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Authentic Sichuan

Google: 4.1 · 262 reviews

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Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Sijie Sichuan Restaurant

CuisineSichuan
Executive ChefZhong Yong
Price≈$42
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

Sijie Sichuan Restaurant in Hong Kong serves authentic Sichuan Chinese fare with bold, balanced heat. Must-try dishes include Chongqing-style Poached Fish in chili oil, Sichuan Cold Noodles, and Sautéed Frog with spicy red chili. Operating as a private-kitchen style venue on the 10th floor of Bartlock Centre, Sijie offers family-style sharing, BYOB with no corkage, and strong value at HKD 201–400 per person. Expect bright chili aroma, numbing Sichuan peppercorn prickle, and tangy vinegar notes across communal plates. Reservations are advised for the modest 55-seat dining room where attentive, informal service keeps the focus squarely on flavor and convivial group dining.

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Sijie Sichuan Restaurant restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
About

Sichuan in the Vertical City: What Causeway Bay Reveals About Hong Kong's Mainland Appetite

The tenth floor of a Causeway Bay commercial block is not where most visitors think to look for serious regional Chinese cooking. But Hong Kong's relationship with mainland cuisine has never been direct. Since the 1980s, waves of Cantonese, Shanghainese, Hunanese, and Sichuan cooks have moved through the city, some chasing the export premium, others brought by corporate restaurant groups, others simply following the diaspora. What makes the current Sichuan moment distinct is that the city now has enough fluent eaters to support restaurants that do not soften the heat or simplify the flavour register for local palates.

Sijie Sichuan Restaurant sits squarely in that category. The Yiu Wa Street address puts it in the denser, less tourist-facing part of Causeway Bay, a neighbourhood where the ground floor might be a pharmacy or mobile phone shop and the restaurants occupy upper floors with no street presence beyond a lift lobby. This vertical geography is a reliable filter in Hong Kong: it tends to screen out the casually curious in favour of those who already know what they are looking for.

The Noodle Question: Where Sichuan Technique Concentrates

In Chengdu-rooted Sichuan cooking, noodle work is one of the clearest registers of kitchen discipline. Dan dan mian, zhong shui jiao, and the wider family of cold-dressed noodles require a different set of skills from the braised and wok-fired dishes that dominate the table. The interplay between a well-made noodle — its surface tension, its capacity to hold sauce without turning starchy — and the layered sauce underneath it (sesame paste, chilli oil, black vinegar, preserved vegetable) is where shortcuts become immediately legible to anyone who has eaten this food in its source region.

Restaurants that take noodles seriously in the Sichuan context tend to be the ones that also control their chilli oil production, keep their Sichuan peppercorn stock fresh enough to deliver genuine ma (numbing sensation) rather than a background tingle, and calibrate their sesame paste ratios by feel rather than by recipe card. These are markers of a kitchen that treats the repertoire as a living practice rather than a fixed menu. Chef Zhong Yong heads the kitchen at Sijie, and the restaurant's consistency across its OAD rankings , placing at number 49 in 2023 and holding at number 59 in both 2024 and 2025 in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Asia list , suggests a kitchen that is not coasting on novelty.

Reading the OAD Rankings in Context

The Opinionated About Dining survey draws from a base of frequent, often professional restaurant diners across Asia who submit structured assessments. Appearing in the top 60 of its Casual Asia category for three consecutive years places Sijie in a small peer group of Sichuan specialists operating outside mainland China that have earned sustained recognition from the kind of eaters who regularly compare them against source-region benchmarks. That peer group is smaller than it might appear: Hong Kong has dozens of Sichuan restaurants, but very few have generated the repeat attention from cross-border diners that a multi-year OAD presence implies.

For context, the restaurants in this tier are not competing with Hong Kong's French or Italian fine-dining sector, which includes multi-Michelin addresses like 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana, Amber, and Caprice, or with the more experimental end of the city's dining scene represented by venues like Ta Vie. Sijie operates in a different register entirely: the casual, high-repetition category where value is measured in execution fidelity and consistency rather than occasion and ceremony. Google reviewer data (4.1 across 255 reviews) supports a picture of a restaurant with a loyal returning base rather than a spike-and-fade novelty crowd.

Among dedicated Sichuan addresses in Hong Kong, Grand Majestic Sichuan occupies a higher-format, higher-price position. Sijie's casual designation places it closer to the everyday specialist tier, which in some ways demands more from the kitchen: there is less ceremony to absorb a slow service night, and less theatre to distract from a dish that misses its calibration.

The Sichuan Diaspora: Hong Kong Against Chengdu

Any serious assessment of Sichuan cooking outside mainland China involves an implicit comparison with what is available in the source city. Chengdu's specialist restaurants set a formidable standard: addresses like Yu Zhi Lan, Silver Pot, Xu's Cuisine, Fu Rong Huang, Ma's Kitchen, and Fang Xiang Jing operate in a city where the ingredient base is local, the competition is intense, and the customer base is uncompromising about authenticity. Hong Kong Sichuan restaurants face the additional challenge of sourcing: fresh Sichuan peppercorn quality, the right grades of doubanjiang (fermented broad bean paste), and house-made chilli oils all require deliberate procurement rather than the casual proximity to source that Chengdu kitchens enjoy.

Restaurants in other mainland cities have navigated this with varying success. Song and Yong in Guangzhou represent how Sichuan has taken hold in a Cantonese city with its own strong culinary identity. Hong Kong faces a similar dynamic, and the restaurants that earn recognition from OAD-calibre diners are typically those that solve the sourcing problem rather than working around it.

Practical: Planning Your Visit

Sijie operates lunch and dinner service Monday through Saturday (11:30 am to 2:30 pm; 6:30 to 10:30 pm) with dinner-only service on Sunday (6:30 to 10:30 pm). The Sunday lunch closure is worth noting for itinerary planning, particularly for visitors combining Causeway Bay dining with weekend retail or the Happy Valley Racecourse schedule. The Yiu Wa Street address is a short walk from Causeway Bay MTR station.

VenueCategoryFormatLunch ServiceRecognition
Sijie SichuanSichuan, CasualA la carteMon–SatOAD Casual Asia Top 60, 2023–2025
Grand Majestic SichuanSichuan, PremiumA la carte / banquetYesHigher-format tier
8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo BombanaItalian, Fine DiningTasting / a la carteYesMichelin Three Stars

For a broader view of where Sijie sits within Hong Kong's full dining spectrum, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide. The city's hospitality picture extends well beyond dining: our Hong Kong hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide map the wider picture.

What People Recommend at Sijie Sichuan Restaurant

With no published menu available for citation, the clearest guide to ordering comes from the restaurant's OAD recognition and the culinary logic of its category. OAD's casual Asia ranking rewards consistency and depth of execution rather than spectacle, which points toward the foundational dishes of the Sichuan repertoire: cold-dressed noodle preparations, mapo tofu calibrated for genuine ma-la balance, twice-cooked pork (hui guo rou), and the broader range of wok-fired dishes where heat control determines everything. Chef Zhong Yong's kitchen has held its OAD position across three consecutive years, which is a reasonable proxy for the kind of dish-level reliability that sustains repeat visits from experienced diners. For those eating Sichuan seriously for the first time in Hong Kong, the noodle section of any menu at this level is where the kitchen's sourcing and technique commitments are most legible.

Signature Dishes
Sichuan Cold NoodlesChongqing-style Poached Fish

Credentials Lens

A small peer set for context; details vary by what’s recorded in our database.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Casual
Best For
  • Group Dining
  • Casual Hangout
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Casual hole-in-the-wall with traditional-modern blend, cheerful and noisy atmosphere ideal for groups.

Signature Dishes
Sichuan Cold NoodlesChongqing-style Poached Fish