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I decided to splurge and go to Nahm with Katoeylover when he was in Bangkok, I was doubly surprised, the food was excellent AND it wasn't nearly as expensive as I expected (not saying its cheap, but 7000 for 4 with 2000B wine was very reasonable).
The menu was quite exotic, this is not your normal street food. The frog curry was yummy.
(rxpharm @ Jun. 30 2008,12:31) Hey DP, making notes for your next visit, good stuff! Â Well, there is a NY Pizza place now on Sukhumvit Road - around where the Foodland is, I think that is around Soi 5-7. Â I haven't tried it myself, but looking it through the window, they have a variety that is different than your favorite Pizza Hut.
Another excellent place to try is Lan Na Thai. #29, Sukhumvit Soi 38. This is an interesting place a combination of a North Indian Restaurant - Hazarra, Thai and Visage a Patiserie, plus a spa in one location. The website is Face Bars
Thegame925 and I were there with our companions of choice. Both remarked the food is quite delicious - aroy mak! My companion wants to return because of the food and the ambience. Â This is a bit pricey, but well worth it for the food and atmosphere.
view from the rooftop garden/sitting area at the hostel
This Face place is fantastic. I live next door to it everytime I come to Bangkok. Real good hostel there. MANY times the smell of their BBQ pork drives me outta my mind as it wafts into the upper floor. Went over once, saw the menu prices and sighed. Easily go 50 bux for me and a date. It would be a shame to go to such a nice place alone. But up the street, there is all the 40 baht thai street food one can eat. SOMEDAY maybe i'll bust loose and take a date there. It would only be 5 days of stay at the hostel, haha.
I wonder if I walked past you two and your dates that night on my way to the stewed pork lady.
I too had heard all the raves about Nahm and we gave it a try last year.
While the food was tasty enough, my party (which consisted of 2 Thais and a Phil LB) weren't that impressed.
I think it is a little overrated.
(NeighborsKnowMyName @ Oct. 12 2012,22:33) I too had heard all the raves about Nahm and we gave it a try last year.
While the food was tasty enough, my party (which consisted of 2 Thais and a Phil LB) weren't that impressed.
I think it is a little overrated.
I've eaten at Nahm on three occasions and rate it as the best Thai dining experience I've ever had.
Whilst it's relatively expensive compared to eating at your average Bangkok eatery, compared to what I'd pay for such an experience in Australia, its a bargain.
More importantly, I'm yet to find food that is so authentically Thai in a fine dining setting.
Nevertheless, I can fully appreciate Nahm isn't for everyone and the experience could well be lost on many depending on your perspective of Thai food and dining in a more general sense.
# A collage from my last Nahm dinner with the honourable TTChang.
Always enjoy my foodie outings with KK Â Â Two other restaurants I can recommend: 'Le Table de Tee' in Silom, and 'Ruen Arai' in Surawong.
Nahm has a very variable rating on Trip Advisor, some think brilliant, others think 'a waste of money, street food is as good'. As I've been several times, I share KK's opinion. Met the chef (Australian) David Thompson a few times - he's the western guru on thai food, and very amusing too
There's one Thai LB that I've taken to both Blue Elephant in Bangkok, and to Nahm. Â In fact there's only one I would do that for, cos I know she appreciates the finer things in life ..... 555 Â Her opinion :Nahm was excellent, better of the two.
But for me, in Thailand, food courts in the malls are the stars. A feast in exchange for a 100 baht coupon. Street food in aircon!
I've been to the Chua Kim Heng Restaurant a few times again and it remains on the top of my list as an excellent dining experience. I am uploading photos of the menu and the roasted goose holding cabinet (storage area after it's been cooked). I asked the person slicing up the goose how many they go through in a day, and his reply - on a busy day around 150-200 geese! There is also a photo of one of my favorite snacks - in Thai it's pronounced bah jang (in Cantonese it's called a doeng). It is glutinous rice wrapped in banana leaf along with egg, pork, water chestnut, peanuts, etc. Quite delicious and can also be found on some of the street food vendor stalls. The ones made in this restaurant are larger and have more filling than the ones from the street vendors. Also if you visit Chinatown in Bangkok you can find these as well - especially in the back alley shops.
If you like dim sum, there are a couple of Tim Ho Wan restaurants in Bangkok. They have one in Terminal 21 and another one in Gateway Ekkamai Malls. The original branch was in Hong Kong, and they are one of the few Michelin Starred dim sum restaurants around. They also have branches in Singapore, Malayasia, Taiwan, Australia and Indonesia, besides Hong Kong and Thailand.
While they don't have an extensive menu, their dim sum is some of the best I've had (including the ones I've been to in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing). Highly recommended. If you go during lunch time, it is busy, so you should plan on going either before or after the rush.
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