Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Old-school Chiu Chow, daily market care.

A Chiu Chow institution that started as a hawker stall in the 1990s and has held its casual, neighbourhood character ever since. At $$, the steamed grey mullet with Puning bean paste and the pre-order steamed eel in lotus leaf are the reasons to come. Book at least two days out if you want the eel — everything else can be decided at the table.
If you want to understand what Chiu Chow cooking looks like when it is done with genuine daily care rather than tourist-facing polish, Tak Kee in Shek Tong Tsui is the right call. This is a $$ restaurant that operates like a neighbourhood institution: low-fuss room, no-ceremony service, and a menu built around what the second-generation owner has sourced that morning. It suits a small group who wants to eat seriously without paying fine-dining prices, and it is particularly well-matched to diners who are already familiar enough with Chiu Chow food to appreciate subtlety over spectacle. For a celebration or a meaningful meal with people who care about regional Chinese cooking, this is a stronger choice than many more conspicuous options in the same price bracket.
Tak Kee started as a hawker stall in the 1990s, and the atmosphere has not been reworked to obscure that origin. The room is casual, the energy is neighbourhood-local, and the noise level reflects a dining room that is genuinely used by people who live nearby — not a space that has been dressed up for out-of-district visitors. That ambient feel is part of the proposition. If you are looking for the kind of quiet, considered room you might find at Ta Vie or Amber, this is not it. What you get instead is a room where the food is the entire point, and the surroundings reinforce rather than undercut that honesty.
The second-generation owner shops for groceries daily and is hands-on in kitchen operations. That detail matters for understanding what kind of restaurant this is: supply-driven, personally managed, and consistent in a way that depends on individual effort rather than institutional systems. Chiu Chow cooking , the regional cuisine of eastern Guangdong, closely related to Teochew food , prizes freshness, precise steaming technique, and condiments that function as structural elements of a dish rather than additions. Tak Kee's kitchen is oriented around those principles. Compared to better-known Chiu Chow addresses in Hong Kong like Chiuchow Delicacies or Chiu Ka Banquet, Tak Kee occupies the more everyday, less ceremonial end of the category , which is not a criticism.
Grey mullet is the dish that appears most consistently in descriptions of what makes Tak Kee worth visiting. It is steamed and served chilled alongside Puning bean paste, a fermented condiment that is central to Chiu Chow cooking and that varies considerably in quality from kitchen to kitchen. The version here is described as the original preparation, which signals that the kitchen is not working from a standardised commercial product. The same fish can also be ordered steamed with dried plums or salted lemon, served hot , two distinct presentations that reward return visits or shared orders across a table.
For groups of four or more, the steamed eel in lotus leaf is the pre-order to know about. It requires at least two days' advance notice, which means you need to plan before you arrive rather than deciding at the table. If you are organising a meal for four or more people, contact the restaurant before confirming your booking and lock in the eel order at that point. Failing to do so means missing the dish most likely to be the centrepiece of the meal.
There is no listed cocktail or drinks program in the available data. Tak Kee is not a destination for a bar experience in the way that venues in Central or Wan Chai are oriented around. If a dedicated drinks program is part of what you are looking for, you will need to supplement your evening , Hong Kong's bar scene has options in most neighbourhoods. Within the meal itself, the beverage pairing logic is Chinese: cold tea, rice wine, or beer are the practical companions to this kind of food, and the price point at $$ means drinks spend is unlikely to drive the bill.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means same-week reservations should be achievable in most cases. Given that the most compelling dish , the steamed eel in lotus leaf , requires two days' notice, the practical booking horizon is at least two to three days out if you want the full experience rather than a partial one. Walk-ins may be possible given the casual format and neighbourhood context, but pre-ordering the eel makes advance contact necessary regardless of how you handle the table reservation. Hours are not listed in the available data, so confirm before you go.
The address is Yick Fung Garden Block A, 3 Belcher's Street, Shek Tong Tsui. This is a residential-commercial neighbourhood on the western edge of Hong Kong Island, quieter and less visited than Central or Sheung Wan. The location means Tak Kee is genuinely local rather than positioned for tourist traffic, which reinforces the character of the room. If you are staying centrally, factor in a 15-to-20-minute taxi or MTR journey. Google reviews sit at 3.9 across 161 ratings , a score that reflects the honest, unfiltered nature of the clientele rather than a curated review base.
For more context on where Tak Kee sits in Hong Kong's broader dining picture, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide. If you are planning a wider trip, our Hong Kong hotels guide and Hong Kong experiences guide cover the rest of the logistics.
Tak Kee has been operating in some form since the 1990s , over three decades in a city where restaurant turnover is fast and rent pressure is constant. That longevity is the strongest trust signal available here. It is not a Michelin-starred room, and it does not operate like one. What it offers is a specific, supply-driven version of Chiu Chow cooking in a casual room with genuine neighbourhood character, at a price point that makes it accessible for most visitors. The pre-order eel and the chilled steamed mullet with Puning bean paste are the reasons to book. Everything else is context. If you are looking for comparable Chiu Chow quality at a similar price, Hung's Delicacies is worth comparing. For something further afield that shows how deeply tradition-rooted Chinese seafood technique can travel, the contrast with places like Le Bernardin in New York or Lazy Bear in San Francisco illustrates how different the value systems of precision cooking can be across cultures.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tak Kee | This eatery, which started out as a hawker stall in the 1990s, has retained its casual vibe. The second-generation owner shops for groceries daily and sometimes helps with kitchen chores. Grey mullet is steamed and served chilled with the original Puning bean paste dip. It can also be steamed with dried plums or salted lemon and served hot. For parties of four or more, consider pre-ordering steamed eel in lotus leaf at least two days ahead.; This eatery, which started out as a hawker stall in the 1990s, has retained its casual vibe. The second-generation owner shops for groceries daily and sometimes helps with kitchen chores. Grey mullet is steamed and served chilled with the original Puning bean paste dip. It can also be steamed with dried plums or salted lemon and served hot. For parties of four or more, consider pre-ordering steamed eel in lotus leaf at least two days ahead. | $$ | — |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Ta Vie | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Feuille | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$ | — |
| The Chairman | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$ | — |
| Neighborhood | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Come casual. Tak Kee started as a hawker stall in the 1990s and has kept that atmosphere intact — the room is not dressed up and neither should you be. A clean T-shirt and jeans are perfectly appropriate. Overdressing would feel out of place here.
Tak Kee does not operate a bar format — this is a traditional Chiu Chow canteen-style setting, not a counter-dining or cocktail-bar venue. Your focus here is the table and the food, particularly the grey mullet and the pre-order eel dishes. Come to eat, not to drink.
There is no formal tasting menu at Tak Kee. The format is à la carte in a casual room. Order grey mullet steamed and chilled with Puning bean paste, and if you are coming with four or more people, pre-order the steamed eel in lotus leaf at least two days ahead — that is the closest thing to a structured experience here.
Booking difficulty is low, so same-week reservations should be achievable in most cases. That said, if you are planning around the steamed eel in lotus leaf — and you should, for a group of four or more — contact them at least two days ahead to pre-order. Don't leave that to the day.
Start with the grey mullet steamed and served chilled with Puning bean paste — it is the dish most associated with Tak Kee's reputation. You can also have it steamed with dried plums or salted lemon and served hot. For groups of four or more, pre-order the steamed eel in lotus leaf at least two days in advance.
This is a second-generation family operation that started as a hawker stall in the 1990s — the owner shops for groceries daily and sometimes works in the kitchen. At $$, it is one of the more affordable ways to eat serious Chiu Chow cooking in Hong Kong. The room is casual, the menu requires some advance planning for the best dishes, and there is no website to check, so arrive with a plan.
Yes, and groups of four or more are actually the best format for getting the most out of Tak Kee. The steamed eel in lotus leaf is the pre-order dish most suited to a shared table, but you need to book it at least two days ahead. Smaller parties of two can still eat well on the grey mullet, but the larger the group, the more of the menu you can cover.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.