7 Best Restaurants in Silom and Bang Rak, Bangkok

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Silom has Bangkok's widest selection of restaurants, many in hotels, on the upper floors of skyscrapers, or around Patpong. You'll find everything from authentic, humble northern Thai food to elaborate, wallet-busting international cuisine.

Lek Seafood

$$ | Bang Rak Fodor's Choice

This unassuming storefront beneath an overpass is the sort of establishment that brings international foodies flocking to Bangkok. The interior here is nothing special, with poor lighting and bluish walls, but you'll barely notice or care with the lively buzz of the local Thai clientele, expert preparations with balanced flavors, and reasonable prices compared to many other seafood joints. 

89 Narathiwat Ratchanakharin Rd., Soi 3, Bangkok, 10500, Thailand
096–645--9646
Known For
  • Beloved by locals
  • No-frills dining
  • Specialties like the curry crab and cockles
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch

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Pen Restaurant

$$ | Yannawa Fodor's Choice

This neighborhood restaurant has little in the way of atmosphere, but seafood aficionados still brave the traffic to Yannawa in order to splurge. Pen is expensive by Thai restaurant standards, but it's still a bargain compared to most hotel restaurants for charcoal-grilled seafood and a range of classic Thai fare.

Baan Khanitha

$$ | Silom

This restaurant in a converted house with a pleasant outdoor garden balances a casually upmarket feel with fairly authentic Thai cuisine oriented toward less adventurous palates. The basics are done well here, from chu chee goong mae nam (curried river prawns) to khao yum (southern Thai-style rice salad). Local artwork adorns the walls.

69 S. Sathorn Rd., Bangkok, 10120, Thailand
02–675--4200
Known For
  • Local artwork
  • Wide menu
  • Mango sticky rice

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Harmonique

$$ | Bang Rak

This small house near the river is filled with Thai antiques and antique chests scattered with bric-a-brac, which all give the ambience of dining at a relative's house. The staff is very good at helping indecisive diners choose from the brief menu, and although the restaurant has become more touristy over the years, it also retains a loyal and regular local clientele.

22 Charoen Krung Rd., Soi 34, Bangkok, 10500, Thailand
02–237--8175
Known For
  • Terrace and dining room seating
  • Unusual Thai dishes like haw mok (fish curry steamed in a banana leaf)
  • Excellent curries
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Himali Cha Cha & Son

$$ | Bang Rak

Cha Cha, who cooked for Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, died in 1996, but his recipes live on and are prepared with equal ability by his son Kovit. Typical Indian-themed decor and a long-standing menu of traditional dishes as well as intriguing daily specials make this restaurant an oldie but a goodie, with two other locations in Bangkok also available.

1229/11 Charoen Krung Rd., Soi 47/1, Bangkok, 10500, Thailand
02–235--1569
Known For
  • Famous tandoori chicken
  • Northern Indian specialties
  • Garlic naan and cheese naan
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Somtum Der

$$ | Bang Rak

This small two-story shophouse serves some of the best Isan (northeastern Thai) cooking in the entire neighborhood, and since it opened a decade ago, the owners have expanded to branches in New York, Tokyo, and Taipei. The menu boasts several varieties of the namesake somtum, including a few that use plaa raa, a more pungent version of the fish sauce used in most Thai cooking. The varieties of laap---the spicy minced-meat salad---are done particularly well here, as is the goi, a similar salad heavy on fresh lemongrass. Almost everyone orders the fried chicken, served here with a thick dark-red chili sauce called jaew.

5/5 Sala Daeng Rd., Bangkok, 10500, Thailand
082–294--2363
Known For
  • Spicy northeastern Thai soups
  • Excellent versions of somtum
  • Moderate prices

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Tawandang German Brewery

$$ | Yannawa

From the outside Tawandang looks like a big barrel, which represents the 40,000 liters of lager and other beers brewed here every month under the supervision of a German brewmaster. Its specialties are lager, weizen, and dunkel beers on tap. With such an active brewery, you might think food would be an afterthought, but the kitchen actually turns out quite good Thai food, with some German, Japanese, and Chinese fare thrown in. The stage in front puts on cheesy but very fun entertainment, which includes comedy drag, Thai folk music, and Thai pop.

462/61 Rama III Rd., Bangkok, 10110, Thailand
02–678--1114
Known For
  • Thailand's first microbrewery
  • Good pub grub
  • Fun crowd
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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