5 Best Restaurants in Macau, China

Beijing Kitchen

$$$ | Cotai

Inspired by its sister restaurant Made In China in the Grand Hyatt Beijing, Beijing Kitchen features northern Chinese cuisine. One of the signature dishes is the Peking duck, which is cooked in a wood-fired oven, roasting away the fat and leaving the skin crispy. The home-style pan-fried pork dumplings have a delicately thin skin. The open kitchen, exposed brick, high ceilings, dark-wood furnishings, and modern Chinese decor give the eatery a sophisticated yet comfortable atmosphere. The dessert menu contains Chinese sweets such as mango pudding and homemade ice cream.

Litoral

$$ | Inner Harbour

In a tasteful setting, with whitewashed walls and dark-wood beams, one of the most popular local restaurants offers authentic Macanese dishes that are simple, straightforward, and deliciously satisfying.

261 Rua do Almirante Sergio, Macau, Macau
853-2896–7878
Known For
  • must-tries such as tamarind pork with shrimp paste or Portuguese vegetable cream soup
  • bebinca de leite (coconut-milk custard) for dessert
  • a line out the door on weekends, when reservations are highly recommended
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

O Porto Interior

$$ | Inner Harbour

Come here for traditional Portuguese food that relies on meats, seafood, and heavy sauces. The grilled prawns, African chicken, and various curries are excellent. But it's the design that makes this place so special—picture an elegant two-story facade, brilliant white colonnades, and Iberian arches tiled with azulejos (glazed and painted Portuguese tiles) complemented by marble steps and bridges. Reservations are a good idea on weekends.

259B Rua do Almirante Sergio, Macau, Macau
853-2896–7770
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

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Pastelaria Koi Kei

$ | Downtown

Walking toward the Ruins of St. Paul's, you will likely be accosted by salespeople forcing Macanese snacks into your hands and enticing you to enter one of the street's pastelarias. Competition is fierce, but Pastelaria Koi Kei is one of the oldest and best.

70–72 Rua Felicidade, Macau, Macau
853-2893–8102
Known For
  • distinctive tan bags, often carried by Hongkongers back home
  • Portuguese custards
  • almond cakes, ginger candy, beef jerky, and egg rolls
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Cash is preferred

Portas do Sol

$$$ | Downtown

Despite the Portuguese name, exquisite dim sum and Chinese haute cuisine are Portas do Sol's specialties. Tiny, sweet Shanghainese pork buns, turnip cakes, and soup dumplings are some of the traditional offerings; there are also innovative new creations that look like miniature jewels on the plate. For dessert you can choose from a wide variety of Chinese sweets, including a fish-shaped chilled mango and coconut pudding, double-boiled papaya with snow fungus (a tasteless mushroom that becomes gelatinous when cooked), and deep-fried sweet milk with longan fruit. Reservations are a good idea on weekends, as this place fills up with Hong Kong and mainland visitors.

Macau, Macau
853-8803–3100
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted, Mon.–Fri. 11:30 am–2:30 pm; Sat.–Sun. 9:30 am–3 pm; daily 6:30–10:30 pm, Reservations essential