Restaurant in Macau, China
Michelin-recognised noodles at street-food prices.

Cheong Kei holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand and has been pressing its own bamboo-pole noodles since the 1970s. The eight-hour prawn-and-plaice soup base is the kitchen's calling card, and the shrimp roe noodles and dace balls are the dishes to order. At $ pricing with walk-in access, this is the most efficient Michelin-validated meal in Macau.
Eight hours. That is how long Cheong Kei's kitchen cooks its soup base, combining dried prawns and dried plaice into a broth that carries more depth than most restaurants achieve with twice the effort and five times the price. For a venue charging at the $ tier, that commitment is the single most telling fact about what you are walking into. If you are in Macau and want to understand why the Michelin inspectors keep returning, this is one of the clearest answers on Rua da Felicidade.
Cheong Kei occupies a ground-floor shopfront on Rua da Felicidade, one of Macau's oldest preserved streets. The room operates at the pace and volume typical of a working noodle shop: orders called, bowls moved, tables turned. Expect a functional, no-ceremony atmosphere. The energy here is purposeful rather than relaxed — this is a place that has been feeding people efficiently for over five decades, and it shows. If you are planning a long, leisurely lunch, this is not the right room. If you want to understand what a generational family business looks like when it has found its discipline and stuck with it, you are in the right place.
The noodles themselves are produced at a factory nearby, still pressed using a bamboo pole , a technique that gives the strands a particular springiness that machine-made noodles do not replicate. The process is labour-intensive and deliberately retained. The thin, fine noodles are the operational and culinary core of the menu, not a detail.
The Michelin Bib Gourmand listing specifically calls out the noodles with dried shrimp roe, the wontons, and the dace balls , served either deep-fried or blanched. The fermented clam sauce is flagged as the recommended pairing for the dace balls. Follow that guidance. At this price point, ordering well matters more than at restaurants where multiple rounds of dishes absorb any misstep. The shrimp roe noodles deliver the most direct expression of what the kitchen does with its own-made product. The wontons and dace balls extend the visit without substantially raising the bill.
Cheong Kei is not a special-occasion restaurant in the conventional sense. There is no private dining room, no tableside ceremony, no wine list. The editorial angle for private or group experiences here is specific: this is the kind of place where the occasion is the shared discovery of something genuinely skilled at a price that removes all financial friction. A small group of two to four people who want to explore Macau's street-food heritage rather than its casino-hotel dining circuit will find this a satisfying and low-stakes booking. Larger groups should factor in the likely constraints of a compact shopfront layout; seat count is not confirmed in our data, but the format suggests limited flexibility for parties above six.
For milestone celebrations that call for a formal room and service depth, consider Jade Dragon or Chef Tam's Seasons instead. Cheong Kei earns its place on a special trip to Macau not as the main event but as the lunch that grounds everything else in context.
Booking is rated Easy. No phone or website is listed in our data, which strongly suggests walk-in is the expected mode of arrival. Given the volume of visitors Rua da Felicidade attracts, arriving at off-peak hours (mid-morning or mid-afternoon, if hours permit) is the practical approach. Hours are not confirmed in our data; verify locally before planning a tight schedule around this stop.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty | Michelin Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cheong Kei | Noodles | $ | Easy (walk-in) | Bib Gourmand 2025 |
| Feng Wei Ju | Hunan-Sichuan | $$ | Moderate | Check current status |
| Lai Heen | Cantonese | $$$ | Moderate | Check current status |
| Robuchon au Dôme | French Contemporary | $$$$ | High | Check current status |
Against Macau's other Michelin-recognised options, Cheong Kei occupies a category of its own by price. At the $ tier, it compares most directly with Feng Wei Ju on value, though the two kitchens serve entirely different registers: Feng Wei Ju's Hunan-Sichuan cooking is built for sharing and heat, while Cheong Kei is a focused noodle operation. If your priority is price-to-quality ratio and you want a Michelin-validated meal for under the cost of a cocktail elsewhere in the city, Cheong Kei delivers more directly than any other option on this list.
Step up to $$ and you reach Five Foot Road for Sichuan cooking , a different cuisine profile but a comparable value-first positioning. At $$$ and above, the comparison set shifts entirely: Lai Heen offers formal Cantonese with the service depth and room quality that Cheong Kei does not attempt to provide. Aji and Robuchon au Dôme at $$$$ are a different decision entirely: those are destination dining commitments, where Cheong Kei is a walk-in stop that repays the detour many times over in quality per dollar.
The practical recommendation: if you are planning a multi-day visit to Macau, book one of the $$$–$$$$ rooms for a formal dinner and use Cheong Kei for a daytime meal that requires no planning and no budget allocation. The two experiences do not compete; they complement. For a noodle-focused comparison further afield, A Niang Mian Guan in Shanghai and A Xin Xian Lao in Fuzhou operate in a similar spirit of craft-focused, low-cost noodle work worth tracking down.
Book it, or rather, walk in. Cheong Kei holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand on the strength of a kitchen that has spent over 50 years refining a small, disciplined menu , bamboo-pole-pressed noodles, an eight-hour soup base, and a handful of accompaniments done well. The Google rating of 3.7 across 448 reviews reflects the no-frills format more than the food quality; the Michelin inspectors are the more reliable signal here. At $ pricing, the only reason not to visit is a preference for formal dining environments. For everyone else passing through Macau, this is one of the most efficient uses of an hour and a few dollars in the city.
For more dining options across the city, see our full Macau restaurants guide. If you are planning the wider trip, our Macau hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest. For noodle-focused dining elsewhere in China, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, and 102 House in Shanghai are worth knowing. For refined Chinese dining as a regional comparison, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing round out the picture alongside Macau's own Alain Ducasse at Morpheus at the leading of the price range.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cheong Kei | Noodles | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); A family business since the '70s, this noodle shop sticks to its roots and its thin, fine noodles are pressed by bamboo pole in its own factory nearby. Their soup is cooked with dried prawns and dried plaice for 8 hours. The noodles with dried shrimp roe are great, but also try their wontons and dace balls that are served deep-fried or blanched; the fermented clam sauce is the perfect accompaniment to the dace balls. | Easy | — |
| Aji | Nikkei, Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Five Foot Road | Sichuan | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Lai Heen | Cantonese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Robuchon au Dôme | French Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Feng Wei Ju | Hunan-Sichuan, Hunanese | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Macau for this tier.
It is one of the better solo dining options in Macau at any price point. The shopfront format on Rua da Felicidade suits a single diner ordering a bowl of shrimp roe noodles and a side of dace balls without the social overhead of a tasting menu. At the $ price tier with a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand behind it, there is no better solo value on the street.
Cheong Kei does not offer a tasting menu. This is an à la carte noodle shop where the Michelin-recommended order covers shrimp roe noodles, wontons, and dace balls — deep-fried or blanched, with fermented clam sauce on the side. If you want a structured multi-course format, Robuchon au Dôme is the Macau option for that.
Not in the conventional sense. There is no private dining, no wine list, and no tableside ceremony. If the occasion is about the food itself — celebrating a Michelin Bib Gourmand shopfront that has been pressing its own bamboo-pole noodles since the 1970s — it works. For a formal celebration, Lai Heen or Robuchon au Dôme are the practical alternatives in Macau.
The menu is built around a dried prawn and dried plaice broth cooked for eight hours, so the kitchen's core offering is not suitable for vegetarians or pescatarians avoiding shellfish. No dietary accommodation data is listed for this venue, so contact ahead if restrictions are a concern — though no phone or website is publicly listed, which makes a walk-in conversation the practical approach.
Small groups of two to four should manage fine at a shopfront noodle operation like this, but there is no private room and no reservation system listed in our data. Larger groups should arrive early, expect to wait, and order efficiently. For groups requiring a seated private dining experience, Lai Heen or Feng Wei Ju are the more practical Macau options.
Yes, straightforwardly. A 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand at the $ price tier is the definition of value-to-quality ratio, and Cheong Kei's bamboo-pole noodles, eight-hour broth, and house-made dace balls are the specific reasons Michelin recognised it. Against Five Foot Road or Aji at higher price points, Cheong Kei wins on value without qualification.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.