
HK BBQ Master on Number 3 Road puts Richmond's Cantonese roasting tradition on full display, drawing long queues for lacquered char siu and crackling-skinned roast pork. Recognized by Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual North America list, it sits among the city's most credentialed Chinese BBQ counters. Chef Eric Leung runs the operation with the kind of production-line precision that serious siu mei demands.

Richmond's Cantonese Roasting Counter
Number 3 Road in Richmond is one of the more concentrated stretches of Cantonese commercial life in North America. The glass-fronted BBQ shops that line it belong to a tradition that arrived with Hong Kong immigrants decades ago and has never needed rebranding. Walking into HK BBQ Master, the first thing you register is the hanging display case: lacquered ducks, rust-red pork belly, coils of char siu suspended under heat lamps, their caramelized edges catching the light. The room is functional, as siu mei counters invariably are. Efficiency is the aesthetic.
The Logic of Siu Mei
Cantonese roasted meats, known collectively as siu mei, represent one of the more technically demanding subsets of southern Chinese cooking. The craft sits in the marinade depth, the roasting temperature control, and the resting time that allows fat to redistribute through the meat before carving. Char siu — the barbecued pork that most non-Cantonese diners encounter first — requires a balance of fermented red bean curd, honey, and five-spice that each kitchen adjusts according to its own ratios. Roast duck demands a separate skill set: air-drying the bird, sealing the cavity with aromatics, and achieving the mahogany skin lacquer without drying the breast meat beneath. These are not interchangeable techniques, and the gap between a competent practitioner and a skilled one is visible in the finished product.
HK BBQ Master, under Chef Eric Leung, operates squarely within the Hong Kong-origin style of siu mei rather than the mainland Chinese variations that prioritize heavier spicing or different cuts. The Hong Kong tradition leans on visual presentation , the sheen of the skin, the geometry of the char siu glaze, the way the roast pork belly is portioned to show the layered fat-to-meat ratio , as much as flavor delivery. That visual discipline is partly practical: in a counter-service format, the product sells itself through the glass before a word is exchanged.
Recognition in a Competitive Field
Richmond's Chinese restaurant ecosystem is among the most competitive outside of Hong Kong and Guangzhou. The city's concentration of Cantonese, Shanghainese, and more recent mainland Chinese restaurants means that recognition here carries more weight than it would in a market with thinner competition. HK BBQ Master's inclusion on the Opinionated About Dining 2025 Casual North America list places it alongside the better-documented casual operations across the continent, a designation that OAD derives from diner votes weighted by the voting history of contributors. In a category where most serious practitioners work without formal accolades, that kind of data-aggregated recognition is one of the more reliable signals available. For comparison, the Richmond dining circuit also includes Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant and Jade Seafood Restaurant, both operating in the higher-overhead Cantonese seafood format that requires a different cost structure and dining occasion entirely. HK BBQ Master occupies the counter-service tier, where value density matters more than tablecloth ceremony.
For a broader look at what Richmond's dining circuit covers across formats and cuisines, the full Richmond restaurants guide maps the range from siu mei counters through to high-format dim sum and international arrivals like Baan Lao. The city's hospitality infrastructure extends further if you're planning a longer stay, with options catalogued in the Richmond hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
Where This Fits in the Broader Canadian Dining Picture
Canada's fine-dining recognition tends to cluster around tasting-menu formats in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. Alo in Toronto, Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal, and Tanière³ in Québec City represent the end of the spectrum where the tasting-menu format and wine program carry as much weight as the kitchen's technical output. Further afield, AnnaLena in Vancouver, Narval in Rimouski, and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln each occupy specialist niches within the country's broader culinary conversation. HK BBQ Master sits at a different coordinate entirely: a counter-service siu mei operation recognized not through tableside ceremony but through the consistency of a specific, demanding craft. The two categories are not in competition, but understanding where casual-specialist recognition appears in OAD's methodology clarifies why this listing matters. The guide does not separate casual from fine-dining in a hierarchy of importance; it separates them by format. Elsewhere in the global casual-specialist conversation, operations like Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City represent what formal-format recognition looks like at its highest tier, but the OAD casual list functions on different criteria entirely, rewarding precision and value within a counter or casual-dining frame.
Planning a Visit
HK BBQ Master is located at 4651 Number 3 Road in Richmond, BC, accessible from central Vancouver via the Canada Line to Aberdeen or Lansdowne stations, both within walking distance of the Number 3 Road corridor. Counter-service BBQ shops in Richmond typically sell out of popular cuts, particularly char siu and roast pork belly, before the end of service, which means arriving in the early lunch window is the more reliable approach. The format is cash-friendly and moves quickly. If your Richmond itinerary extends to other neighbourhood formats, L'Opossum and Lemaire Restaurant represent different price points and cuisines within the broader city circuit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at HK BBQ Master?
The menu at HK BBQ Master sits within the standard siu mei range: char siu, roast duck, and roast pork belly are the core offerings at any serious Cantonese BBQ counter in the Hong Kong tradition. Chef Eric Leung's operation has earned its OAD 2025 Casual North America recognition within that framework, which means the baseline cuts are worth ordering directly rather than hedging toward combination plates. In the Hong Kong siu mei style, the roast pork belly is the technical benchmark: the crackling skin layer should shatter cleanly under pressure, and the fat-to-meat ratio through the cut is where craftsmanship shows. Char siu, meanwhile, is the more expressive canvas, with each kitchen's marinade balance distinguishing it from competitors along the same street. Both are reasons to visit Jade Seafood Restaurant or Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant for a full Cantonese meal after you've picked up your roasted meats, if a multi-stop Richmond afternoon is the plan.
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