Hing Kee 興記菜館
Photograph: Ann Chiu
Photograph: Ann Chiu

Where to find Hong Kong's best claypot rice dishes

Warm your heart (and stomach) with these claypot rice dishes

Advertising

Whenever people think about Hong Kong's cuisine, most people might be more familiar with like dim sum or street food like fish balls and siu mai. However, one local dish we think that deserves just as much attention has got to be claypot rice. With piping hot ingredients laid over a bed of fluffy rice and drizzled with sweet soy sauce, what more could you ask for? Take a look at our list of the city’s best claypot rice restaurants down below.

RECOMMENDED: Stay updated with the latest food and drink news in Hong Kong!

Hong Kong’s best claypot rice

  • Kennedy Town

Sheung Hei is a well-known local joint in Kennedy Town, recommended in the Michelin Guide. The restaurant is so popular, there are queues every evening almost without fail. There are about 30 different claypot rice options to pick from at Sheung Hei including the preserved meat and spare rib claypot rice ($98). Its popularity may be down to the chef’s habit of mixing fresh and leftover rice and adding a couple of drops of lard, which helps it achieve the perfect charred condition.

  • Yau Ma Tei

Not to be confused with the five-star hotel, Four Seasons is the granddaddy of claypot rice on Temple Street – it’s been serving the hungry folks of Mong Kok for more than 30 years. The moment claypot season hits, massively long lines start forming outside. The claypot rice is cooked using a charcoal fire and there are 30 different varieties you can select. Try going for the chicken and Chinese sausage claypot rice ($73), where the rice boasts a great aroma, tender chicken and a cracking soy sauce flavour.

Advertising
  • Chinese
  • Central

While Ser Wong Fun is known for their famous snake soup, their claypot rice dishes are equally as delicious. Ser Wong Fun makes their own preserved meats and features them throughout their claypot rice options such as duck sausage with chicken ($220) and salted fish with chopped pork ($200). Customise your claypot rice by adding ingredients like dried oysters ($60/pc) or cured duck leg ($100/pc).

  • Chinese
  • Sai Ying Pun

The don of claypot rice in Sai Ying Pun, Kwan Kee is famous for its signature charcoal-cooked claypot rice and the quality is equally good whether at this SYP branch or its flagship branch on Kwai Heung Street. Reservations are a must to get a seat during dinner and be warned, you have to wait an hour for your rice once you’ve placed your order. But trust us, it’s well worth it as the dish is seriously well-cooked and the rice is evenly crisp across the entire bottom of the pot.

Advertising
  • Yau Ma Tei

If Four Seasons is the granddaddy of Temple Street, Hing Kee is like the grandma. Another neighbourhood institution with more than 30 years of history, Hing Kee now spreads across two streets and six separate branches, so at least you don’t have to queue for long to get a seat. Many tourists come here for the cheap and authentic local cuisine. In terms of claypot rice, there’s a plethora of options that allow you to mix-and-match up to 60 different variations, much like the minced beef with Chinese sausage claypot rice ($65).

  • Chinese
  • Shau Kei Wan

Sui Wah’s owner was once a chef at New Chui Wah, a renowned and much missed claypot rice specialist in Causeway Bay, so you know he can deliver a mean claypot rice. Pick and choose from 30 different versions of the signature charcoal-cooked dish. Ingredients range from traditional ones to funky western-fusion mixes – think mushrooms and foie gras, and beef and garlic – to non-conventional combos like octopus and chicken with Chinese sausage ($77). Pay special attention to the soy sauce here: it comes with layers of flavouring and mixes brilliantly with any and all the ingredients served here.

Advertising
  • Shek Tong Tsui

A neighbourhood institution with 40 years of history, Wing Hop Sing originally started out as a cha chaan teng before morphing into a restaurant that specialises in claypot rice. What makes Wing Hop Sing’s claypot stand out from the rest is that its dishes are cooked using a baking oven, so that heat is spread equally. A must-try is the beef and egg claypot rice when you visit, as well as their daily soup. Note that they operate till 4pm and are closed on Sundays.

Looking for more local cuisine?

Recommended
    You may also like
    You may also like
    Advertising