Restaurant in Xiamen, China
Two Bib Gourmands. Local seafood. Book it.

A second-generation family seafood restaurant that has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, Hao Shi Lai is one of Xiamen's most reliable addresses for Minnan cooking at mid-range prices. The claypot threadfin and peppered salt baby eels are the benchmark dishes. Book for groups or a relaxed late dinner when you want serious local seafood without a serious bill.
Book Hao Shi Lai if you want Minnan seafood with a genuine local pedigree and two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand recognitions (2024 and 2025) at a mid-range price point. This family operation, running since 1993 and now into its second generation, is one of the more reliable addresses for traditional Fujian coastal cooking in Xiamen's Siming District. At ¥¥ pricing, it delivers the kind of quality-to-cost ratio that justifies the Bib Gourmand tag: serious cooking without the bill that comes with a starred room. If you are after a late-night seafood option with proven local credibility, this is a strong candidate.
Hao Shi Lai has been feeding Xiamen since 1993, and the Michelin inspectors have been paying attention. The double Bib Gourmand recognition is not a minor footnote — it is the guide's explicit signal that this is a place offering good cooking at a price that does not require justification. For a city with a serious seafood tradition rooted in Minnan (Southern Fujian) cooking, that matters. Xiamen diners grow up eating this way, and Hao Shi Lai sits in many of their childhood memories precisely because the cooking is consistent rather than showy.
The kitchen focuses on fresh seafood handled with the restraint that defines good Minnan cooking. The threadfin blanched in claypot is the benchmark dish here: the flesh is oily and silky, with an umami depth that comes from quality sourcing and precise temperature control rather than heavy seasoning. If you are deciding between this and a more polished room, that dish alone makes the case. The deep-fried baby eels in peppered salt take a different direction — crispy, punchy, and seasoned with a mild spice that makes them particularly well-suited as a companion to cold beer or baijiu. These are not subtle dishes designed to impress critics; they are direct, flavour-forward cooking made for people who eat seafood seriously.
The late-night angle is worth considering explicitly. Seafood-focused family restaurants in Fujian often run later than standard dinner service, and Hao Shi Lai's profile as a long-standing local institution suggests it draws the kind of crowd that eats on local time rather than tourist time. If you are visiting Xiamen and want a seafood meal after 9 PM that does not involve a tourist-facing strip, this address on Hubin South Road in Siming District is worth putting on your short list. The friendly service noted across multiple sources adds to its suitability for later, more relaxed dining rather than a rushed midweek dinner slot.
For context on where this sits in the broader regional picture: Minnan cooking shares DNA with Teochew and Hokkien traditions, prioritising the natural flavour of the ingredient over complexity of sauce. If you have eaten at venues like Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) in Beijing or Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, you will recognise the philosophy of letting premium seafood do the work. Hao Shi Lai operates at a more accessible price tier but with a comparable commitment to sourcing quality. Compared to destination-level seafood rooms like Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau or Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, the setting is far less formal, but the core ingredient quality that earns Bib recognition is present.
Within Xiamen's seafood scene, Xing Wang Seafood · Rongting Hui (Siming) covers similar ground and is worth comparing directly before you book. For a different register of Fujian cooking, Hokklo and Yanyu (Jiahe Road) offer alternative takes on the regional tradition. If you are building a broader itinerary, our full Xiamen restaurants guide covers the range, and the Xiamen bars guide is useful for planning around a late dinner here. Internationally, if you want to benchmark Minnan-style seafood against other coastal traditions, the approach has loose parallels with places like Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast , different ingredients and traditions, but the same argument that the leading seafood cooking is built on sourcing rather than technique for its own sake.
The second-generation family operation model matters here more than it might elsewhere. Restaurants that survive a generational handover in Chinese family dining tend to do so because the core product holds. Hao Shi Lai's continued Bib Gourmand status into 2025 suggests the transition has not diluted what made the original reputation. That is a meaningful data point when you are deciding between a venue with local longevity and something newer without a track record.
For special occasions, this is not the obvious first call if formal surroundings or wine service matter to you. But for a celebration that is about eating well rather than being seen eating well, the combination of genuine local status, two Michelin Bib Gourmands, and mid-range pricing makes it a compelling option. A table of four or more, ordering the claypot threadfin and the peppered salt eels alongside whatever the kitchen recommends as fresh that evening, is a better special-occasion meal than most rooms charging twice the price. Venues like Fleurs Et Festin and Xian Xiong Qi offer more polished settings if presentation is the priority.
Booking is direct at this price tier and format. No phone or website data is available in the public record, so walk-in or third-party platform booking is the most practical approach. Given the Bib Gourmand profile and local following, earlier in the evening is safer for groups; later slots are more likely to have availability and suit the relaxed pace the cooking deserves. See the quick reference below.
Quick reference: Hao Shi Lai, 24 Hubin S Rd, Siming District, Xiamen | ¥¥ | Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 & 2025 | Booking: walk-in or third-party platform recommended | Leading for: Minnan seafood, late-ish dinner, groups eating well without a large bill.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hao Shi Lai | Seafood | ¥¥ | Easy |
| Bai Jia Chun Hao De Lai Jiang Mu Ya (Zhongxing Road) | Fujian | ¥ | Unknown |
| Chic 1699 | Fujian | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Dai Tai | Yunnanese | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Fu Yu Da Tong Ya Rou Zhou | Congee | ¥ | Unknown |
| Lai Cuo Cheng Bian Shi Dian | Small eats | ¥ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
This is a family-run Minnan seafood restaurant that has been operating since 1993 and earned back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025. The value proposition is strong: serious local cooking at a ¥¥ price point. Go in expecting a no-frills, neighbourhood-canteen atmosphere rather than a formal dining experience, and you will not be disappointed.
Hao Shi Lai is a traditional Chinese seafood restaurant rather than a bar-format venue, so counter or bar-seat dining is not part of the setup. Plan to sit at a table. Seating arrangements are not detailed in available records, so calling ahead or arriving early is the safest approach.
Exact booking policy is not publicly documented, but as a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant with deep local roots in Xiamen, expect demand to be steady, especially on weekends. Booking at least a few days ahead is advisable; walk-ins may be possible on weekday lunches but carry risk. check the venue's official channels at 24 Hubin S Rd, Siming District, to confirm.
Yes, at ¥¥ pricing and with a menu anchored in shareable seafood dishes, a solo diner can reasonably order two or three plates without overspending. The friendly service noted in Michelin's recognition makes solo visits comfortable. It is easier to manage here than at a formal banquet-style seafood house.
This is a Bib Gourmand-rated neighbourhood restaurant, not a fine-dining room, so casual dress is entirely appropriate. There is no indication of a dress code. Come as you would to a well-regarded local canteen.
The two standout dishes documented by Michelin are the threadfin blanched in claypot, praised for oily, silky flesh and strong umami, and the deep-fried baby eels in peppered salt, crispy with a mild spicy kick. The eels pair well with drinks if you are eating with a group. Start with those two and build from there.
As a family-run restaurant operating since 1993 with a strong local following, it is well-suited to group dining in the way most Minnan seafood restaurants are: order several dishes to share at the table. Specific private dining rooms or maximum group sizes are not confirmed, so check the venue's official channels for larger bookings.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.