Hong Kong has a sweet tooth that spans two worlds: the warm, comforting Cantonese tradition of egg tarts, egg waffles and bowls of dessert-soup, and a fierce, fast-moving modern scene of patisseries, cake boutiques and plated dessert bars. The happy result is a city where you are never more than a short walk from something wonderful and slightly bad for you.
Here is how to eat your way through the best of it.
In This Guide
The local classics: tarts, waffles & dessert soups
Start with the canon. The egg tart is Hong Kong's defining pastry — a wobbly custard in either crisp shortcrust or flaky puff, best eaten warm. Tai Cheong Bakery built a legend on the shortcrust version; old cha chaan teng and Cantonese bakeries do their own takes everywhere. The egg waffle (gai daan jai) is the great street sweet, a honeycomb sheet of crisp-and-soft spheres eaten off a paper bag, or in modern shops folded around ice cream.
Then there are the Cantonese dessert-soups: warming bowls of black sesame soup, walnut soup, sweet tofu pudding (dau fu fa) and the iconic mango pomelo sago, served at dedicated dessert houses (tong sui shops) that are a beloved end to a Chinese meal. Chains like Hui Lau Shan put a mango-everything spin on the tradition.
The patisserie boom
Hong Kong's Western dessert scene has exploded into one of Asia's best. Elegant mille crêpe cakes — dozens of paper-thin pancakes layered with cream — became a citywide obsession, and you will find beautiful versions in cake boutiques across Causeway Bay, Tsim Sha Tsui and the malls. Japanese-influenced cake shops turn out impossibly neat slices; French-trained pâtissiers do proper tarts, éclairs and entremets.
The quality bar is high and the competition fierce, which keeps standards up. For a special occasion, a whole cake from a good boutique is a Hong Kong art form; for an everyday treat, a single perfect slice with a coffee is hard to beat.
Dessert bars & plated sweets
At the ambitious end, Hong Kong has embraced the dessert bar — sit-down spots where pastry chefs plate composed, restaurant-style desserts, sometimes as a multi-course tasting. These are destinations in their own right, ideal for a date or a celebration, blending technique, theatre and serious flavour. Soft-serve and gelato specialists, Taiwanese shaved-ice shops and Korean bingsu cafés round out the cold-sweet options, especially welcome in the sticky summer months.
It is the perfect beat-the-heat move: duck out of the humidity into an air-conditioned dessert room and order something cold and beautiful.
How to plan a sweet crawl
The fun of dessert in Hong Kong is how easily you can string it together. A Causeway Bay afternoon can take in a cake boutique, a tong sui shop and a soft-serve window within a few blocks; a Sham Shui Po wander rewards you with old-school bakeries and egg-waffle carts. Pair a dessert stop onto a meal, a shopping trip or a museum visit and the city's sweetness reveals itself.
Two rules only: eat the egg tart and egg waffle warm, and never be too full for a bowl of tong sui — the gentle, not-too-sweet Cantonese dessert-soups are the soul of the whole scene.