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CuisineZhejiang
Executive ChefPan Jiulong
LocationHong Kong, Hong Kong
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

A Michelin-starred Zhejiang and Shanghainese restaurant on Wan Chai's Lockhart Road, Zhejiang Heen is run by Hongkongers of Zhejiang descent and ranked #253 in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Asia for 2025. The menu moves between regional delicacies and Shanghai classics, with pre-order dishes like the seared swamp eel drawing particular attention from regulars and critics alike.

Zhejiang Heen restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
About

Wan Chai's Unlikely Address for a Regional Chinese Tradition

Hong Kong's Chinese fine dining scene has long been dominated by Cantonese. The city's Michelin constellation skews heavily toward dim sum masters and roast-meat institutions, with Zhejiang and Shanghainese cooking occupying a quieter corner of the recognition map. That makes the sustained critical attention on Lockhart Road in Wan Chai worth examining: a first-floor dining room above the street-level noise of one of Hong Kong's most commercially dense corridors, serving the cuisine of Zhejiang province to a clientele that includes both the diaspora community it emerged from and a wider audience that has followed the awards trail in.

Zhejiang Heen has held a Michelin star since at least 2024, and its trajectory on the Opinionated About Dining rankings tells a clear story of consolidating recognition: Highly Recommended in 2023, ranked #235 in 2024, and #253 across all of Asia in 2025. In a list that covers the full breadth of the continent's restaurant culture, maintaining a position in the top 300 across consecutive years is a meaningful signal. For context, it places Zhejiang Heen in a peer tier that includes Hong Kong's French fine dining rooms — Amber, Caprice — and modernist destination restaurants like Ta Vie, yet Zhejiang Heen operates at a substantially lower price point ($$), which makes it an anomaly in the city's critical upper tier.

The Architecture of a Zhejiang Meal

Zhejiang cuisine is among China's eight recognized culinary traditions, shaped by the freshwater lakes, rice paddies, and coastline of a province that includes Hangzhou, Ningbo, and Wenzhou. Its character tends toward lighter saucing than Shanghainese cooking, with a preference for steaming, poaching, and precise knife technique over heavy reduction. The cuisine prizes texture and natural sweetness, and its greatest dishes often look simpler than they are.

At Zhejiang Heen, the menu places Zhejiang delicacies alongside Shanghainese specialities, a pairing that reflects both the geographic proximity of the two traditions and the tastes of the restaurant's Zhejiang-descended ownership. The Shanghainese additions give the menu a familiar anchor for diners who know red-braised pork or hairy crab preparations, while the Zhejiang dishes offer something less commonly encountered in Hong Kong's restaurant landscape.

Thinking through the meal as a sequence: the early courses tend to reward restraint. Cold starters in both traditions are exercises in clean flavour , vinegared vegetables, marinated proteins, preparations that open the palate rather than saturate it. These dishes rarely photograph dramatically, but they set the register for what follows.

The mid-meal is where the kitchen's technique becomes most legible. The dish that recurs most consistently in critical commentary on Zhejiang Heen is the pre-order item listed as 'snatched tiger tails': seared swamp eel in a brown sauce. Swamp eel (huang shan or monopterus albus) is a staple of Jiangnan cooking , the broader culinary region encompassing Zhejiang and Jiangsu , and its preparation here is described as revealing precise knife work alongside a springy, resilient texture. That combination is not accidental: eel flesh is notoriously difficult to handle, and achieving the right resistance without toughness or softness requires a controlled cooking approach. The pre-order requirement is standard for dishes that need sourcing or advance preparation, and it signals that this is not a dish executed from standing inventory.

Buns and pastries complete the picture of what makes a Zhejiang and Shanghainese meal distinctive from Cantonese dim sum. The dough-based preparations in this tradition , soup dumplings, pan-fried buns, sesame-coated pastries , carry more weight and filling density than their Cantonese equivalents, and they function differently in the meal's arc, appearing as substantive courses rather than side notes. Zhejiang Heen's buns and pastries draw specific mention in OAD commentary, suggesting they are treated with the same attention as the main plates.

Seasonal dishes round out the menu's logic. Zhejiang cooking is highly seasonal in its sourcing, tied to the rhythms of the Yangtze delta , hairy crabs in autumn, bamboo shoots in spring, freshwater fish according to availability. For diners visiting Hong Kong between October and December, the seasonal menu at a restaurant of this tradition is likely to reflect the hairy crab season that defines the Jiangnan autumn calendar. Checking what is available at the time of a visit, rather than relying on fixed expectations, is how to engage with this type of menu correctly.

The Room and Who It's For

The dining room is described as traditionally furnished , a deliberate counter-signal to the minimalist renovation aesthetic that defines many of Hong Kong's newer Chinese fine dining addresses. Traditional furnishings in this context typically mean dark wood, round tables suited to shared dining, and a formal-but-familiar atmosphere that reflects the restaurant's origins in serving a community rather than performing sophistication for an international audience.

That community dimension matters for understanding what kind of restaurant this is. Zhejiang Heen was established by Hongkongers of Zhejiang descent, which places it in a specific category of diaspora-community restaurants that have, over time, accumulated critical recognition without altering their foundational identity. The service is described as friendly and unobtrusive , a quality that the OAD commentary flags explicitly and that distinguishes the dining experience from the more formal ceremony of rooms like 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana or Forum.

For diners interested in tracing the Zhejiang tradition at its geographic source, the comparison with Hangzhou's leading restaurants is instructive. Establishments like Ru Yuan, Longjing Manor, and 28 Hubin Road serve the same culinary tradition in its home province, often with access to hyperlocal ingredients , West Lake vinegar, Longjing tea, local freshwater fish , that Hong Kong kitchens must source from further afield. What Zhejiang Heen offers instead is the diaspora interpretation: a version of the tradition that has been maintained and refined in a different city, shaped by the community that carried it there. Both are worth experiencing as distinct expressions of the same culinary heritage. Other Hangzhou addresses worth noting in this tradition include Guiyu (Xihu), Hangzhou House, Jie Xiang Lou, Definitely Fresh, and Dining Room.

Planning a Visit

Zhejiang Heen is on the first floor of Zhejiang Industrial Building at 300-306 Lockhart Road, Wan Chai , a district well served by the MTR (Wan Chai station) and easily reached from most of Hong Kong Island. The restaurant operates seven days a week from noon to 11 PM, which means it accommodates both lunch and dinner without a mid-afternoon break, a practical detail for visitors building a day around multiple stops. The $$ price positioning makes it accessible relative to the Michelin-starred tier in Hong Kong, where three-star addresses like Caprice operate at a multiple of this price point.

The pre-order requirement for the seared swamp eel dish means advance communication with the restaurant is advisable before arriving. Given the OAD ranking and Michelin recognition, booking ahead rather than walking in is the sensible approach, particularly on weekends. Chef Pan Jiulong oversees the kitchen.

For a broader view of where this restaurant sits within Hong Kong's dining and hospitality scene, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, our full Hong Kong hotels guide, our full Hong Kong bars guide, our full Hong Kong wineries guide, and our full Hong Kong experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the signature dish at Zhejiang Heen?
The dish that appears most consistently in critical commentary is 'snatched tiger tails' , seared swamp eel in a brown sauce, noted for precise knife technique and a springy texture. It is a pre-order item, meaning it must be requested in advance rather than ordered on arrival. Under Chef Pan Jiulong, this preparation represents the kind of Zhejiang technique that earned the restaurant its Michelin star and repeated Opinionated About Dining recognition. The buns and pastries also receive specific critical attention and are worth ordering as part of any visit.
What kind of setting is Zhejiang Heen?
The room is traditionally furnished, reflecting the restaurant's origins as a community-rooted address rather than a designed-for-Instagram dining concept. In a Hong Kong context where many Chinese fine dining rooms have moved toward contemporary minimalism, the traditional approach here is a considered position. The price point is $$ , lower than the French and Japanese fine dining rooms that share its tier on the OAD Asia rankings , and the service style is described as friendly and unobtrusive. It sits in Wan Chai, one of Hong Kong Island's most accessible neighbourhoods. Diners who prefer the formal ceremony of rooms like Amber will find a different register here, but the awards record confirms the kitchen operates at a comparable level of seriousness.
Is Zhejiang Heen a family-friendly restaurant?
The format is well suited to groups and family-style dining. Shared plates are the natural mode of a Zhejiang and Shanghainese meal, and the traditionally furnished room with round tables supports that style of eating. The price range ($$ in Hong Kong terms) keeps the total bill manageable relative to the city's starred tier, which matters when booking for larger parties. The noon-to-11 PM daily hours mean it works for both lunch gatherings and evening family meals. That said, it is a sit-down restaurant with a serious kitchen, not a casual noodle house , children comfortable with a multi-course Chinese meal will find it appropriate; those expecting a simple, quick meal may find the pre-order dishes and pacing require more planning.
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