Restaurant in Guangzhou, China
Mamak
250ptsMichelin value, easy booking, Malaysian cooking.

About Mamak
Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024, 2025) make Mamak one of Guangzhou's clearest value propositions: Malaysian cooking by chef Kenneth Wan at the ¥ price tier, with easy booking and a 4.3 Google rating. For a Michelin-flagged meal that costs a fraction of the city's Cantonese fine-dining options, this is where to go.
A Bib Gourmand Malaysian Kitchen in Guangzhou — and One of the City's Best-Value Meals
At the ¥ price tier, Mamak in Guangzhou's Liwan District is one of the most cost-efficient ways to eat well in a city full of serious restaurants. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what regulars in the neighbourhood already know: chef Kenneth Wan is producing Malaysian cooking that Michelin's inspectors consider worth going out of your way for, at a price that won't require any budget justification. If you're deciding between this and a mid-range Cantonese meal nearby, the value calculus here is harder to argue with.
Mamak sits in Liwan District, one of Guangzhou's older commercial and residential quarters, away from the polished dining corridors around Tianhe. That location matters for your planning: this is not a restaurant you stumble into after a shopping afternoon on Beijing Road. You come here with intent, and that intent is rewarded. For explorers interested in how Malaysian cooking translates into a Chinese city context, Mamak is one of the few places in Guangzhou where that question gets a properly considered answer.
What Mamak Actually Is
Malaysian cuisine in mainland China is still a relatively thin category. Mamak's consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition places it in a small group of venues where Michelin has assessed the cooking as genuinely accomplished rather than merely adequate for its price point. The Bib Gourmand designation, for context, goes to restaurants where inspectors find good food at moderate prices — it is a different benchmark from the star system, but it is not a consolation prize. Earning it twice in succession, as Mamak has, signals consistency rather than a one-time peak.
Chef Kenneth Wan leads the kitchen. Beyond his name and the Michelin record, specific biographical details are not available here , but the two-year track record of independent recognition speaks to what is happening on the plate more reliably than any biographical summary would.
On the editorial angle of drink pairings: Mamak's database record does not list a wine program, and at the ¥ price tier a curated wine list would be unusual for this format. Malaysian cooking at this level is more naturally paired with teh tarik, fresh lime juice, or cold beer than with a sommelier-led list. If wine depth is your deciding factor for a Guangzhou evening, Taian Table or Rêver are the places to go. Mamak is the right choice when the food is the point and the price is a genuine consideration.
Practical Details
Booking is rated Easy, which makes Mamak a practical option even for same-week or same-day planning , a meaningful contrast to the longer lead times required at Jiang by Chef Fei or BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road). The address places it in Liwan District at 43 西南方向190米, postcode 510150. Hours, phone, and booking method are not listed in the current record , checking directly on arrival or via local mapping apps is the practical approach. Google reviews sit at 4.3 from 129 ratings, a solid score for a neighbourhood-scale venue at this price tier.
Dress code is not specified. At the ¥ price point, smart-casual is almost certainly more than sufficient. Solo diners will find this format direct: the price tier and accessible booking make it easy to plan a last-minute solo lunch or dinner without the friction of minimum spend requirements or large-group-skewed menus that affect some of the higher-end venues in the city.
Malaysian Cooking in Context
If you're travelling from elsewhere in China and want to benchmark Mamak against other serious Malaysian kitchens, the reference points are in Kuala Lumpur: Dewakan and Beta represent the fine-dining end of Malaysian cuisine. Mamak operates at a completely different price and format register, but the Bib Gourmand recognition means its cooking has been assessed by the same organisation that awards stars to those KL venues. That is a useful trust signal for travellers who want to know whether this is a serious kitchen or simply a neighbourhood convenience.
For the food-focused traveller building a Guangzhou itinerary, Mamak fills a specific gap. The city's Michelin-recognised dining skews heavily toward Cantonese , Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine and Chōwa represent that spectrum at the ¥¥¥ and innovative ends respectively. Mamak is where you go when you want a Michelin-flagged meal that costs a fraction of those options and comes from a completely different culinary tradition. That combination is genuinely rare in Guangzhou's current restaurant map.
Elsewhere in China, the broader picture of regional and international cooking recognised by Michelin includes venues like Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) in Beijing, 102 House in Shanghai, and Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu , all operating at higher price tiers. For Guangzhou specifically, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing give a sense of the wider Pearl River Delta dining scene. Ru Yuan in Hangzhou offers another regional reference point for travellers building a multi-city picture.
For a fuller picture of what Guangzhou has to offer beyond Mamak, see our full Guangzhou restaurants guide, our Guangzhou hotels guide, our Guangzhou bars guide, our Guangzhou wineries guide, and our Guangzhou experiences guide.
The Verdict
Book Mamak if you want Michelin-flagged cooking at a price point that leaves room in your budget for everything else. Two consecutive Bib Gourmand awards at the ¥ tier make this one of the clearest value calls in Guangzhou's recognised dining scene. Easy to book, affordable, and producing Malaysian cooking that Michelin inspectors have found worth the trip twice over , the decision is not complicated.
FAQ
Is Mamak good for solo dining?
- Yes, Mamak is a practical solo dining choice. The ¥ price tier means there's no minimum spend pressure, and the Easy booking rating means you can plan on short notice rather than committing weeks ahead.
- Malaysian cooking at this format typically works well for solo diners , portions are generally dish-by-dish rather than designed around large-group sharing, so you can order to your own appetite without waste or awkwardness.
- If you're solo and want a higher-spend evening with a wine program to explore, Taian Table at ¥¥¥¥ is the counter option in Guangzhou , but for a low-friction, Michelin-recognised solo meal in Liwan District, Mamak is the call.
Compare Mamak
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mamak | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | ¥ | — |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Taian Table | Michelin 2 Star | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Chōwa | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Teochew Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Rêver | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mamak good for solo dining?
Yes — at the ¥ price tier with easy booking, Mamak is a low-friction solo meal in Guangzhou. Malaysian dishes like noodle and rice plates tend to be naturally solo-friendly formats, and you won't be paying a cover charge that punishes single diners. Two consecutive Bib Gourmand awards (2024, 2025) mean the quality-to-spend ratio holds up whether you're a table of one or four.
What is Mamak known for?
Mamak is primarily known for Malaysian in Guangzhou.
Where is Mamak located?
Mamak is located in Guangzhou, at China, Guangdong Province, Guangzhou, Liwan District, 43, 西南方向190米 邮政编码: 510150.
How can I contact Mamak?
You can reach Mamak via the venue's official channels.
Recognized By
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