Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Baked
100ptsShorefront Artisan Baking

About Baked
Ranked 98th on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining Casual Asia list, Baked is a French-trained bakery in Repulse Bay helmed by chef Grégoire Michaud. Positioned against Hong Kong's broader café and artisan-bread scene, it brings rigorous European technique to one of the city's most relaxed shorefront settings. The address alone places it at a comfortable remove from the Central rush.
A Shorefront Setting That Changes the Calculus
Repulse Bay sits roughly 30 minutes south of Central by taxi, and the distance matters. Hong Kong's premium dining conversation tends to cluster around Wan Chai, Central, and the hotel corridors where Amber, Caprice, and 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana set the tone for four-figure tasting menus and white-tablecloth formality. Repulse Bay operates on a different register entirely. The approach along Beach Road opens onto one of the territory's few genuinely usable beaches, and the commercial strip beside it, where Baked occupies Shop 113 on Level 1 of 28 Beach Road, carries a rhythm that is rare in a city that rarely slows down. That physical context is not incidental to understanding what the bakery represents within Hong Kong's food scene.
Where Artisan Baking Sits in Hong Kong's Culinary Hierarchy
The city's serious dining conversation has long been dominated by the fine-dining tier, with venues like Ta Vie defining what precision and seasonal sourcing look like at the leading of the market. But a quieter, more durable shift has been taking place at street level. Across the past decade, Hong Kong's café and artisan-bakery segment has moved from novelty to a competitive category in its own right, with trained pastry professionals and European-lineage bakers bringing genuine technical ambition to formats that seat dozens rather than hundreds.
Baked enters that scene with meaningful credentials behind it. Chef Grégoire Michaud's French training places the operation in the same lineage as the artisan-bread revival that reshaped European bakery culture over the past two decades, a movement that prizes long fermentation, sourcing transparency, and minimal intervention over the efficiency-first output of industrial production. That tradition now has a foothold on the south side of Hong Kong Island. For context on how the city's casual-dining bakery tier has developed, our full Hong Kong restaurants guide maps the broader picture.
The Sustainability Frame: Craft Baking and Conscious Production
The global artisan-bakery movement did not arrive at its current form purely through taste. Waste reduction, shorter supply chains, and the ethical sourcing of grain have become defining characteristics of the bakeries that sit at the category's more considered end. In cities where this approach has taken root most deeply, the logic is consistent: fewer ingredients, handled with greater attention, reduce both waste and the dependence on commodity supply chains that prioritise volume over quality.
French-trained bakers operating in the European tradition have historically been closer to this philosophy than their industrial counterparts, in part because classic bread-making requires relatively little and rewards precision heavily. Long-fermented doughs, for instance, make better use of flour by breaking down complex starches over time, which also improves digestibility and shelf life, reducing the likelihood that baked goods go to waste before they are consumed. At the scale of a single-location bakery in a beach-adjacent setting, that kind of approach is also operationally coherent: production can be calibrated to daily demand rather than the surplus logic of a high-volume urban operation.
For comparison, the approach taken by 26 Grains in London and Radio Bakery in New York illustrates how this philosophy operates in other major cities: grain sourcing transparency, short ingredient lists, and format discipline that keeps the menu tight enough to avoid the accumulation of end-of-day excess. Arsicault Bakery in San Francisco and b. patisserie, also in San Francisco, represent how French technique applied to artisan production has found durable audiences in competitive markets. In Scandinavia, Andersen Bakery in Copenhagen and Bageriet Benji have pushed grain provenance and seasonal adaptation even further.
Baked's position within Hong Kong's version of this conversation is reinforced by its 2025 Opinionated About Dining Casual Asia ranking, where it placed 98th. OAD's methodology relies on the assessments of experienced eaters rather than institutional reviewers, which means the recognition reflects sustained quality across multiple visits rather than a single evaluation moment. For a single-location bakery operating outside the city's primary dining districts, that kind of sustained peer recognition carries weight.
The Repulse Bay Address and How to Use It
Logistics matter here. Repulse Bay is accessible by bus from Central (routes 6, 6A, and 6X connect the area regularly) or by taxi in roughly 25 to 35 minutes depending on traffic. The neighbourhood draws a mix of expatriate residents, weekend beach visitors, and those specifically making the trip for the food and café options clustered along Beach Road. The Level 1 location within the 28 Beach Road development places Baked alongside a curated selection of other food and lifestyle operators, which means it functions as a destination in a broader half-day itinerary rather than a standalone detour.
The bakery sits in a different competitive conversation than Bakehouse, which has established itself as a Central-area anchor for the city's artisan-bread audience. The two operations serve broadly similar trained palates but from different vantage points in the city, with Repulse Bay's pace and setting giving Baked a character that is harder to replicate in a higher-density neighbourhood.
For those planning a broader visit to the south side, the area pairs well with a walk along the beach and the surrounding residential streets, which carry a quieter residential character than most of Hong Kong's commercial zones. If you are building an itinerary around Hong Kong's food and drink scene more broadly, our full Hong Kong bars guide, our full Hong Kong hotels guide, our full Hong Kong wineries guide, and our full Hong Kong experiences guide cover the rest of the city's premium options in depth.
Globally, the artisan bakery category has developed a recognisable set of reference points. Beyond the examples already mentioned, Arôme Bakery in London, Antica Focacceria San Francesco in Palermo (operating in a very different, centuries-old register), and Bakehouse within Hong Kong itself all illustrate how diverse the category has become in terms of format, tradition, and sourcing philosophy. Baked sits within this international peer set, occupying a specific corner of it defined by French technique, an accessible setting, and a recognised place in Asia's casual dining rankings.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try dish at Baked?
Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data, and given how bakery menus shift with season and supply, any fixed recommendation risks being out of date quickly. What the OAD Casual Asia ranking (98th in 2025), the French-trained background of chef Grégoire Michaud, and the bakery's positioning in the artisan-bread tradition collectively suggest is that the core bread and viennoiserie output is the category where craft and technique converge most clearly. That is where the production philosophy is most legible, and it is the logical starting point for a first visit. For the most current menu, visiting in person or checking directly at the shop at 28 Beach Road remains the reliable approach.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Hong Kong
- AmberAmber holds three Michelin stars, a Green Star, and a 97-point La Liste score — making it the most credentialled French fine-dining address in Hong Kong. Chef Richard Ekkebus runs a tasting menu that fuses Japanese and French technique with strict sustainable sourcing. Book at least eight weeks ahead; dinner availability is near impossible without significant advance planning.
- CapriceCaprice holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 99 points, making it one of the most credentialled French restaurants in Asia. On the sixth floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, it delivers a structured à la carte menu from Chef Guillaume Galliot alongside floor-to-ceiling harbour views. Book four to six weeks out for dinner; lunch offers a quieter entry point at the same kitchen level.
- The ChairmanThe Chairman is the strongest case for contemporary Cantonese cooking in Hong Kong and, at $$ pricing, one of the best-value highly awarded restaurants in Asia. Ranked #2 in Asia's 50 Best (2025) and holding a Michelin star, it demands serious advance booking — online only, on specific days — but delivers an experience that justifies the effort for any serious food traveller.
- Ta VieTa Vie holds three Michelin stars and a top-25 OAD Asia ranking, making it one of Hong Kong's most credentialed restaurants. Chef Hideaki Sato's seasonal tasting menus express Japanese ingredient philosophy through French technique in a deliberately quiet, intimate room. Book as early as possible — availability is near impossible, dinner only, Tuesday and Thursday through Sunday.
- WING RestaurantWING ranks #3 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holds the Gin Mare Art of Hospitality Award — two of the more credible signals that both the kitchen and the front-of-house are performing at a serious level. Chef Vicky Cheng's seasonal tasting menu works across China's eight regional cuisines with technical precision. Booking is Near Impossible, so plan well ahead; Friday lunch is the only daytime option.
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)The only Italian restaurant outside Italy with three Michelin stars, Otto e Mezzo has held that distinction continuously since 2012. Book the tasting menu, time your visit for truffle season (October–December) if possible, and plan well ahead — tables are genuinely difficult to secure. At the $$$$ price point, it is the reference address for Italian fine dining in Hong Kong.
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