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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Louise

    550pts

    Michelin-starred French; book early, dress up.

    Louise, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Louise

    A Michelin-starred French contemporary restaurant inside Central's PMQ building, Louise is the right booking for food-focused diners who want serious cooking without the full formality of Hong Kong's top-tier $$$$ houses. Connected to Odette's Julien Royer and holding consistent OAD Asia rankings, it delivers technically grounded, produce-led French cooking at a $$$ price point. Book at least three to four weeks ahead.

    Who Should Book Louise — and When

    Louise is the right call for food-focused visitors and Hong Kong residents who want a serious French contemporary meal in a setting that feels considered rather than corporate. The Michelin star (2024) and consecutive appearances on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Asia list — ranked #96 in 2023 and #121 in 2024 , give it legitimate credentials, and the $$$ price range positions it as a worthwhile splurge without requiring the full commitment of a $$$$ tasting-menu marathon. If you are planning a dinner for two with wine, a celebratory mid-week lunch, or simply want a well-executed French meal in Central, Louise earns its place on the shortlist. Thursday through Sunday it opens at noon, making it one of the better options for a long, unhurried lunch in the neighbourhood. Monday through Wednesday is dinner-only from 6 PM.

    Louise in Context: PMQ, Central, and the French Contemporary Tier

    Louise occupies space inside PMQ, the former Police Married Quarters on Aberdeen Street that has been repurposed as one of Central's more atmospheric creative complexes. The 1930s colonial architecture sets the physical tone before you even sit down , low ceilings, period detail, and a bar on the ground floor where a drink before the meal makes sense as a pacing choice, not just a commercial upsell. The dining room is upstairs, and the move between the two registers as an intentional transition rather than an afterthought.

    Chef Julien Royer, whose Singapore restaurant Odette holds a reputation as one of the most technically precise French kitchens in Asia, opened Louise as a Hong Kong expression of that sensibility. Day-to-day kitchen responsibility falls to Chef Franckelie Laloum, which means the food here is aligned with Royer's standards without being a satellite copy. For explorers of the French contemporary category across Asia, the connection to Odette provides useful triangulation: Louise sits in the same quality register but operates at a lower price point and with a more relaxed register. If you have eaten at Odette and want to understand how that philosophy translates to Hong Kong, Louise is the direct comparison. For the broader French contemporary category in Asia, see also Lerouy in Singapore and Le Normandie in Bangkok as points of reference.

    The Food: What the Data Supports

    The awards documentation highlights the roasted Hong Kong yellow chicken as the standout sharing dish , served with rice cooked in chicken fat and green salad, it is the kind of direct execution that justifies confidence. Yellow chicken from Hong Kong has a specific, well-regarded profile: firmer than commodity poultry, with more pronounced flavour. The sommelier is noted as an active resource for wine pairings, which matters at a venue where the wine list is likely a meaningful part of the bill. Go in expecting to engage with the floor team on that front; it is worth the conversation.

    The cuisine sits in French contemporary territory, which in practice means classical technique applied without dogmatic formality. This is not the place to arrive expecting tableside theatre or elaborate amuse-bouche sequences, though those may exist. What the record supports is confident produce-led cooking with enough technical grounding to justify the star. For explorers who have already worked through Hong Kong's French canon at venues like Amber, Caprice, or Épure, Louise occupies a different register: warmer in atmosphere, less formal in service cadence, and more accessible in price without conceding on substance.

    A Note on Delivery and Takeaway

    Louise is not a delivery restaurant. The format , a bar arrival, a move to the dining room, sommelier-led wine pairing , is built entirely around the in-room experience. The roasted yellow chicken is a sharing dish that depends on timing and temperature in a way that does not survive a delivery journey. If you are considering Louise for an off-premise occasion, the honest answer is to reconsider: the value here is inseparable from the space and service. Venues like Neighborhood or more casual options in the Central area will serve you better if the meal needs to travel. For the full picture of Hong Kong's restaurant scene, including more delivery-friendly options, the broader guide covers the range.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book well in advance , Michelin-starred venues in Central fill quickly, and Louise's profile as a Royer-affiliated restaurant makes it harder to walk in than most peers at this tier. Treat this as a hard-to-book venue and plan accordingly. Hours: Monday to Wednesday, dinner only from 6 PM. Thursday to Sunday, lunch and dinner from 12 PM, last service at 11 PM. Budget: $$$ per head , expect to spend meaningfully on wine given the sommelier's active role. Dress: Smart casual is the safe choice for a Michelin-starred Central dining room with colonial-era architecture; overly casual dress would feel mismatched. Address: PMQ, 35 Aberdeen St, Central. Getting There: Central MTR is the practical base; Aberdeen Street is a short walk uphill. Groups: No seat count is confirmed in available data, but PMQ's footprint is relatively contained , contact the restaurant directly for group bookings above four.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Louise stacks up against Ta Vie, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana, and other peers across price tiers. For French contemporary specifically, Feuille is the closest match in cuisine and price. For broader context on where French technique is being applied across Asian cities, Essential by Christophe in New York, Restaurant Yuu in New York, IDAM by Alain Ducasse in Doha, Blue by Alain Ducasse in Bangkok, and Cuivre in Shanghai offer useful reference points across the category. For everything else in the city, see our Hong Kong hotels guide, our Hong Kong bars guide, our Hong Kong wineries guide, and our Hong Kong experiences guide.

    FAQ: Louise, Hong Kong

    • What should a first-timer know about Louise? Start with a drink at the bar downstairs before moving to the dining room , the two-stage arrival is part of the experience, not optional filler. The kitchen works in French contemporary territory with a Michelin star backing it, so expect technical cooking with quality produce rather than a casual bistro register. At $$$ per head, budget for wine; the sommelier engagement is a meaningful part of what you are paying for. The roasted Hong Kong yellow chicken is the documented highlight and is designed for sharing.
    • What should I wear to Louise? Smart casual is the reliable standard for a Michelin-starred room inside a colonial-era building in Central. No confirmed dress code exists in available data, but the setting and price tier make jeans-and-trainers a poor fit. Treat it as you would any serious one-star in a comparable city and you will not be out of place.
    • Is Louise good for solo dining? The format , bar arrival, dining room, wine pairing , works for a solo diner who is genuinely engaged with the food and service rather than looking for conversation across the table. At $$$ it is a meaningful solo spend, but for a food-focused traveller willing to invest in a single excellent meal in Hong Kong, it is a credible choice. The bar component also means arrival solo feels natural rather than awkward.
    • Can Louise accommodate groups? No confirmed private dining details or seat count is available in current data. Contact the restaurant directly for groups of five or more. The PMQ building setting suggests a contained space rather than a large-format dining room, so do not assume a large group can be absorbed without advance coordination.
    • How far ahead should I book Louise? For a Michelin-starred Royer-affiliated venue in Central with a 4.4 Google rating across 559 reviews, treat booking difficulty as high. Weekend lunch and prime dinner slots on Thursday through Saturday will fill earliest. Aim for at least three to four weeks out for a specific date; two weeks is possible for midweek dinner but involves real risk of missing your preferred slot. Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon at ifc mall is an easier reservation if you need a fallback in the area.

    Compare Louise

    Getting a Table: Louise and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    LouiseFrench, French Contemporary$$$Hard
    Ta VieJapanese - French, Innovative$$$$Unknown
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)Italian$$$$Unknown
    FeuilleFrench Contemporary$$$Unknown
    The ChairmanChinese, Cantonese$$Unknown
    NeighborhoodInternational, European Contemporary$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Louise?

    Arrive early enough to have a drink at the bar downstairs before moving to the dining room — the format is designed as a progression, not just a meal. The roasted Hong Kong yellow chicken, served with rice cooked in chicken fat, is the documented standout and worth ordering if you're dining with at least one other person. Louise holds a Michelin star and ranked #121 on Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Asia in 2024, so expectations around kitchen precision are warranted. Ask the sommelier about wine pairings — that interaction is built into the experience.

    What should I wear to Louise?

    Louise is a Michelin-starred French contemporary restaurant inside PMQ in Central — that context calls for polished, put-together clothing. Think smart evening wear rather than casual; the 1930s colonial-style dining room sets a considered tone. There is no dress code stated in the venue record, but turning up in shorts or trainers would feel out of place given the price point and format.

    Is Louise good for solo dining?

    Louise works for solo diners who are comfortable with a formal French contemporary format, but the bar downstairs is a more natural fit for arriving alone before heading up. The roasted Hong Kong yellow chicken — the kitchen's signature sharing dish — is designed for two or more, so solo visitors should factor that into what they order. At the $$$ price range with a Michelin star backing it, the solo spend is meaningful, so go in knowing what you want from the meal.

    Can Louise accommodate groups?

    Louise can work for small groups, but it is not structured as a large-group venue — the dining room format and French contemporary menu are better suited to tables of two to four. Groups specifically interested in the yellow chicken sharing dish will find that format a natural fit for three or four diners. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels to ask about availability; nothing in the venue record confirms private dining options.

    How far ahead should I book Louise?

    Book at least two to three weeks in advance, and more if you're targeting a Friday or Saturday evening. Louise's Michelin star and its association with Julien Royer — whose Singapore restaurant Odette is among Asia's most sought-after tables — give it a reservation profile that fills well ahead. Thursday through Sunday the restaurant opens at noon, which offers a lunch window that is typically easier to secure than prime dinner slots.

    Hours

    Monday
    6 PM-11 PM
    Tuesday
    6 PM-11 PM
    Wednesday
    6 PM-11 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-11 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-11 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-11 PM
    Sunday
    12 PM-11 PM

    Recognized By

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