If you are preventing user access to certain resources (files) from a security perspective the correct way is a minifilter. This is because it's the only way you are sure that the user cannot access the filtered resources.
If you use API hook you can intercept calls at kernel32.dll (CreateFileW, FindFirstFile, etc., etc.) but an attacker can uses Native API (ntdll.dl). Of course, you can intercept at Native level (it's more difficult since it's undocumented) but attackers can use differents APIs at kernel switch level. At that level it's not portable to hook. It's almost impossible to prevent creative attackers to access to resources using API hook, that's why it's not recommended for security software.
In my opinion, API hooking is a good option for monitoring. If you want to see what an application is doing, it's very good to use API hook since you can intercept higher level functions than in kernel-mode.