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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Sukiyaki Mori

    230pts

    Accessible booking, convivial format, OAD-ranked.

    Sukiyaki Mori, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Sukiyaki Mori

    Sukiyaki Mori on Stanley Street is one of Hong Kong's most accessible OAD-ranked Japanese restaurants — easy to book, three consecutive years of Asia Top Restaurants recognition, and a sukiyaki format that works well for special occasions and small groups. Chef Nakaya Mori runs both lunch and dinner services daily. A strong choice if you want serious Japanese dining without the booking anxiety.

    Should You Book Sukiyaki Mori?

    Getting a table here is not the ordeal it is at Hong Kong's most oversubscribed Japanese counters — booking difficulty is rated easy, which makes Sukiyaki Mori a rare proposition: an OAD-ranked restaurant on Stanley Street in Central that you can actually plan around without setting a 6 AM alarm. The question is not whether you can get in. The question is whether the experience justifies the effort of showing up, and on the evidence of three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining recognition (Highly Recommended in 2023, ranked #200 in Asia in 2024, climbing to #212 in 2025), the answer is yes for anyone serious about Japanese cuisine in Hong Kong.

    The Room and the Format

    Sukiyaki Mori sits on the first floor of Stanley 11, a short walk into the heart of Central. The format is sukiyaki — a hot-pot style that is fundamentally different from the omakase counters and kaiseki rooms that dominate Hong Kong's Japanese fine-dining tier. Where those formats keep you at arm's length from the cooking, sukiyaki is an inherently communal experience: the pot is at the table, the pace is yours, and the room is built around that intimacy. If you are planning a special occasion, a business lunch with some warmth to it, or a date where conversation matters as much as the food, that spatial dynamic works in your favour. It is not a format suited to solo dining or large parties looking for a formal, structured progression through courses.

    Chef Nakaya Mori leads the kitchen. Specific menu details and current pricing are not confirmed in our data, so treat any figures you encounter online as subject to change and confirm directly when booking.

    Multi-Visit Strategy

    Because booking is accessible and the format is convivial rather than ceremonially paced, Sukiyaki Mori rewards repeat visits in a way that tasting-menu venues do not. On a first visit, treat it as an orientation: understand the house broth, the meat quality, and the dipping egg , the fundamentals that define whether a sukiyaki kitchen is operating at a serious level. The OAD ranking confirms this one is. On a second visit, you have enough context to be more deliberate: ask about seasonal ingredients (sukiyaki is at its leading in the colder months when quality beef and seasonal vegetables align), and consider whether the lunch or dinner setting suits your pace better. The kitchen runs the same hours across both services , 12 to 3 pm and 6 to 11 pm, seven days a week , so neither slot is operationally disadvantaged. A third visit is when Sukiyaki Mori starts to function as a reliable anchor in your Hong Kong restaurant rotation, the kind of place you bring visitors to when you want to show them something that is not the usual Cantonese or Western fine-dining circuit.

    For Japanese dining in Hong Kong at a comparable standard, consider Kappo Rin, Godenya, Nagamoto, Ryota Kappou Modern, and Zuicho , each takes a different approach to the category. If you are building out a Japan trip alongside a Hong Kong visit, the OAD circuit connects Sukiyaki Mori to Tokyo kitchens like Myojaku, Azabu Kadowaki, Kagurazaka Ishikawa, and Ginza Fukuju, as well as Kyoto's Isshisoden Nakamura and Osaka's Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama , all worth cross-referencing if sukiyaki and kaiseki are your focus.

    Trust Signals

    The OAD Asia rankings are a credible peer-reviewed guide built on critic and chef votes rather than paid placements. Three consecutive years of recognition , progressing from Highly Recommended to a ranked position , indicates a kitchen that has stayed consistent and is considered seriously within the regional Japanese dining community. Google reviews sit at 4.3 across 262 ratings, which for a Central Japanese specialist in a city with demanding dining standards is a solid signal that the experience holds up across a broad base of diners, not just specialist critics.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Stanley 11, 1/F, 11 Stanley Street, Central, Hong Kong
    • Hours: Monday to Sunday, 12–3 pm and 6–11 pm
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , no weeks-out scramble required
    • Cuisine format: Sukiyaki (hot-pot style, Japanese)
    • Chef: Nakaya Mori
    • Awards: OAD Leading Restaurants in Asia , Ranked #212 (2025), #200 (2024), Highly Recommended (2023)
    • Google rating: 4.3 / 5 (262 reviews)
    • Price range: Not confirmed , verify directly when booking
    • Dress code: Not specified , Central standards apply; smart casual is a safe baseline
    • Leading for: Special occasions, dates, business meals with a convivial tone; less suited to solo dining

    For more on where to eat, drink, and stay in the city, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, our Hong Kong hotels guide, our Hong Kong bars guide, our Hong Kong wineries guide, and our Hong Kong experiences guide. For context on Hong Kong's broader dining scene, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon and the story of the Former Jumbo Floating Restaurant in Aberdeen illustrate how far the city's restaurant culture spans.

    Compare Sukiyaki Mori

    Quick Value Check: Sukiyaki Mori
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    Sukiyaki Mori
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    Comparing your options in Hong Kong for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Sukiyaki Mori?

    Booking difficulty is rated easy relative to Hong Kong's most competitive Japanese counters, so a week's notice is usually sufficient. That said, Friday and Saturday dinner slots move faster — book at least 10 days out for weekend evenings. This is one of the few OAD Asia Top 200 restaurants where last-minute tables are a realistic option.

    Can Sukiyaki Mori accommodate groups?

    Sukiyaki is inherently a group-friendly format — the shared hot pot structure suits tables of four or more better than it suits solo diners. The first-floor space at Stanley 11, Central lends itself to convivial, communal dining. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and any private arrangement options.

    What should I order at Sukiyaki Mori?

    The format is sukiyaki, so the menu follows a hot-pot structure rather than an à la carte spread — ordering decisions largely centre on protein grade and supplementary add-ons rather than choosing between dishes. Specific menu details are not published, so the clearest move is to ask the kitchen on arrival what cuts are available that day.

    Is Sukiyaki Mori good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. Sukiyaki Mori suits occasions where the mood matters as much as the ceremony — it is convivial and interactive rather than formally paced like an omakase counter. Three consecutive years of OAD Asia recognition, including a Top 200 ranking in 2024, give it credibility as a destination dinner. If your group wants tableside theatre and a relaxed pace, this works well.

    What are alternatives to Sukiyaki Mori in Hong Kong?

    For Japanese dining at a comparable or higher tier, the field in Hong Kong is deep. If you want tasting-menu precision over a shared-pot format, Ta Vie or Vea offer structured, chef-driven progression. For a different kind of convivial splurge with strong local identity, The Chairman is the reference point. Sukiyaki Mori's advantage is accessibility: it is easier to book than most of its OAD-ranked peers.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Sukiyaki Mori?

    Both services run the same hours pattern — 12 to 3 pm and 6 to 11 pm daily. Lunch tends to be quieter at most Central restaurants in this category, which suits smaller groups or those who prefer a less energetic room. Dinner is the more natural fit for the sukiyaki format, where the pace of cooking over a shared pot benefits from an unhurried evening slot.

    What should I wear to Sukiyaki Mori?

    The venue data does not specify a dress code, and sukiyaki restaurants in Hong Kong generally do not enforce formal attire. Smart casual is a sensible default for a first-floor Central restaurant with OAD Asia ranking — neat but not black-tie. Bear in mind that sukiyaki cooking produces steam and broth, so avoid delicate fabrics you would not want near a hot pot.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Tuesday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Wednesday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Thursday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Friday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm
    Sunday
    12–3 pm, 6–11 pm

    Recognized By

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