400 Years of Spice Trade on a Plate

Macau Food Guide

Macanese cuisine is one of the rarest fusion cuisines in the world — a living record of Portuguese, Chinese, Goan, African, and Malay cooking traditions meeting in a single city for four centuries.

Best egg tarts in Asia Taipa Village food trail From MOP 12 to MOP 800+

The Cuisine That Grew From Macau's History

You cannot understand Macanese food without understanding Macau's history. When Portugal established its trading post here in 1557, it became the first European settlement in East Asia — and a crossroads for the world's most lucrative spice routes. Ships from Lisbon, Goa, Malacca, Mozambique, and Japan all passed through.

The cooks who fed this community worked with whatever was available: Portuguese wine and olive oil, Chinese soy sauce and five-spice, Indian curry leaves and coconut milk, African bird's eye chilli, Malay lemongrass. Over centuries, these ingredients merged into a completely distinct cuisine that no longer closely resembles any of its sources.

This is what Jenice finds extraordinary about Macanese food. African chicken exists nowhere in Africa in this form. The egg tart is better than its Lisbon ancestor. Minchi is something no Portuguese person would recognise as Portuguese. These dishes are the physical evidence of 400 years of the world converging on a small peninsula.

Today, Macanese cuisine is on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list. There are fewer than a dozen restaurants in the world that serve it at a high level — most of them are in Macau.

8 Dishes You Must Eat in Macau

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African Chicken (Galinha Africana)

Portuguese colonial fusion

Grilled chicken in a piri piri-coconut-peanut sauce. A spice trade artefact that no longer exists in its original form in either Africa or Portugal.

MOP 90–130 Restaurante Litoral, Henri's Galley
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Macanese Egg Tart (Pastel de Nata)

Portuguese adaptation

Flaky puff pastry shell with rich caramelised custard. The Macanese version evolved from the Lisbon pastry and is now arguably better than the original.

MOP 12–18 Lord Stow's Bakery (Coloane), Margaret's Cafe e Nata
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Pork Chop Bun (猪排包)

Macau street food

Crispy bone-in pork chop stuffed in a crusty Portuguese-style roll. The definitive Macau street food. Queue is worth it.

MOP 40–55 Tai Lei Loi Kei (Taipa Village), cafe across from A-Ma Temple
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Minchi

Macanese home cooking

Minced pork with soy, bay leaves, and Worcestershire sauce over rice, topped with a fried egg. The Macanese comfort food you'll dream about after you leave.

MOP 70–95 Most Macanese restaurants, Riquexo restaurant
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Caldo Verde

Portuguese, adapted locally

Portuguese kale soup with chorizo. A simple peasant soup that tastes extraordinary when made well. Common on Macanese restaurant menus.

MOP 50–75 Litoral, Espaco Lisboa, most Macanese restaurants
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Dim Sum (Yum Cha)

Cantonese tradition

Har gow, siu mai, char siu bao, turnip cake. Morning teahouse culture that predates the casinos by centuries. Best for breakfast.

MOP 30–60 per dish Local Cantonese teahouses on the Peninsula, early morning
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Bacalhau (Salt Cod)

Portuguese, cooked Chinese-style

Salted cod prepared multiple ways — baked, fried in cakes, or in pastéis. The most Portuguese ingredient in Macau cuisine, adapted over centuries.

MOP 80–120 Litoral, A Lorcha, Portuguese-style restaurants
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Serradura (Sawdust Pudding)

Portuguese, perfected in Macau

Layers of whipped cream and crushed Marie biscuit crumbs. Ridiculously simple, ridiculously good. Named for its resemblance to sawdust.

MOP 20–40 Lord Stow's, most Macanese cafes and dessert shops

Where to Eat: Our Picks

These are the restaurants we return to. Not influencer-list places — the ones we actually recommend to people we care about.

Restaurante Litoral

Macau Peninsula · Macanese · MOP 200–350 per person

The best traditional Macanese restaurant on the Peninsula. Run by a local family, menu unchanged for decades. Order the African chicken and minchi. Book ahead for dinner.

Order: African chicken, bacalhau, caldo verde

Lord Stow's Bakery

Coloane Village · Pastry · MOP 12–18 per tart

The original. Andrew Stow's 1989 bakery that created the Macanese egg tart as we know it. Best eaten hot, standing outside. Go early.

Order: Pastel de nata, serradura

Tai Lei Loi Kei

Taipa Village · Street food / Cafe · MOP 40–80

The pilgrimage destination for pork chop buns. Also serves milk tea and simple Macanese snacks. The queue moves fast; it's worth it.

Order: Pork chop bun, milk tea

Fernando's Restaurant

Hac Sa Beach, Coloane · Portuguese / Macanese · MOP 250–450 per person

A Macau institution. Beachfront restaurant with long tables, whole grilled fish, African chicken, and sangria. Get there early; no reservations, first come first served.

Order: Whole grilled fish, African chicken, clams in garlic butter

Margaret's Cafe e Nata

Near Senado Square · Pastry / Cafe · MOP 12–25 per tart

The best egg tart on the Peninsula and the most convenient if you're doing the heritage walk. Often shorter lines than Lord Stow's. Also does milk tea and Portuguese pastries.

Order: Egg tarts (hot from the oven), milk tea

Espaco Lisboa

Coloane Village · Portuguese / Macanese · MOP 300–500 per person

Traditional Portuguese restaurant in a restored heritage building in Coloane. One of the most atmospheric dining rooms in Macau. Good for a slow dinner after a beach afternoon.

Order: Bacalhau, grilled fish, house wine

The Taipa Village Food Trail

Taipa Village, specifically the streets around Rua do Cunha and Rua Correia da Silva, is the best food street in Macau. A 2-hour morning walk here covers:

The whole trail can be done in two hours if you're just eating snacks, or extended to four hours with a proper sit-down lunch.

Macau Food — Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions