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All Thailand Bangkok Hai Som Tam Convent
AO Edited Gastro Obscura

Hai Som Tam Convent

Isaan street food staples are in spectacular form at this no-frills institution.

Bangkok, Thailand

Added By
Barbara Woolsey
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Although not a traditional Isaan dish, the pad thai is in fine form here.   Barbara Woolsey for Gastro Obscura
The som tam here is sour, funky, sweet, and deceptively spicy.   Barbara Woolsey for Gastro Obscura
Seafood rice comes packed with flavor.   Barbara Woolsey for Gastro Obscura
Wash down an order of fried pork jowl with a cold Singha.   Barbara Woolsey for Gastro Obscura
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For some of Bangkok’s best (and most well-priced Isaan food), look no further than this shop-kitchen tucked onto prime street food territory.

For decades, Hai Som Tam Convent has been Bangkok office workers’ go-to destination for spicy northern food. For many years, the greasy spoon shophouse has been incredibly popular for its prime location adjacent to Silom Road—despite having very little atmosphere (green paint, uncomfortably bright lights and no AC).

Nowadays, the restaurant boasts a second floor with extra seating (it’s air-conditioned, while the ground floor still keeps an open layout with electric fans) and more staff than ever. The leather-bound, laminated menu has expanded considerably with even more Thai dishes, but the best ones remain the same: classic, fiery delights from Thailand’s rural northeastern Isan region.

Isaan recipes are known for bringing the heat and Hai’s chefs, cooking in an open, street-side kitchen, keep up with tradition. As the name suggests, som tam (shredded green papaya salad) is the specialty here and available in an assortment of toppings from salted crab to fermented fish.

Other popular menu items include smoky gai yang (grilled chicken marinated in a flavorful mix of garlic, cilantro roots, soy sauce, and fish sauce), served with spicy dipping sauce, as well as sai ua—northern Thai pork sausage fried with lots of aromatics including lemongrass and galangal.

Don’t forget to order khao niaw (sticky rice), which, unlike jasmine rice, is served in individual portions in plastic pouches tucked into cute bamboo holders. This is meant to be eaten with your hands—pull pieces off and use it to mop up all the extra spicy sauces you can muster.

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Restaurants Street Food

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The best time to go is late afternoon before the dinner rush and when Convent Road fills up with street food vendors.

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Added By

barbarawoolsey

Published

April 17, 2024

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Hai Som Tam Convent
2, 4-5 Convent Rd, Silom
Bangkok, 10500
Thailand
13.727341, 100.533286
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