Most of Hong Kong's buzziest new restaurants land in Central or Causeway Bay, so it is a happy surprise to find one of the season's most fun openings sitting quietly over the water in North Point. Sichuan Verandah Hong Kong is a new Sichuan bistro on the second floor of Hyatt Centric Victoria Harbour, and it has a clever hook: you decide exactly how hot your dinner gets.
The pitch is bold Sichuan cooking — mapo tofu, dan dan noodles, smoked tea duck — served in a light, garden-like room with an outdoor terrace and wide Victoria Harbour (維多利亞港) views. The twist is a "Spice Challenge" card that runs from gentle to ferocious. Here's what it serves, where to find it, what it costs, and how the heat ladder actually works.
In This Guide
Why Sichuan Verandah Hong Kong Is Worth the Trip to North Point
North Point is having a quiet moment, and Sichuan Verandah is a good reason to head east. It opened on 14 April 2026 as the newest dining room at Hyatt Centric Victoria Harbour, and it does something most Sichuan restaurants in town do not: it leans into the harbour. Floor-to-ceiling windows and a connecting outdoor terrace give you skyline and water on one side and a wok-charred chilli haze on the other.
The room is the surprise. Sichuan cooking is usually served in busy, no-frills dining halls, but here the inspiration is a luminous glass conservatory — high ceilings, leafy touches and plenty of daylight. It feels more like a garden bistro than a fiery canteen, which makes the kitchen's punchy Sichuan (川菜) flavours land all the more sharply.
It also arrives at a lively moment for the city's kitchens, one we track in our guide to the new restaurants opening in Hong Kong and unpack in why Hong Kong's food scene is having a moment. A harbour-view Sichuan bistro inside a design-led hotel is exactly the kind of opening driving that energy.
Sichuan Verandah
A new harbour-view Sichuan bistro on the second floor of Hyatt Centric Victoria Harbour, serving bold, customisable-spice Sichuan cooking in a bright, garden-inspired room with an outdoor terrace.
What Is the Spice Challenge, and How Hot Can You Go?
This is the part that makes Sichuan Verandah more than another hotel restaurant. Every menu comes with a Spice Challenge card, a simple way to set your heat across five tiers. At the bottom sits "Baby Spice" for beginners and anyone who flinched the last time they met a peppercorn; at the top is "Spice Master", for the chilli-hardened who want the full numbing, tongue-tingling málà experience.
The point is inclusivity. Sichuan food has a reputation for being all-or-nothing, which can scare off a whole table when one person can't take the heat. By letting you dial most dishes up or down, the kitchen makes it easy to bring a spice-shy friend and still order the dan dan noodles you actually came for. It is a small idea, executed well.
Beyond the gimmick, the cooking is recognisably classic Sichuan with an elevated, casual-bistro touch. The flavours that define the cuisine — chilli oil, fermented broad bean paste, that signature numbing peppercorn — are all present. You are choosing the volume, not changing the song.
What to Order at Sichuan Verandah
This is sharing food, so build a table that swings from cold starters to a numbing centrepiece. The menu spans à la carte plates, weekday set lunches served on a Sichuan tray, and a weekend tapas-and-happy-hour list. Here's a sensible first run for two or three, with prices noted at launch.
| Dish | What it is | Price (HKD) |
|---|---|---|
| Sichuan cold noodles | Chilled, chilli-dressed noodle starter | $68 |
| Dan dan noodles | The classic; adjustable spice level | $78 |
| Spicy wontons in chilli sauce | Silky wontons in fragrant red oil | $88 |
| Mapo tofu | Soft tofu, Wagyu beef, fermented broad bean paste | $148 |
| Smoked tea duck | Tea-smoked duck, a Sichuan signature | $168 |
| Wok-fried spicy chicken | Crisp chicken; choose your heat | $198 |
| Poached sliced beef in chilli oil | Tender beef in a fiery broth | $228 |
A first-timer's order
- Sichuan cold noodles (HK$68) — a cooling, chilli-bright way to open before the heat builds.
- Mapo tofu (HK$148) — the benchmark dish, here with soft tofu and Wagyu beef; order it middle-of-the-dial first.
- Smoked tea duck (HK$168) — smoky and far gentler, a good counterweight to the chilli plates.
- Dan dan noodles (HK$78) — the one to test your Spice Challenge tier on.
- Poached sliced beef in chilli oil (HK$228) — the showpiece if your table can take the heat.
If you like to plan dinner around a view, the terrace tables are the ones to request, and the restaurant earns a place on any running list of the city's best Chinese restaurants in Hong Kong for its setting alone.
Where Is It, and How Much Does It Cost?
Sichuan Verandah sits on the second floor (West Tower) of Hyatt Centric Victoria Harbour, at 1 North Point Estate Lane in North Point (北角), on the eastern side of Hong Kong Island. The easiest approach is Exit A1 of North Point MTR, then a short two-to-five-minute walk down towards the harbourfront and the ferry pier. It is a genuinely waterside address, which is rare for the cuisine.
On price, this is a sit-down dinner rather than a quick bowl of noodles, but it is not punishingly expensive for a hotel room. À la carte plates run from about HK$68 for Sichuan cold noodles to HK$148 for the mapo tofu and HK$228 for the poached beef in chilli oil. Share a handful between two or three with drinks and a rough budget lands around HK$250–400 a head — treat that as an estimate and confirm the current menu when you book.
Before you go
A few things to plan around. The kitchen serves lunch 12pm–3pm and dinner 6pm–10pm daily, with a weekend happy hour 3pm–6pm on Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays — handy if you want tapas and a drink on the terrace between services. As with any new venue, hours and menus can shift, so reserve through TableCheck or on +852 3896 9900 and double-check timings, especially if you're travelling across the harbour for it.
Is Sichuan Verandah Worth It?
If you like Sichuan food but rarely get to eat it with a view, yes. The combination is the whole appeal: serious chilli-and-peppercorn cooking, a bright garden-style room, and Victoria Harbour out the window. The Spice Challenge is a smart touch that makes it an easy booking for a mixed group, from the heat-seekers to the cautious.
It won't replace a backstreet málà institution if raw authenticity over atmosphere is your only metric. But for a relaxed, good-looking dinner that takes Sichuan flavours seriously — and gives North Point a destination table worth crossing town for — Sichuan Verandah is a welcome arrival. Book a terrace table, set your tier, and order the duck to cool things down.
For the full menu, hours and bookings, see the restaurant's official Hyatt page, reserve via TableCheck, and read THE LOOP HK's opening report.
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