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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo

    210pts

    Michelin-noted Italian in Central worth the splurge.

    Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo

    Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo holds back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024–2025) for contemporary Italian cooking on On Lan Street in Central, Hong Kong. At the $$$ tier, it sits between the casual Italian options and the $$$$ luxury of 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana — making it the clearest choice for serious Italian in Central without the top-tier spend. Book two to three weeks ahead for weekends.

    Verdict

    Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo earns two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) for contemporary Italian cooking in Central, Hong Kong — a category with very few serious contenders at the $$$ price tier. If you are looking for Italian cuisine done with enough technical ambition to warrant a dedicated trip, this is one of the more focused options on On Lan Street. Book it for an intimate weekday dinner when the room is quietest and the kitchen has the most room to perform. The 4.6 Google rating across 41 reviews is modest in volume but consistent in sentiment, which at this price and format suggests a loyal rather than casual diner base.

    Why It Matters on On Lan Street

    On Lan Street in Central sits at a particular intersection of Hong Kong's dining geography: close enough to the Lan Kwai Fong energy to attract foot traffic, but far enough up the hill to draw diners who are making a deliberate choice rather than an opportunistic one. Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo occupies the second floor of On Lan 18, which already signals something about its positioning. You walk past the street-level options and climb to a room that has earned its audience. This is not a neighbourhood restaurant in the casual sense — it is a neighbourhood anchor in the sense that Central's professional and creative diners have a specific Italian address they return to. In a city where Italian restaurants tend to cluster at either the red-sauce end or the ultra-luxury end (see 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana at $$$$), Citrino occupies a middle ground that is harder to hold and arguably more useful for regular dining.

    Contemporary Italian in Hong Kong carries specific expectations: the city's diners are well-travelled, ingredient-literate, and compare everything against what they have eaten in Milan, Rome, or the Italian-inflected kitchens of Singapore. For a point of comparison outside Hong Kong, the contemporary Italian format Citrino operates in sits in the same category as Buona Terra in Singapore or Agli Amici in Rovinj , Italian cooking that treats the canon seriously without being locked inside it. That context matters when you are deciding whether the $$$ spend is calibrated correctly for what arrives at the table.

    Timing and the Room

    For a venue operating at this level in Central, the leading time to visit is a Tuesday or Wednesday evening, early in the service. Central restaurants at the $$$ tier tend to peak on Thursday and Friday, when the financial district crowd finishes late and arrives loud. Mid-week, earlier in the evening, the room on the second floor of On Lan 18 functions closer to its intended register , focused, unhurried, quiet enough for the kind of conversation that a meal at this price should support. Lunch is worth considering if your schedule allows: Central's lunch-format dining at the $$$ tier often delivers comparable kitchen output at a pace that suits the food better than a rushed Friday dinner service. Check current lunch availability when booking, as formats at this level in Hong Kong frequently shift seasonally.

    Visually, the second-floor setting on On Lan Street gives you distance from the street-level noise of Central without the clinical remove of a tower-floor dining room. The approach , a deliberate climb rather than a hotel lobby arrival , frames the meal before it starts. For diners who care about the full context of where they eat, that physical separation from the street is part of the decision.

    The Italian Contemporary Format in Hong Kong

    Contemporary Italian is a specific format that rewards some familiarity before you arrive. Unlike a trattoria or a classic ristorante, the contemporary Italian kitchen tends to work in tasting-menu or set-menu structures where the progression matters as much as any single dish. Citrino's Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 indicates consistent execution rather than a single exceptional season , Michelin Plate status at this tier signals that the kitchen delivers reliably against its own stated ambitions. That consistency is exactly what you are paying for at $$$. For comparison, Atto di Vito Mollica in Florence and Bracali in Ghirlanda operate in this same register of Italian contemporary , technically serious, ingredient-driven, format-conscious , and Citrino belongs in that conversation even operating outside Italy.

    For Hong Kong diners building out an Italian-focused itinerary, Citrino pairs logically with a broader Central evening: cocktails at one of the On Lan or Wyndham Street bars beforehand, and the restaurant as the anchor. For the full picture of what the city offers at this and adjacent levels, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, as well as our Hong Kong bars guide and our Hong Kong hotels guide for planning the wider trip.

    Practical Details

    Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo is at 2F, On Lan 18, 18 On Lan Street, Central, Hong Kong. Price range: $$$. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google rating: 4.6 (41 reviews). Booking difficulty is moderate , advance reservation recommended, particularly for Thursday through Saturday evenings. No booking method or hours are confirmed in our current data; contact via the restaurant directly or check current reservation platforms for availability. Dress expectations at this tier in Central generally lean toward smart casual as a minimum; see FAQ below for detail.

    Quick reference: 2F On Lan 18, 18 On Lan St, Central | $$$ | Michelin Plate 2024–2025 | Book ahead for weekends.

    More Italian Contemporary Worth Knowing

    If you are building a broader picture of where Citrino sits in the global Italian contemporary category, the following Pearl listings are useful reference points: L'Olivo in Anacapri, Amistà in Corrubbio, and Antonello Colonna Labico each represent the format operating in its home context. Within Hong Kong, Noi by Paulo Airaudo is the other Italian-influenced address worth knowing at the serious end of the market. For French Contemporary at a comparable price tier, Amber and Caprice are the standard-setters, though both operate at a higher price point. Ta Vie is the right comparison if Japanese-French innovation is what you are weighing against Italian contemporary. For something lighter before or after, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon at ifc mall is a short walk away in Central.

    FAQ

    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo? At the $$$ tier with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition, the value case is solid for contemporary Italian in Hong Kong. You are not paying Otto e Mezzo Bombana prices ($$$$ at 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana), but you are getting a kitchen that Michelin has assessed as consistently competent. If tasting-menu Italian is your format and you want to stay under the $$$$ ceiling, Citrino is the clearest option in Central.
    • What should a first-timer know about Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo? This is a second-floor restaurant on On Lan Street in Central , arrive on time, as the format is structured rather than drop-in. The cuisine is contemporary Italian, meaning the kitchen works with European technique and Italian product logic rather than red-sauce familiarity. First-timers who know Italian cuisine at the trattoria level should recalibrate expectations: this is a more composed, progression-based format. The 4.6 Google rating from a small but loyal reviewer base suggests consistent delivery rather than occasional brilliance.
    • What should I wear to Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo? No dress code is confirmed in our data, but at $$$ in Central Hong Kong with Michelin Plate recognition, smart casual is the practical baseline , clean, put-together, no sportswear. The neighbourhood and price tier both point toward an audience that dresses deliberately. If you are coming from an office or a hotel in Central, business casual translates directly. Err toward smart if unsure.
    • Can Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo accommodate groups? Seat count is not confirmed in our current data. For groups of four or more at a second-floor Central restaurant at this price tier, contact the venue directly in advance to confirm private or semi-private arrangements. Groups larger than six should treat availability as uncertain until confirmed. If group dining is your primary requirement and flexibility matters, Neighborhood at $$ offers a more relaxed format for larger tables.
    • How far ahead should I book Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo? Booking difficulty is moderate. For weekday dinners, one to two weeks ahead should be sufficient. For Thursday through Saturday, or if you are building a trip around a specific date, two to three weeks is the safer window. Michelin Plate restaurants in Central at $$$ fill faster than casual observers expect , the diner base is deliberate and repeat-booking. Don't leave it to the week before for a weekend slot.
    • Is Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo good for solo dining? Contemporary Italian at this format and price tier can work well for solo diners, particularly at a counter or smaller table if the room configuration supports it. The structured format of the menu means solo dining does not require a companion to make sense of the meal , you move through the progression at your own pace. Central is an easy neighbourhood to arrive in and leave from solo. If solo dining with a more social counter format is what you want, check whether seating options accommodate singles when booking.

    Compare Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo

    Getting a Table: Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Citrino da Yoshinaga JinboItalian Contemporary$$$Moderate
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)Italian$$$$Unknown
    Ta VieJapanese - French, Innovative$$$$Unknown
    FeuilleFrench Contemporary$$$Unknown
    The ChairmanChinese, Cantonese$$Unknown
    NeighborhoodInternational, European Contemporary$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Hong Kong for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo?

    At the $$$ price range and with back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, the format earns its keep if contemporary Italian tasting menus are your preferred format. The case for spending here is stronger than at unmarked competitors in Central at similar prices. If you want a la carte Italian flexibility, this is not the venue to default to — the contemporary format is structured and course-driven by design.

    What should a first-timer know about Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo?

    The venue sits on the second floor of On Lan 18, 18 On Lan Street in Central — factor in the building entrance when timing your arrival. It operates in the contemporary Italian format, which means a structured progression of courses rather than a traditional trattoria-style order. Two consecutive Michelin Plates signal consistent execution, so expectations for precision over casual comfort are appropriate here.

    What should I wear to Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo?

    No dress code is confirmed in available data, but a Michelin-noted contemporary Italian in Central Hong Kong at the $$$ price point sits in territory where neat, polished dress is the practical default. Avoid beachwear or activewear; business casual or above is a safe call. When in doubt, err toward what you would wear to a similar-tier European restaurant.

    Can Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo accommodate groups?

    Specific group capacity details are not available in the confirmed venue data. For groups of four or more at a second-floor Central restaurant in this category, contacting the venue directly well ahead of your preferred date is the right move — do not assume walk-in or same-week availability for larger parties. Booking lead times for groups at comparable Michelin-noted Central venues typically run two to four weeks.

    How far ahead should I book Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo?

    Book at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend tables; midweek evenings at a Tuesday or Wednesday slot are your best chance at shorter lead times. A Michelin Plate for two consecutive years in a high-demand Central location means availability tightens faster than most diners expect. Do not rely on walk-ins at this level.

    Is Citrino da Yoshinaga Jinbo good for solo dining?

    Contemporary Italian at this level typically runs structured tasting menus, which translate well for solo diners who want a focused, course-by-course experience without the social pressure of a shared-plates format. The $$$ price point is a commitment solo, so weigh it against what you are getting: two consecutive Michelin Plates and a precise contemporary Italian format in one of Central's more considered dining streets.

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