A year on the Bangkok food scene
How eating out in this city evolved in 2016.
The folks from Thonglor mainstay Roast introduce Bangkok to a whole new style of sharing-friendly, communal dining with a project that basically rewrites the Thonglor food map.
The Laos-born baker’s pastry is so good it won over Paris’s Chambre professionnelle des Artisans Boulangers-Pâtissiers. We fail to recognize it in a blind taste test.
The man behind the no. 1 restaurant in Asia launches Meatlicious, his beef-heavy follow-up to Gaggan where charcoal and wood take over from molecular wizardry.
Two months into the year and we still haven’t got a seat at Masato, the wildly in-demand sushi den of a former NYC Michelin-starred chef. Buzz of places like Umi and Tama show that it’ll be a big year for fishy fine dining.
Bangkok clocks up at least six new spots where clean-eating freaks can have their fill (or at least their carefully controlled portion size): Farmfactory, Brekkie, Patisserie Potager, Organika, Absolute Fit Food and Veganerie Concept.
Picking up where Raintree and K Village left off comes 72 Courtyard. What it lacks in fake grass, Wine Connections and despair, it more than makes up for in bare concrete, bao buns and expensive cocktails.
And once again the man with the most Michelin-star-studded restaurant portfolio in the world, Joel Robuchon, takes Bangkok’s top spot.
Cafe-hoppers no longer need to look at Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpurand Singapore in envy thanks to a place called CODE, which offers egg yolk croissants in all their gooey glory.
The project had already been the talk of the town for a year. Opposite’s Jess Barnes and Eat Me’s Tim Butler refurbishing a huge shop-house in Sathorn and doing dishes from local ingredients in a space designed by Kelly Wheatley. As it transpires, Jess Barnes jumps the shark and Tim Butler is just a backer with no hand in the kitchen. But the food is still fantastic.
The inaugural edition of the list sees six entries from Bangkok: Vesper, Q&A, Teens of Thailand, Bamboo Bar, Maggie Choo’s and Hyde & Seek. We get in trouble with one of them.
Sorrento, the old-school Italian on Sathorn Soi 10, launches with a big makeover to keep up with the craft cocktail and tapas board competition. Its pasta served from a massive cheese wheel outrages actual Italians but tastes amazing.
Bangkok’s Gaggan restaurant, earlier named the best in Asia, slipped from No.10 to No.23. David Thompson’s Nahm (No. 8 in Asia’s 50 Best list) fell to No.37 from No. 22 in 2015.
From Jun 6-12, it’s about all we drink when someone decides to dedicate a whole week to the bitter-sweet hangover in a glass. We don’t remember else about Bangkok’s food scene this month.
After wowing the Instagram users of Singapore and Hong Kong, rainbow food hits Bangkok thanks to a multicolored sandwich at All Six to Twelve. Bangkokians Instagram as one.
On our first night at Hong Kong’s Little Bao, the power goes out for 20 minutes and we don’t get a free drink. None of it matters thanks to the amazing Chinese buns of chef Mae Chow, who goes on to be crowned S. Pel’s Asian Female Chef of the Year 2017.
The dude who turned America on to Japanese food opens in Bangkok as part of MahaNakhon Cube.
The much-anticipated modern-Aussie venture opens its beautiful doors. We try to make reservations, get freaked out by the first-world style reservation system, and book on the wrong day.
Taking over the wedge of space that formerly housed Opposite Mess Hall, Bangkok’s favorite burger flipper starts grilling up tomahawk steaks and dishing out heavy cocktails.
After slowly hitting the city all year long, cheese tart mania reaches its peak with the opening of Osaka’s Pablo. Bangkokians everywhere embrace their inner Hong Kong uncle.
It’s been there every fall-winter, lurking on the menus of fancy restaurants ready to hit you in the wallet, but for some reason the whole world went white truffle crazy in 2016. Instagram turns into a flakey mess of ungodly expensive fungus topping everything from steaks to sandwiches.
Including the honest-to-god chicken noodles that made nights out on the street worthwhile :(
Thanks to Shari Shari, Bangkok gets the authentically inauthentic Californian-style Hawaiian fresh fish dish—which is the type you’re supposed to be eating right now.
Young, posh and equipped with ingredients rifled from all across Thailand, they whip up a week of dinners in Bangkok as part of a global culinary tour of the world.
Gaining a universal, “meh, not bad,” from everyone who eats there, the Italian restaurant franchise of Britain’s no. 1 celeb chef finally opens in Bangkok. Bring on 2017!
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