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Restaurants and food stalls in Bangkok


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Ok, this tends to be on the total low end of food discussed on this site, but I just have to share.

My last experience there was back in 1999, but I've been assured by my friends in Bangkok that the deal is still basically there and the same. Daidomon is a huge chain in Thailand, basically a sit down place where you sit at a table with electric grills and the bring you raw meat. You cook it to your liking, dip it in one of their suprisingly good sauces, and munch away.

So here's the deal they had (and apparently still do):

All you can eat.... for 120 baht. That's about three US dollars.

Think there's a catch? There isn't. But there is a technique to it. You see, in addition to your waitress that only brings you your beer (more on this later) there's basically a team of runners whose job it is to run meat to your table. Most of these are 14-15 year old boys who will get really tired of running meat to a table of demanding diners.

Here's the secret. Bring a 500 baht (about 12 bucks) bill with you. Ignore the first person with the meat delivery, that's your complete starter set.. After the initial assault you can request specific meats. The kid that brings you this order... give him the 500 baht, and say "that's for you" (in Thai of course). Trust me, the people at the tables around you are going to wonder whether you are some sort of VIP with all the meat that will be piling up at your table.

Oh... the beer... apparently this deal isn't available at certain locations, but for another 120 baht you can get unlimited refills of Carlsberg beer.

Honestly, not the best way you could spend your eating time in Thailand, but with a group of friends, it's a story generator. Trust me :raz:

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Thanks for the mention. I haven't spent enough time in Bangkok to recommend specific vendors--generally I'll try something new, become hooked, and then not have time to try enough versions of it to make a real recommendation. I do recommend picking up the book Thai Hawker Food if you don't already have it--it should be easy to find in a gift shop.

Matthew Amster-Burton, aka "mamster"

Author, Hungry Monkey, coming in May

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I can think of a couple from the last time I was in Bangkok a couple years ago. If you are going to be having a few upscale eating experiences I can definitely recommend the traditional Thai restaurant in the Grand Hyatt Erawan. Admittedly it is a little pricey, but the last time I heard they were doing an all-you-can-eat deal. A set price (can't remember how much but not unreasonably high) and they bring you a multi-page, beautifully bound menu which you can order anything from, as many times as you wish. The red roast duck curry with pea eggplants and the dry-fried catfish salad were my favourites. I think they are still doing this as a lunch special. Although I can't recall the name of the restaurant, it is the one on the same level as the hotel's swimming pool.

There was a tiny, faded-gentry type of place called 'The Lemongrass Restaurant' in Soi 24 on Sukhumvit Rd, where we lived in the mid 80's that was still there on my last trip, though I didn't eat there. It was an exquisitely converted private home full of antiques and flowers, with a bilingual menu (english and thai versions on facing pages ). I can't guarantee it's still there now, but the food was quite good. I particularly remember a dish where a chicken tenderloin was pincered in a bamboo stick split lengthwise, spread with a swwet-hot paste of tomato and birdseye chillies, and grilled over charcoal until smoky and juicy.

(Edit: I think Robert Brown posted about this one in another thread on May 29, oops!.)

For a slightly kitschy and more basic experience, if you like seafood, the "If It Swims" restaurant on Sukhumvit Rd is a good place. I can't remember which Soi it's in, but all the taxi/tuktuk drivers knew it as it had an absolutely GIGANTIC neon signboard (bigger than Coke's!) with a rock lobster on it, with "If It Swims, We Have It" written on it. It is an aeroplane-hangar-sized space with a fresh-food market all down one wall. You grab a shopping cart and a buch of plastic bags and choose what flopping-fresh fish or fish parts you want, which dewy, bloom-fresh vegetables you want, what perfumy tropical fruits you would like for dessert, or even if you want any of the huge selection of sushi varieties or assortments they offer. The other side of the counter is an enormous kitchen filled with people wearing chef hats (20-50+), all serving, prepping, cooking or making sushi. Next you take your cartload to the checkout and pay for your food.

The rest of the space is taken up with rows of dining tables. As you leave the checkout a waitress excorts you to a table and offers a menu stating a list of ways your raw materials can be prepared for your dinner, and the small cooking fees charged. Everything is impeccably fresh - one of our regular favourites was always fried rice prepared with a scoopful of freshly-shelled raw crab meat that we kids were allowed to select.

Sigh. Now I'm hungry.

Edited by Ondine (log)

" ..Is simplicity the best

Or simply the easiest

The narrowest path

Is always the holiest.. "

--Depeche Mode - Judas

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When I was in Chiang Mai a couple of years back I had a few very nice meals at a restaurant called the Rain Forest (the restaurant was recommended by several Thai people when I asked them where to go for the best meal in Chiang Mai). Wonderful place, located outside the city center (take a tuk-tuk or a bicycle to get there), frequented only by only by local Thais (at least when I was there I was the only Farang).

All of the dishes I had were great, the thing i recall the most about the place was the quality and the abundance of the "Thai Food" ingredients such as Thai and Holy Basil, Lemongrass, Peppercorns etc. Upon leaving the place I was very happy to have just had an outstanding meal, but I was also wondering why I can't get a Thai meal outside of Thailand of the same quality(or close to it) that the Rain Forest serves( my view is that it is all up to the quality and freshness of the Thai herbs).

If you are in Chiang Mai it is definitely worth a visit.

The restaurant section in Chiang Mai News has the address for the restaurant( 181 Chiang Mai - Hod Rd., T. Nong Khwai.

Tel: 053441908, 053432319)

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  • 1 month later...

The last time we were in Bangkok, we ate beautifully, but largely at hotels: the Sala at the Oriental, the different restaurants at the Regent... Where do Thais eat, elegantly? Are there some "local" restaurants, the Thai equivalent of French and American bistro, but serving Thai food?

We'll be there again in mid-November, this year.

Thank you. Danielle

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Frankly when it comes to food in Bangkok, if you must eat "elegantly" then you will sacrifice in terms of quality. I have nothing at all against upscale, but my experience in Bangkok is that you must choose --- mediocre, occasionally pretty good, and also quite often pretty bad, in upscale surroundings OR incredible mind-blowing flavors in surroundings that vary from on-the-street (literally) to just-regular-decor restaurant. When we lived in Bangkok it just got to the point where if we wanted upscale surroundings we resigned ourselves to NOT eating Thai.

Upscale Thai restaurants outside of hotels that come to mind are Cafe Siam, Siam Elephant (Sathorn Soi 1), Blue Elephant, Baan Khanitha (2 branches). Blue Elephant is at least in a lovely restored building and I had a salmon laab there once that was quite fine. Cafe Siam unacceptably mediocre esp. given the prices (and a piddling selection of Thai dishes), Siam Elephant has some great dishes (deep-fried softshell crab in black pepper sauce, a couple of the curries, and ALL the salads -- and the ice creams) and the rest, appetizers esp, are sub-par. Though this place would not be on a par, in terms of atmosphere, with the places you mention in your post. Baan Khanitha consistently mediocre, not bad not great.

For upscale in hotels I vote for Celadon at the Sukhothai.

But if you really want really good Thai food you need to go downmarket a bit. Thais who eat "elegantly" usually do so at private dinner parties (having a maid who often cooks is not at all uncommon for middle class and wealthier Thais) and at restaurants serving other, usually Western, cuisines. And all Thais place a premium on taste and quality --- so more often than not when a wealthy Thai wants to eat Thai you'll find him or her in a favorite open-air noodle hut or modest restaurant.

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Quite honestly this is rather easy....

Just wander the streets, if you don't want to eat food from hawker stalls (see 101023049 threads about this) look for restaurants.... err how do I describe this... basically carved out of the base of large concrete buildings.

Look for:

1) Enough flourescent lighting to give you an artificial tan.

2) Nasty faded posters on the walls (special bonus if it's the Coca Cola poster of the last Miss Thailand that won Miss Universe about 10 years ago... Porntip something... always seemed to be a common factor for places like this that I have had great meals in... look for the crown).

3) Tons of Thais inside. Thai people will downright refuse to eat at a restaurant where the food is not really really good, at least when it comes to Thai food. All bets are off when it comes to other places coughPLANETHOLLYWOODcough.

Don't know whether this is more downmarket than you are thinking, but trust me, it works.

edit: Forgot the most important part... that the restaurant is actually walled in at the front (you know, doors and windows and a/c... for a lot of Thais, that's considered elegant enough)/

Edited by branch (log)
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I would agree with "ecr" that the best Thai food is not to be found in elegant surroundings. In fact, I am not a great fan (except for occasional special events) of royal Thai cuisine. Everyday food, however, is as good as any food anywhere.

There are literally thousands of great places under bridges, on the banquette, anywhere else you look. Fortunately for you, there are also some good indoor restaurants, though they are only ordinary in decor.

Saturday evening, I had dinner with friends at one of my favorite restaurants of this type. The Orient is a restaurant in Sukhumvit Soi 49 (right where the road does the S bend). It is reasonably attractive, very reasonably priced, and of excellent quality. I particularly recommend:

- soft shell crab stir-fried with garlic and black pepper (bpu nim tod gratiem prik thai)

- crabmeat in a yellow curry sauce (bpu pat pong kari)

- any soup, but especially dtom klong with bpla krob (this is a spicy sour soup with crispy fish that I like better than dtom yam)

- a crispy morning glory salad that is to die for (yam phak bung krob)

- fried crumbled catfish salad with green mango relish (yam bpla duk foo with yam mamuang priaow)

Everything I've had there has been very good.

Also, I really like Taling Pling, which is in a soi off of Silom behind the Indian temple. My favorite thing there is the stir-fried gourd leaves (pak damlung) with minced pork (moo sap).

Again, you really will eat best if you just head out into the streets, but you should be very well fed at either of these.

Oh, one other thought. By far the best Isaan/Lao food comes from the street, but for an introduction, you could do much worse than Vientiene or Baan Lao, both in Suk Soi 36 or 38 (can't remember which). Near there is Hualomphong Food Station, about which I have heard good things, but I haven't tried it. (Don't be confused and think this should be near the train station because of the name. Hualomphong train station and the restaurant are nowhere near each other.) These would be good places to try Isaan/Lao food for the first time, but only the streets will do you right.

If you haven't done it before, I would also recommend a trip out to Aw Dtaw Gaw, the major food market across the street from Chatuchak Market. Take your camera, as it's a great visual experience.

If you want more input, please let me know, but this should be a good start.

Take to the streets and enjoy,

Jim

Jim Jones

London, England

Never teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and frustrates the pig.

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And in addition to all the other's recommendations, you might also want to try the 6th floor Food Center at MBK. A mind boggling array of food in one location.

Personally I would eat the street food or at the small thai restaurants where the locals eat. It does take me 2 days to get used to the level of Chilli heat.

I fry by the heat of my pans. ~ Suresh Hinduja

http://www.gourmetindia.com

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jrufusj --- do try Hualomphong Station, IMO it's on the same level as the other Lao/Issaan places.

Another recommendation (not sure if this is appropriate as the OP wanted upscale surroundings but...) --- for lunch, the tented food market down the soi directly behind the Sindhorn Building (Wireless Road, next to the US embassy). Just follow the crowds of office workers around noon. Graze to your heart's delight, and if you're lucky the 2 ladies selling young coconut pie will be in attendance.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I will be in Thailand next montha nd am anticipating trying out many of the restaurants patroned by locals as well as street food. How easy is it to order food and understand what's going on if I don't speak the language? In particular, I am very interested in eating at the street food stands but I am concerned that I may not understand or be able to converse with the merchants. Any advice?

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I will be in Thailand next montha nd am anticipating trying out many of the restaurants patroned by locals as well as street food.  How easy is it to order food and understand what's going on if I don't speak the language?  In particular, I am very interested in eating at the street food stands but I am concerned that I may not understand or be able to converse with the merchants.  Any advice?

cwyc:

Please don't be intimidated. You'll find it's all much easier than you think.

One recommendation I would make is to look for a book with a title that is something like Thai Hawker Food. If you can't find it before you get to Thailand, you should be able to find it at any Bookazine, Asia Books, or Kinokuniya bookstore in Bangkok. Asia Books is ubiquitous, so you should be close to one of their shops no matter where you may be staying.

The book is slim...maybe 60 to 80 pages...white softcover with graphic art type decoration...relatively small size...but not quite small enough to fit in your back pocket.

The book isn't perfect, but it does a good job of surveying the major street foods, along with giving Thai names and a few tricks for identifying what kinds of food each vendor is likely to have (by the arrangement of the vendor's stall or the apparatus the vendor uses).

Once you get that far, all you really need to do is point. To be perfectly polite, you can say "Kaw (insert name of food) noi khrap." Replace the word khrap with kha if you are female. I'll not try to describe tones, as vendors will get what you mean even without the right tones, as long as you keep your vocabulary and sentence structure simple. Context goes a long way.

On the other hand, when you order coffee, you would say "sai nom" to ask for milk to be put in. However, if you say it with the wrong vowel length and tones, it can also mean "shake your breasts". Don't worry, when a foreigner makes an effort at Thai, it is very much appreciated and no one will be offended.

If this weren't a family forum, I'd tell you about the first time a bunch of young male Thai office workers took a business trip to Tokyo and were taught to order coffee in Japanese. That was a shocked group of young men!

Enjoy,

Jim

Jim Jones

London, England

Never teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and frustrates the pig.

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It is *very* easy to get along in Thailand without Thai if you set aside your worries and, perhaps most important, smile. Thais are, in general, some of the most welcoming people and earth and they love to see farang (that's you -- a foreigner) enjoy Thai food! When buying food on the street (or anywhere that there's no English menu, for that matter), just smile and point, hold up your fingers to show quantity, and smile. If the vendor asks something and you don't understand him or her, shrug and smile. Esp. on the street, no mistake will be too costly --- a stick of muu yang (grilled pork) will set you back only 5 or 7 baht.

Many restaurants have English menus --- otherwise smiling and pointing works well there too.

Relax and enjoy yourself in one of the world's food hotspots (IMO).

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I was just looking for the book on amazon and didn't find it there.  Did find however, a book called Vatch's Thai Street Food.  Have you seen this one before?  Is it worth getting?

cwyc:

When I wroter the last note, I was in Tokyo. I'm now back in Seoul in my library. The exact name of the book I recommended is Thai Hawker Food. No specific author is credited. The book was published in 1993 in Thailand by Book Promotion & Service Ltd.

The telephone number for international sales is 662/375-2685~6. However, this is a very old number and may not work any more. I expect that you may have to purchase this book in Thailand.

Unfortunately, I don't know the other book you have mentioned.

Good luck,

Jim

Jim Jones

London, England

Never teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and frustrates the pig.

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I was just in Bangkok and the book is very easily available there. For instance, at Bookazine (many branches), Asia Books (many branches), Kinokuniya in the Emporium. Many hotel gift shops also have it --- in the past I've seen it in gift shops at both Marriotts, the Shangri-la, the Hyatt Erawan, the Regent ....

I would say that, as a reference by which to familiarize yourself with street foods in Bangkok you'd be much better off investing in the Lonely Planet World Food (Thailand) than Vatch's. (also the former is almost pocket-sized)

And an even better way is to take yourself, on your first day in Bangkok, to a market that has almost everything, like Dalat Aw Taw Kaw (already mentioned by jrurusj).

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I would say that, as a reference by which to familiarize yourself with street foods in Bangkok you'd be much better off investing in the Lonely Planet World Food (Thailand) than Vatch's. (also the former is almost pocket-sized)

I own the Lonely Planet World Food guide for Japan. Bought it when I first started travelling there a couple of years ago. I've learned a lot from it, though it doesn't go into tremendous depth. I also gave the Thailand version to my parents before their visit to Bangkok and they enjoyed it very much. As a starting point for getting familiar with Thai Food, it would be quite helpful.

The advantage of Thai Hawker Food is that it gives some clues to using the food vendors -- where they are concentrated, how to recognize the kinds of things they are selling, etc.

The two books in combination would be a great start.

And an even better way is to take yourself, on your first day in Bangkok, to a market that has almost everything, like Dalat Aw Taw Kaw (already mentioned by jrurusj).

I know I mentioned it before, but I can't recommend Aw Dtaw Gaw (or Aw Taw Kaw) highly enough. It is probably the best place in all of Thailand to see a concentration of great fresh ingredients, as well as prepared foods. Any hotel concierge or taxi driver should be able to help you get there. If you want to do it on your own, I would recommend picking up a copy of Nancy Chandler's map of Bangkok. This should give you a clear picture. It also has a good map of Chatujak market itself. Finally, it is probably the best map in terms of clarity and focusing on the attractions and areas that are most likely to appeal to visitors or foreigners newly resident in Bangkok. My wife and I keep a large stack around to give out to friends who will be visiting Bangkok for the first time.

Enjoy your trip,

Jim

Jim Jones

London, England

Never teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and frustrates the pig.

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  • 1 month later...

If you're prepared to eat like the locals do, nothing in Bangkok is expensive. I have two favorite places.

First, an Issan restaurant called Krua Rommai, 16 Sukhumvit soi 36 (take the Skytrain to Thong Lo; soi 36 has a Shell service station on the corner and the restaurant is a short walk down the soi). Tel: 02-661-2340. Open: Monday-Saturday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. You'll eat for less than US$10 here easily but it doesn't take credit cards. Amazing barbecued chicken with sticky rice, really interesting greens. Larb, the finely chopped, really spicy salad with chicken or pork and ground roasted rice. Eggplant in a spicy and sour sauce. And the orm, a hot curry with fish.

Second, Rut & Lek, at the intersection of Yaowarat and Soi Texas (Yaowarat is a one-way road through Chinatown. Soi Texas, home to the Texas parking garage, comes in from the right. Rut & Lek is on the far corner as you head in the direction of the traffic.) Open: daily, 6:30 p.m. to 2:45 a.m. Three people can stuff themselves for $25, including beer. (Again, no credit cards). This is all seafood -- barbecued fish cooked in aluminum foil with a herby paste; amazing giant shrimps; great tom yum (it's hot though! really hot!) and crab fried rice that is divine etc

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thanks for the recommendations--now i guess we have to figure out how to get around the city. i have no idea what hotel the airline is going to put us up at or where it is.

scrolling down, i see there's been a recent thread on bangkok eateries. unlike the original poster there i'm not interested in elegant surroundings, but it sounds like the same advice might apply to me. walk around, try the hawkers and eat where there seem to be lots of thais.

i'm also intrigued by episure (a fellow regular on the india board) noting that it takes him two days to adjust to the heat level of the food. i don't know if this is because he is an effete mumbaikar :smile: or whether it will be the same story for a bengali and a korean--we only have the one day anyway, so we're just going to plunge in and hope for the best. i do know that thai food in india is exponentially hotter than thai food in the u.s.a. did anyone here eat at baan thai at the oberoi, delhi when it first opened in the early 90s? i remember bring startled by how hot the salads were.

at any rate my digestive tract will get the shock to its system a day early--if it wasn't for the fact that we get to kolkatta in the middle of the night i'd stop for a mutton roll on the way home, and follow it up with a couple of fresh roshogullas and lots of syrup. oh man, i wish i were leaving tonight.

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Food in Bangkok -- my favorite topic in the whole world. :rolleyes:

To maximize tasting given your limited time, you must definately have lunch (closed for dinner) at Dalat Aw Taw Kaw where you can sample all sorts of exceedingly well-prepared goodies for very little money. Here's how to get there: take the BTS (skytrain) to the end of the line at On Nut (where Chatuchak Market is). Follow the signs at the skytrain and head towards Chatuchak (about a 10-minute walk). You will see the entrance to Chatuchak on your right --- keep walking until you get to the major intersection and turn right. Dalat Aw Taw Kaw will be up ahead on your left ... look for a parking lot and a covered market, that's it. (or ask Thais, always helpful, for directions).

Here you can sample the full spectrum of Thai tasties, from huge steamed prawns eaten with a dipping sauce of lime/fish sauce/chilis (2 for less than 100 baht); to grilled sausages (some of that Issaan food that a previous poster mentioned --- round ones are sour from fermented rice, long fat ones are spicy); to sakoo (sweet-savory rice flour dumplings with a filling of peanut, shrimp paste, pork, and eaten wrapped in a lettuce leaf with a sprig of coriander and raw chili); to a myriad of prepared curries and vegetables with rice; to grilled eggplant topped with the fish sauce-lime preparation above; to grilled fish; to muuyang (grilled pork with dipping sauce); to khanom (sweets, primarily) of all types. And much more. Look for khanom taan, which is made by only one vendor there --- small coconuty steamed cakes, not too sweet, topped with fresh shredded coconut. These are hard to find elsewhere in Bangkok. What you do is cruise the vendors lining the front of the market (nearest the street), make your purchases, and head to the interior of the market where there are tables surrounded by stalls doing all sorts of noodle and other dishes. Purchase a drink (perhaps Thai iced tea) from a vendor and most likely he or she or another will offer you a bowl and knife and fork to use to eat your goodies with. If you still have room by all means order a plate of guaytiaow laad naa (wide rice noodles with "gravy" which sounds so unexciting but it really is a wonderful dish) from the stall fronted by blue tiles. Anoint with vinegar, fish sauce, and chilis from the condiment tray, and enjoy.

You can probably stuff your face at Dalat Aw Taw Kaw for $5-7. Though the market is "upscale" compared to some others, the quality is truly excellent and the place is frequented by locals (albeit richer locals) far more than by tourists.

For dinner I would pursue Issaan food as another poster recommended, but I would head to Narathiwat Soi 24 for an open-air, truly Thai experience. Get a taxi (thy're not that expensive) from the Sala Daeng BTS station, instruct him to sto at Narathiwat Soi 24. Get out and retrace your journey back along Narathiwat (a big busy road) less than 1/4 of a block to the first grilled chicken and fish (you can't miss the grill) place you come to. It's a rather downmarket place but I've eaten here with never a problem so don't worry. Take a seat and order gaiyang krungdua (half a grilled chicken), somtam (papaya salad), khaoniaow (sticky rice), and, if you have the room, cimcum/jeemjum (Issaan-style hotpot). The dipping sauce for the chicken (the dark red stuff, not the sweet stuff) is out of this world. Without beer this feast will set you back about 4 US dollars. (Caveat: better on a Thu, Fri, Sat, or Sun night than on other weekdays).

If you can name your hotel and are concerned about getting around I can name closer places. But these two experiences will give you a very good sampling of the incomparable deliciousness of "real" Thai food.

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No need to worry about commuter expenses; I had a car and driver for $6/hr. As well my wife and I used the subway which although somewhat limited in range is very safe and fast and clean. The taxis are cheap as well but traffic gets really bad.

Food:

Too much for just two meals ahhhhhhh!!!!!

I found the street food to be fantastic; ranging from grilled skewerd meat (who knows what kind) to pad thai, rice, and especially these pan seared vegetable dumplings) This is a great way to have lunch all over Bangkok; you can visit temples, shop and eat at the same time.

If I could have only one dinner Bangkok there is no question that my favorite Rest. is the "Fish Market" out off of Sukhumvit around soi 16 if I remember. This is an amazing seafood restaurant that you will never forget. (I have been to Bangkok 3 times for a total of 7 days and I have eaten here 3 times) Essentially it is a fish market with just about every kind of fresh sea delight you can imagine. You take a shopping cart and pick out your fish, crab, lobster, etc. then your vegetables, bread and fruit and proceed to the check out register. Then you take your cart to your assigned table and the waiter asks how you would like them to prepare you choices. You can not go wrong! Definitely have lobster in yellow curry, morning glories in oyster sauce, garlic bread and I swear every single sauce I tried was great.

My best experience was on business, we were 8 people and we tried about 12 diff dishes. I then returned to Thailand with my wife and we loved it so much that we went twice. It is a bit pricey but how often are you in Bangkok, and as the local businessman who introduced me says it is "the best". Plus if you eat on the street for lunch you will only spend a couple of dollars.

Have fun and enjoy a great city!

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I just got back from BKK a few weeks ago and the most fun food for me was everything off the random carts on the street-- such as breakfast chinese donuts, corn in the waffles, charcoal grilled stuff on a stick, fruit such as yellow watermelon, longan, rambutan, pomelo, desserts like those little marshmallowfluff on top of the crispy waferlike cookies that resemble a sunnyside up egg, the purple taro frozen yogurt/ice cream. Also I admit that we did go to McDonald's for the chocolate dipped ice cream cone while we were in a mall checking email- the chocolate was pretty good.

kt

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Yeah, streetcarts. Don't forget the guys/gals selling coconut ice cream (more sorbet-ish, actually). Some say these carts are dicey but I've not had a problem. Best best is probably to go to the ones mobbed by office workers around lunchtime on weekdays. A blob of coconut sticky rice topped by coconut ice cream topped by roasted peanuts --- unbeatable!

Aside--- some good locations to mix with the office crowds (these folks search out the best and best value): Wireless (Wittayu) Road across from the American Embassy; Soi Tonson behind the huge Sindhorn building on Wireless (there are several subsois with food and a big covered market with various vendors of tasty things); Soi Sala Daeng, betw. Sathorn and Silom --- another covered market with lots of food vendors and snacks; Soi Convent up near Silom and some vendors spilling onto Silom from that Soi; Sukhumvit Road across from Central Department Store.

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Getting late into this conversation: ecr has given you the jist of things, I'd just put a slightly different perspective - Open air dining - around Sangri-La Hotel just take a look at the stalls, see what catches your fancy and chow-away. Since I deduce that you ar not travelling solo, I'd not recommend to dine/drink at Sukhumvit Soi 4 or 22 :wink:

Another place is Makkasan Rd (very close by to all major hotels) where a few value-laden restaurants are to be found.

Edited by anil (log)

anil

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