The effects of dietary metabolizable energy (ME) and crude protein (CP) on the growth performance, meat quality, and cecal microbiota of Taihe Silky Fowl (TSF) during fattening were investigated. In total, 900 twelve-week-old female fowl were randomly allocated to 9 treatments (5 replicates per group, 20 fowl per replicate), and were fed a 3 × 3 factorial arrangement of treatments diets (ME: 11.30, 11.93, or 12.56 MJ/kg; CP: 15%, 16%, or 17%). As ME increased, the average daily feed intake (ADFI, P<0.001), feed conversion ratio (FCR, P<0.001), pectoral and thigh shear forces (P<0.05), pectoral and thigh muscle fiber diameter (P<0.001) decreased significantly, while muscle fiber density increased (P<0.001). Pectoral muscle fiber diameter was lower and muscle fiber density higher at 16% CP than 15% or 17%. As ME increased, pectoral crude fat content increased significantly (P = 0.007). Pectoral crude protein, total amino acid (TAA), and essential amino acid (EAA) content were higher at 15% dietary CP than 16% or 17%. As ME increased, pectoral inosine monophosphate (IMP, P = 0.006), uridylic monophosphate (UMP, P = 0.003), guanylic monophosphate (GMP, P = 0.009), and adenosine monophosphate (AMP, P <0.001) decreased significantly, while hypoxanthine riboside (HxR, P = 0.045) increased. As dietary CP increased, IMP (P = 0.019), AMP (P <0.001), and HxR (P = 0.024) increased significantly. Cecal microbiota composition varied with dietary ME: 12.56 MJ/kg ME increased the abundance of Bifidobacteriaceae, and 15% CP increased that of Paraprevotella. These findings suggest that 12.56 MJ/kg dietary ME and 15% CP can enhance growth performance, improve meat quality by reducing shear force, enhancing flavor and nutritional value, and benefit for intestinal microbiota in fattening TSF.