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แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Bangkok Chinatown แสดงบทความทั้งหมด
แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Bangkok Chinatown แสดงบทความทั้งหมด

Bangkok Chinatown (Yaowarat)

BANGKOK CHAINATOWN



Bangkok Chinatown 
(Yaowarat - เยาวราช)
YAOWARAT is one of the most colourful and busiest parts of the city. The bustling streets are filled with street vendors, goldsmith shops, Chinese restaurants serving exotic delicacies like bird-nest and shark fins , traditional?? Chinese herbs and desserts and miscellaneous goods. It is a paradise for food lovers.
Packed with market stalls, street-side restaurants and a dense concentration of gold shops, Chinatown is an experience not to miss. The energy that oozes from its endless rows of wooden shop-houses is plain contagious – it will keep you wanting to come back for more. Plan your visit during major festivals, like Chinese New Year, and you will see Bangkok Chinatown at its best.


Bangkok’s Chinatown is known among Thai people as “เยาวราช Yaowarat”. It has been the main center for trading by the Chinese community for more than 200 years. There are many small streets and alleys full of shops and street vendors selling all types of goods – Chinese herbs, clothes, gold etc.  Yaowarat comes alive each evening after dusk, and it is one of the most exciting dining destinations in Bangkok.

My Top 5 favorite stalls in Yaowarat are:

1) ก๋วยเตี๋ยวคั่วไก่ Kuay Teow Kua Gai
(Fried noodles with Chicken) This dish is actually Chinese, it is similar to Thai’s Pad See Ew (ผัดซีอิ๊ว).  The special method of this place unlike somewhere else  is they cook chicken in brass pan on a pot-sized charcoal stove, and top the dish with crispy squid .
Location: Soi Leng Buai Eiang (ซอย เล่งบ้วยเอี๊ยง), open 18:00-midnight. Tel: 081-795-1839

2) หอยแครงลวกป้าจิน Hoi Krang Luak Bpa Jin
( Aunt Jin’s Soft Boil Cockles ) They use fresh cockels and what makes it so good is Nam Jim or dipping sauce which is made of Sweet Peanuts Stick (น้ำจิ้มถั่วตัด).
Location: Padung Dao Road (Soi Texas), open 8:00 – midnight

3) ก๋วยจั๊บอ้วน โภชนา Kuay Jap Oun Pochana 
( thick rice noodles soup)
Kuay jap is Rice Noodle Rolls in broth. This longstanding Kuay Jap vendor is possibly the most popular hawker stall in Chinatown. People have been known to cross town for the cook named Lek’s exceedingly peppery broth and tender offal, which includes pork heart, liver, stomach and tongue.
Location: Corner of Soi 11 and Yaowarat Road. Tel: 02 224 3450. Open daily, 7 p.m.-late.

4) นายหมง หอยทอด Nai Mong Hoi  Nang Rom Tord
(The oyster omelette at Nai Mong)



My mom often took me to oyster omelette place in my hometown when I was a little girl and I disliked this dish until I found Nai Mong Hoi Nang Rom Tord - a crisp and rich base of eggs topped with an unctuous sauce of oysters and spring onions. Sprinkle it with some white pepper and splash over the Sriracha chili sauce. Once you try it, you will understand why I changed my mind and this place has been going for 40 years.
Location: Talad Gao (ตลาดเก่า) Plubpla chai Road, corner of Plaeng Naam and Charoenkrung Rd., 02-623-1980. Open daily 11am-9pm. 60 Baht/dish.

5) ก๋วยเตี๋ยวหลอด Guaythiew Lod

(Stuffed rice flat noodles rolls ) at Guaythiew Lod
This Chinese-style delicacy is unabashedly delicious: stuffed to overflowing with pork, shiitake mushrooms,dried shrimp and squid, topped with bean sprouts, scallion and deep-fried garlic and bathed in a sweet soy sauce.Sounds good, right? It tastes even better than it sounds.
Location:  in front of Seiko watch shop, next to La Scala shark fin
restaurant +66 (0)2 225 3558. Open  Tue-Sun 6:30 p.m.-1 a.m.  35 baht/bowl.


Oh! and there is always room for dessert (it is my motto!). The dessert I would like to recommend you to try is a bowl of gingko nuts (แปะก๊วย), lotus root (รากบัว), longan and other goodies. There are many dessert stalls offering this dish, you can just randomly pick one place and enjoy!
How to get there:The easiest way I like to do is taking the MRT (Bangkok’s underground train) to Hua Lamphong station, take exit 1 and get on a Tuk-Tuk to Yaowarat road. It takes only about 5 minutes. You can also take a taxi, but I think Tuk-Tuk is more fun and quick:)

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