu Chow congee or thin noodles rather than rice. The restaurant holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand, which indicates the kitchen delivers these dishes at a level that stands up to formal scrutiny. Specific current menu items and pricing should be confirmed directly with the restaurant, as these can vary by season and group size.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Hong Kong
- AmberAmber holds three Michelin stars, a Green Star, and a 97-point La Liste score — making it the most credentialled French fine-dining address in Hong Kong. Chef Richard Ekkebus runs a tasting menu that fuses Japanese and French technique with strict sustainable sourcing. Book at least eight weeks ahead; dinner availability is near impossible without significant advance planning.
- CapriceCaprice holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 99 points, making it one of the most credentialled French restaurants in Asia. On the sixth floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, it delivers a structured à la carte menu from Chef Guillaume Galliot alongside floor-to-ceiling harbour views. Book four to six weeks out for dinner; lunch offers a quieter entry point at the same kitchen level.
- The ChairmanThe Chairman is the strongest case for contemporary Cantonese cooking in Hong Kong and, at $$ pricing, one of the best-value highly awarded restaurants in Asia. Ranked #2 in Asia's 50 Best (2025) and holding a Michelin star, it demands serious advance booking — online only, on specific days — but delivers an experience that justifies the effort for any serious food traveller.
- Ta VieTa Vie holds three Michelin stars and a top-25 OAD Asia ranking, making it one of Hong Kong's most credentialed restaurants. Chef Hideaki Sato's seasonal tasting menus express Japanese ingredient philosophy through French technique in a deliberately quiet, intimate room. Book as early as possible — availability is near impossible, dinner only, Tuesday and Thursday through Sunday.
- WING RestaurantWING ranks #3 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holds the Gin Mare Art of Hospitality Award — two of the more credible signals that both the kitchen and the front-of-house are performing at a serious level. Chef Vicky Cheng's seasonal tasting menu works across China's eight regional cuisines with technical precision. Booking is Near Impossible, so plan well ahead; Friday lunch is the only daytime option.
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)The only Italian restaurant outside Italy with three Michelin stars, Otto e Mezzo has held that distinction continuously since 2012. Book the tasting menu, time your visit for truffle season (October–December) if possible, and plan well ahead — tables are genuinely difficult to secure. At the $$$$ price point, it is the reference address for Italian fine dining in Hong Kong.
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