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CuisineCantonese
Executive ChefDee Lui
LocationHong Kong, Hong Kong
Michelin

Ship Kee is a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Cantonese restaurant on the sixth floor of Hopewell Centre in Wan Chai, holding the award in both 2024 and 2025. Under chef Dee Lui, it occupies the mid-price tier where precise Cantonese technique meets accessible pricing, making it one of Wan Chai's more consistent arguments for the neighbourhood's dining credentials.

Ship Kee restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
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Six Floors Up, Firmly Grounded in Wan Chai's Cantonese Tradition

Wan Chai's dining character has always been shaped by a certain pragmatic ambition: rooms that do not announce themselves, kitchens that have been refining the same techniques for decades, and a clientele that returns because the cooking holds up. The sixth floor of Hopewell Centre on Queen's Road East fits that description precisely. There is no street-level theatre, no ground-floor signage angling for foot traffic. You take the lift, step out, and find Ship Kee operating with the low-key confidence of a restaurant that has never needed to perform its credentials — which, since 2024, have included a Michelin Bib Gourmand, renewed for 2025.

The Bib Gourmand designation matters here not as a consolation prize for the sticker-price conscious, but as a specific editorial argument about where serious Cantonese cooking now sits in Hong Kong's pricing spectrum. The city's top tier — represented by addresses like Lung King Heen, T'ang Court, and Lai Ching Heen , operates at price points where the room, the service theatre, and the ingredient sourcing are all priced in together. Ship Kee's double Bib Gourmand signals something different: technique that clears Michelin's quality threshold at a price point ($$) where shortcuts are the norm, not the exception.

The Cantonese Mid-Tier and What It Actually Requires

Hong Kong's Cantonese mid-tier is more competitive than its lower profile suggests. The restaurants in this band are not competing against the three-star rooms , they are competing against each other, and against the accumulated weight of neighbourhood expectation. Wan Chai residents and office workers who have eaten Cantonese food all their lives are not a forgiving audience. Wok hei either registers or it doesn't. Timing on steamed fish is either correct or it exposes the kitchen. Bib Gourmand recognition at this level means Michelin's inspectors found consistency across multiple visits, which is the harder part of the equation at this price point.

Chef Dee Lui works within that context. In a category where the cooking tradition is more relevant than any individual chef's biographical arc, what matters is whether the kitchen is executing the fundamentals with discipline , whether the seasoning is calibrated, whether oil temperatures are managed correctly, whether the sourcing reflects genuine care rather than margin optimisation. Ship Kee's sustained recognition across two consecutive years suggests those fundamentals are in order.

On the Question of Drinks at This Level

The editorial angle of wine and beverage curation sits differently at a Bib Gourmand Cantonese address than it does at the cellar-deep fine dining rooms. Hong Kong's premium Cantonese addresses , places like Rùn or Forum , maintain wine lists that can run to considerable depth, with older Burgundy vintages and aged Bordeaux that pair surprisingly well against the clean, precise flavours of high-level Cantonese cooking. The interaction between aged white Burgundy and steamed seafood, or between a lighter red and roasted meats, is a pairing logic that Hong Kong's fine dining rooms have spent years refining.

At Ship Kee's price tier, that depth of cellar curation is not the primary value proposition. The drinks dimension here is leading understood through the lens of what serves the cooking: clean, unfussy pairings that do not compete with the kitchen's precision. Jasmine tea, Chinese rice wine, or a direct bottle of white are the practical choices. The absence of a deep sommelier program is not a gap , it is a correct reading of what the format requires. Visitors who want to pair serious wine with serious Cantonese cooking at this address should approach it as a meal-first proposition and manage expectations accordingly. For cellar depth alongside Cantonese at the fine dining level, the starred rooms referenced above operate in a different register entirely.

Across the wider region, Cantonese cooking has attracted serious wine investment at the premium tier: Jade Dragon in Macau and Summer Pavilion in Singapore both sit in hospitality contexts where beverage programs are deeply resourced. Ship Kee operates in a different competitive set entirely , closer in spirit to 102 House in Shanghai or Canton 8 in the Huangpu district, where the cooking tradition carries the weight of the meal rather than the room or the list.

Wan Chai as a Dining District

Wan Chai occupies a particular position in Hong Kong's dining geography: more residential in texture than Central, less self-consciously trendy than Sai Ying Pun, and home to a dense concentration of Cantonese addresses that serve the neighbourhood's working population as much as destination diners. Hopewell Centre sits on the eastern edge of the district, and the building's vertical density , offices stacked above offices, restaurants operating on upper floors without the luxury of ground-level presence , is a physical expression of how Hong Kong has always managed the relationship between space and ambition.

For visitors building a broader Hong Kong eating itinerary, Ship Kee belongs in the same day as the neighbourhood's more casual dai pai dong culture rather than the same evening as a starred tasting menu. It functions as a serious midday or early evening address where the cooking rewards attention without requiring a formal occasion. Check our full Hong Kong restaurants guide for a complete map of where Ship Kee sits relative to the city's wider range, from neighbourhood Cantonese to the three-star rooms.

Cantonese Beyond Hong Kong

For readers tracking Cantonese cooking across the region, the tradition has seeded serious addresses in every major city. Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau represents one interpretation of the tradition at the premium end. Le Palais in Taipei demonstrates how the cooking travels when the sourcing and technique are handled with rigour. Bao Li Xuan and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Shanghai show the mainland's growing investment in the form. Ship Kee, however, operates from the source , Hong Kong remains the primary reference point for Cantonese cooking precisely because the tradition is embedded in the daily life of the city, not imported or interpreted from a distance.

Planning Your Visit

Ship Kee is located at 6/F, Hopewell Centre, 183 Queen's Road East, Wan Chai. For additional context on where to stay and what else to do in the city, see our full Hong Kong hotels guide, full Hong Kong bars guide, full Hong Kong wineries guide, and full Hong Kong experiences guide.

VenueCuisinePrice TierRecognitionFormat
Ship KeeCantonese$$Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024, 2025)Neighbourhood restaurant, upper-floor
Lung King HeenCantonese$$$$Michelin starredHotel fine dining
ForumCantonese$$$Michelin recognisedDestination restaurant
NeighborhoodInternational/European Contemporary$$RecognisedCasual contemporary

Frequently Asked Questions

Would Ship Kee be comfortable with children?

At the $$ price point and with a neighbourhood Cantonese format, Ship Kee is considerably more relaxed than the starred fine dining rooms. Hong Kong's mid-tier Cantonese restaurants generally accommodate families without difficulty , the cooking is approachable, the atmosphere is not built around hushed formality, and the dishes lend themselves to sharing across a table of mixed ages. That said, the sixth-floor location in a commercial building means there is no outdoor space or dedicated play area. If the priority is a family-oriented environment with more spatial flexibility, a ground-floor address in the same neighbourhood may suit better.

Is Ship Kee formal or casual?

Hong Kong's Bib Gourmand tier operates in a noticeably different register from the starred rooms. At addresses like Lai Ching Heen or T'ang Court, dress codes and service formality are part of the proposition. Ship Kee, at $$, sits firmly in the smart-casual category. The Michelin recognition is about cooking quality, not room atmosphere or service theatre. Business casual is appropriate; formal dress is not required and would likely feel out of register with the setting.

What should you order at Ship Kee?

Specific menu details are not confirmed in our database, so naming dishes with false precision would be misleading. What the Bib Gourmand recognition does confirm, across two consecutive years under chef Dee Lui, is that the kitchen's approach to core Cantonese technique clears Michelin's quality threshold consistently. In the Cantonese tradition, the reliable indicators of kitchen quality are the wok-fried dishes (where heat control is most visible), steamed preparations (where ingredient quality cannot be hidden), and roasted items. Ordering across those categories, rather than defaulting to the most familiar options, will give the clearest read on what the kitchen does well.

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