Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Ki Tsui

    210pts

    Michelin-recognised puddings at street-food prices.

    Ki Tsui, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Ki Tsui

    Ki Tsui is a Michelin Plate-recognised street-food counter in Jordan, Hong Kong, specialising in traditional Cantonese puddings and pastries including Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies. At $ pricing with no booking required, it is one of the most accessible Michelin-noted stops in the city. Walk in, order multiple items, and treat it as a deliberate detour rather than a main event.

    Is Ki Tsui Worth Visiting in Jordan, Hong Kong?

    Yes — if you are looking for a Michelin-recognised stop for traditional Cantonese puddings and pastries at street-food prices, Ki Tsui on Saigon Street is the answer. This is a single-price-tier shop (priced at $) that earned a Michelin Plate in 2025, which means the guide's inspectors found quality here that merits a detour, even if it falls below the star threshold. For anyone who has already eaten their way through the obvious Cantonese dining rooms and wants to understand what Hong Kong's traditional confectionery culture actually tastes like, Ki Tsui is the right call.

    The Space and What to Expect

    Ki Tsui operates as a small shopfront in Jordan, one of the older, denser residential and commercial pockets of Kowloon. The physical space is compact — the kind of counter-forward layout where you point, order, and either eat standing or take away. There are no tablecloths, no host stand, and no reservation system to navigate. What the tight space does communicate immediately is focus: this shop does one category of food and has been doing it long enough to attract Michelin attention. If you walked past it without knowing what it was, you might not stop. That is the point , Ki Tsui is not performing for tourists, which is part of why the product quality is consistent.

    The format suits solo visitors and pairs more naturally than groups. Two people can work through several items without feeling like they are blocking the counter for others. If you are visiting Jordan for the first time, note that the neighbourhood sits close to the southern end of Nathan Road and is walkable from Jordan MTR station, which makes Ki Tsui easy to fold into a broader afternoon in Kowloon without any planning overhead.

    The Food: Cantonese Puddings and Pastries

    The Michelin Plate citation specifically calls out the shop's Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies alongside a wide array of Cantonese traditional puddings and pastries. These are not adapted-for-export versions of the real thing , they are the traditional formats that predate Hong Kong's modern restaurant industry. Walnut cookies in this context are dense, crumbly, and not sweet in the way a Western bakery biscuit would be; the flavour is roasted and slightly bitter in a way that works with tea. Xiaofeng cake is a layered or pressed cake style with a long history in Guangdong province's confectionery tradition.

    If you have visited Ki Tsui once and stuck to one or two items, the follow-up visit is the one to use more deliberately. Work across the pudding range rather than defaulting to what you already know. The shop's breadth , noted in the Michelin record , means there is more to discover than a single visit typically reveals. Come with enough appetite to try three or four items. At $ pricing, the cost of doing this is negligible.

    Value and Pricing

    At the $ price tier, Ki Tsui is among the most accessible Michelin-recognised food stops in Hong Kong. The city has a well-documented track record of awarding Michelin recognition to street-food and casual operators , Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle in Singapore and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles are regional comparators in the same Michelin street-food category , so a Plate here is not a novelty. It is a signal that the product is genuinely good, not just good for the price. That distinction matters when you are allocating time on a Hong Kong trip.

    For context on what $ buys you elsewhere in Hong Kong's casual Cantonese scene, Cheung Hing Kee in Tsim Sha Tsui operates in a similar neighbourhood price bracket. The former Jumbo Floating Restaurant in Aberdeen represents the opposite end of the Cantonese nostalgia spectrum , high profile, complicated legacy , and Ki Tsui is the cleaner call for anyone who wants the food without the mythology.

    Booking and Logistics

    No booking is required or possible. Ki Tsui operates as a walk-in shopfront, which means the only logistical variable is timing. Arriving during peak afternoon hours , when Jordan residents are running errands and picking up pastries , can mean a short wait at the counter. Coming earlier in the day or later in the afternoon reduces that friction. Booking difficulty is rated Easy: there is no reservation system, no waitlist, and no queue infrastructure to manage. You show up, order, and pay. Hours are not confirmed in available data, so checking locally before a dedicated trip is worth the thirty seconds it takes.

    Jordan is well-connected by MTR (Jordan station, Tsuen Wan Line), and Saigon Street is a short walk from the station exit. If you are combining this with other Kowloon eating, Banana Boy, Fat Boy, and Bánh Mì Nếm in Wan Chai offer different cuisine angles for a full afternoon of eating across Kowloon and beyond. For a broader sense of what Hong Kong's food scene covers at this price tier, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide.

    A Note on the Michelin Plate

    The 2025 Michelin Plate designation is a trust signal, not a promise of a formal dining experience. Michelin awards Plates to restaurants and food shops where cooking quality is good, without the full star-level judgement on service, ambiance, and consistency that a one-star or above requires. At a street-food counter, that is the right framing: the food is worth eating, the experience is exactly what it appears to be, and you should not walk in expecting anything other than what the shop is. That honesty is, in itself, a reason to go. Ki Tsui has been doing this long enough and well enough that Michelin's inspectors noticed. In a city with as much competition as Hong Kong, that means something.

    For other street-food Michelin comparators in the wider region, 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town, 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee in Singapore, and A Noodle Story in Singapore follow a similar model of traditional technique meeting Michelin recognition at street-food price points. A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket and Beanmountain in Hong Kong round out the picture for dessert and sweet-focused street food in the region. The pattern is consistent: focused product, no frills, quality that outlasts the hype.

    FAQ

    • What should I wear to Ki Tsui? No dress code applies. This is a street-food counter in Jordan , casual clothes are the norm. The space is small and the format is counter service, so comfort matters more than appearance.
    • What should a first-timer know about Ki Tsui? Arrive knowing what you want to try, or be prepared to point at items in the display. The shop specialises in Cantonese traditional puddings and pastries, including Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies. Prices are at the $ tier, so ordering multiple items to sample the range is the right approach on a first visit.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Ki Tsui? There is no tasting menu. Ki Tsui is a street-food counter , you choose individual items from the available selection. The equivalent of a tasting approach here is ordering three to four different items across the pudding and pastry range.
    • How far ahead should I book Ki Tsui? No booking is needed or available. Walk in, order at the counter, and pay. The only timing consideration is avoiding peak afternoon hours if you want a shorter wait.
    • Is Ki Tsui worth the price? Yes. At $ pricing with a 2025 Michelin Plate, Ki Tsui offers Michelin-recognised Cantonese pastry and pudding at some of the lowest prices in Hong Kong's food scene. The value equation is direct.
    • What should I order at Ki Tsui? The Michelin record specifically cites Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies as representative items. Beyond those, the shop offers a wide range of traditional Cantonese puddings. On a return visit, work across that range rather than repeating the same two items.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Ki Tsui? There is no bar. Ki Tsui is a small shopfront with counter service. Eating on-site means standing at or near the counter; most customers take items away.
    • Can Ki Tsui accommodate groups? Groups are possible but the small space makes larger parties awkward. Two to three people is the practical upper limit for a comfortable counter experience. If you are visiting with a larger group, stagger your ordering or plan to take items away and eat nearby.

    For hotels, bars, and other experiences to pair with a visit to Jordan and Kowloon, see our Hong Kong hotels guide, our Hong Kong bars guide, and our Hong Kong experiences guide. If you are interested in what the broader Pearl Hong Kong food picture looks like beyond the street-food tier, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon in Central sits at the opposite end of the formality scale and covers the pastry and dessert category with a very different price and service proposition. Our Hong Kong wineries guide rounds out the picture if wine is part of your trip planning.

    Compare Ki Tsui

    Recognized Venues: Ki Tsui and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Ki TsuiMichelin Plate (2025); Despite the small size, this shop offers a wide array of Cantonese traditional puddings and pastries like Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies.$
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Ta VieMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    The ChairmanMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best$$
    FeuilleMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best$$$
    VeaMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$

    What to weigh when choosing between Ki Tsui and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Ki Tsui?

    No dress code applies. Ki Tsui is a compact street-food shopfront in Jordan, so wear whatever you would to any casual Kowloon errand. The Michelin Plate here recognises the food, not the formality of the setting.

    What should a first-timer know about Ki Tsui?

    Go expecting a small shopfront, not a sit-down restaurant. Ki Tsui is a walk-in only operation on Saigon Street in Jordan, with a Michelin Plate (2025) for its Cantonese traditional puddings and pastries. Arrive knowing what you want to try — the Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies are specifically called out in the Michelin citation — and factor in that peak hours may mean a short wait.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Ki Tsui?

    There is no tasting menu. Ki Tsui is a street-food pastry shop, so you order individual items over the counter. The $ price tier means you can try several things without meaningful spend — that is the format here, not a structured multi-course experience.

    How far ahead should I book Ki Tsui?

    No booking is needed or possible. Ki Tsui operates walk-in only. The practical question is timing: arriving during peak hours or on weekends may mean a queue at a small shopfront, so an off-peak visit on a weekday is the lowest-friction option.

    Is Ki Tsui worth the price?

    Yes, straightforwardly. At the $ price tier, it is among the most accessible Michelin-recognised food stops in Hong Kong. You are paying street-food prices for items that earned a 2025 Michelin Plate, which is a strong value proposition by any measure in a city where Michelin recognition usually correlates with significantly higher spend.

    What should I order at Ki Tsui?

    The Michelin Plate citation specifically names the Xiaofeng cake and walnut cookies as representative of the shop's Cantonese traditional puddings and pastries. Beyond those, the citation notes a wide array of items, so treating the visit as a chance to sample several things at $ prices is the right approach — though specific daily availability is not documented.

    Can I eat at the bar at Ki Tsui?

    There is no bar. Ki Tsui is a compact shopfront where items are purchased over the counter. Whether you eat on the spot or take away depends on the physical space available at the time of your visit, which is typical of this format in Jordan and Kowloon generally.

    Recognized By

    More restaurants in Hong Kong

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Ki Tsui on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.