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Bangkok Dining - Street food market of Bangkok Thailand
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Finding
good Thai, and Chinese dishes, is quite easy. Many Thais like to eat out
in "food streets" and this is something that visitors will find
very interesting. It is a great experience and the food is tasty and inexpensive.
With gastronomic choice galore, eating out in Bangkok is fun amazing and
inexpensive. In this remarkable city, visitors can experience a cosmopolitan
feast of diverse cultures and styles. Eating places range from five-star
restaurants to food shops, cafe and street-side stalls and food carts.
Thai food,both authentic and nouvelle dishes, can be found almost everywhere
at small, sparingly decorated restaurants or lavishly ornate ones, along
the pavements, and in the markets. In Nagkok the food is good everywhere
at small, sparingly decorated restaurants or lavishly ornate ones, along
the pavements, and in the markets. In Bangkok the always the place that
really matters.
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Yaowarat
Bangkok's Chinatown houses some of the best and most expensive Chinese
restaurants in the city, along with many of the best and cheapest food
stalls, especially at night. Large restaurants line the bustling Yaowarat
Road, but venturing into sois, or lanes, will lead you to less impressive
yet equally enjoyable establishments. The restaurants mostly specialize
in southern Chinese cooking, with noodles, seafood and, at lunchtime,
dim sum dumplings dominating the menus.
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Phahurat
Taking a short walk from Yaowarat's Chinatown to Phahurat's little India
is like taking a transcendental journey between two different worlds.
Inhabited by Thai people of Indian origin, the confined alleyways around
the Phahurat area accommodate a number of authentic Indian restaurants,
particularly those offering North Indian cuisine. Alternatively, other
sub continental foods such as Punjabi and Pakistani are also plentifully
available.
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Siam Square
This shopping area is crammed with medium to high-priced eateries as well
as American fast-food outlets. Whether you crave Thai, European, Chinese
or Japanese foods, there is a place for you somewhere in this fashionable
area. Traditional Thai restaurants are flanked by gaudy fast-food franchises
and Japanese suki parlors. Soi 1 has conventional Chinese restaurants.
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Sukhumvit Road
There is no shortage of eating places on Sukhumvit. Some people say that
from any spot along the road you are within 100 meters of at least one
restaurant. And the food could not be more cosmopolitan.
At its western end, around Soi Nana, an enclave of Pakistani and Middle
Eastern restaurants fills the sois with the aroma of spices, earning this
area the name "Little Arabia". Further up the road Indian cuisine
takes over, with restaurants offering both northern and southern Indian
specialties.
European and American cooking balance the equation, with Italian, French,
British, German, and Mexican restaurants lining the road and presenting
a variety of options in terms of menus, atmosphere, and prices. Sukhumvit
55, also known as Soi Thonglor, and its labyrinthine branches are also
full of restaurants of every kind.
Then there is Thai food. Both authentic nouvelle dishes can be found at
small, sparingly decorated restaurants or lavishly ornate ones, along
the pavements, and in the markets.
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Soi Lang Suan
Like Sukhumvit Road, Soi Lang Suan offers a diverse mix of Thai, Asian,
and European influences. Fashionable restaurants present interesting eating
possibilities at medium to high prices. Also home to some of the most
popular jazz pubs in the city, the street's flashy atmosphere attracts
the money crowd in droves after sundown.
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Silom Road
Several food streets are linked to this road in Bangkok's busiest area.
Seafood stalls sprout along the section near Saladaeng Intersection after
sunset until late at night. The nearby Convent Road offers everything
from Indonesian to an Irish tavern. Opposite, a crush of Japanese restaurants
makes Soi Thaniya into a lively walkway for Japanese visitors and sushi
lovers of all nationalities.
Thai food is available in palace style and street style, side by side.
The best selection of the former can be found in Soi Phipat. Find the
Thai version of fast food at most shopping complexes and Soi Lalai Sap's
Lunch Market. A good one-stop eating place is Silom Village in Soi 24,
where food in a variety of Thai styles is served in a relaxing atmosphere.
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Bang Lamphu
Shoestring travelers flock to Bang Lamphu, especially the area around
Khaosan Road. Most eating places in this area cater for budget-conscious
diners. Many guesthouses on Khaosan Road have open-air cafes serving standard
Thai and Chinese dishes. Other decent possibilities include Indian, Jewish,
and Muslim restaurants.
(c) Provided by Tourism Authority
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