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Menus with that Michelin factor


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Menus with that Michelin factor

By Khetsirin Pholdhampalit 
The Nation Weekend 

 

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Thai restaurant Methavalai Sorndaeng, which has been serving up such favourites like fish ball green curry, spicy lemongrass salad and crispy rice noodles in sweet and sour sauce for 60 years, has earned its first one-star rating from Michelin.

 

Thai restaurants make up the bulk of this year’s little red guide, which has expanded its entries to include Phuket and Phang Nga

 

IN A CITY known the world over for its incredible street food, it takes something very special to be awarded a Michelin star. However, Supinya “Jay Fai” Junsuta, 72, owner of streetside eatery Jay Fai has had no problems retaining hers for a second year and remains the only street venue in Bangkok to earn this internationally recognised rating.

 

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Supinya Junsuta, aka Jay Fai :Nationphoto/Anand Chantarasoot

 

The second edition of Michelin Guide Bangkok was launched on Wednesday and in addition to Jay Fai, the 12 other one-starred restaurants from last year have also retained their honours, namely Bo.lan, Chim by Siam Wisdom, Elements, Ginza Sushi Ichi, J’aime by Jean-Michel Lorain, L’Atelier de Joel Robuchon, Nahm, Paste, Saneh Jaan, Sra Bua by Kiin Kiin, Upstairs at Mikkeller and Savelberg.

 

Innovative European restaurant Suhring run by and named after twin chefs Mathias and Thomas earned an upgrade from one to two stars.

 

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European restaurant Suhring run by twin chefs Mathias and Thomas earned an upgrade from one to two starsNationphoto/Anand Chantarasoot

 

No restaurant in Thailand has won the coveted three stars yet, though all three two-starred venues from the inaugural edition, namely progressive Indian eatery Gaggan, contemporary French restaurant Le Normandie and European delight Mezzaluna have retained their ratings. 

 

“I lost 10 kilograms in the week after winning one star last year. I haven’t stopped since and people are still queuing up to try the dishes. I still cook with a charcoal brazier and am the only cook. About 80 per cent of the customers coming today are foreign,” says Jay Fai who also cooked for Prime Minister Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha and top tennis players Simona Halep and Jelena Osapenko.

 

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Jay Fai, whose eatery is famous for omelette stuffed with a giant portion of crabmeat, retains one Michelin star and remains the only street venue in Bangkok to be recognised with such an award. (File photo: Nationphoto/Chalinee Thirasupa)

 

Jay Fai inherited the business from her father, a stir-fried noodle chef – 40 years ago and quickly made her ordinary eatery extraordinary. Her famous omelettes with giant portions of crab vary in price from Bt800 to Bt2,000. 

 

From 2pm to 1am every day except Sunday and Monday, diners still queue at her small shophouse with just seven tables in the Pratu Phee area, next to the Golden Mount despite being able now to book by phone and email. 

 

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“Though I have a variety of dishes on the menu, customers keep ordering the ones suggested in the Michelin Guide, namely crabmeat omelette and stir-fried crab curry,” says the sprightly septuagenarian who is also working with Thai Airways on designing inflight street food dishes for business and first class passengers. 

 

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The legendary Thai restaurant Methavalai Sorndaeng has earned its first one-star rating from Michelin.:Nationphoto/ Rachanon Intharagsa

 

The 60-year-old Thai restaurant Methavalai Sorndaeng next to the Democracy Monument on Rajadamnoen Avenue is among the 10 new restaurants to have been awarded one star. 

 

Boasting a charming retro ambience with Victorian-style chairs and tables with white tablecloths and live ’80s Thai music, it’s long been popular among businessmen and politicians and counts among its customers former prime ministers Gen Prem Tinsulanonda, Anand Panyarachun and Chuan Leekpai.

 

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The all-time favourite is fish ball green curry :Nationphoto/ Rachanon Intharagsa

 

“Our key is to deliver Thai dishes with refined flavours and cooked with local ingredients, spices and herbs. We make everything from scratch from the coconut cream to the curry pastes. We also stick to authentic recipes and will neither compromise the flavours to meet individual diners’ requests nor marry imported ingredients like salmon with Thai herbs and spices,” says Jirawut Sapkiree, the second-generation owner of Methavalai Sorndaeng.

 

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Crispy rice noodles in sweet and sour sauce :Nationphoto/ Rachanon Intharagsa

 

The restaurant has 30 staff in the kitchen and can accommodate about 150 diners. There are more than 100 dishes on the menu and all-time favourites include green curry with fish ball, crispy rice noodles in sweet and sour sauce, and spicy lemongrass salad.

 

“Our location puts us at the heart of Thai politics. During the 14 October uprising in 1973, our restaurant housed a temporary Thai Red Cross centre and we delivered food until we ran out of ingredients. I hope we never see such politically tumultuous times again,” says Jirawut, who plans to renovate the restaurant next year and pass on management duties to his children.

 

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Spicy lemongrass salad :Nationphoto/ Rachanon Intharagsa

 

The second edition of the little red guide has also expanded its reach to cover the best dining venues in the southern provinces of Phuket and Phang Nga as well as to Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani, Nakhon Pathom, Samut Sakhon and Samut Prakan in Greater Bangkok.

 

Pru restaurant in Phuket is the only restaurant in southern region to have been awarded one star. A little gem in Samut Sakhon with a homey ambience and family recipes, Ruean Panya also receives its first star as has Suan Thip in Nonthaburi that offers refined dishes inspired by royal recipes. 

 

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Chef Jim Ophorst of Pru, right, and Gwendal Poullennec, international director of Michelin Guides

 

Located in the luxury Trisara resort, Pru restaurant is based on the farm-to-table concept and raises various local plants, herbs, organic vegetable, free-range chickens and ducks on its own 600-rai farm.

 

“My ultimate goal is to create a 100-per-cent locally sourced menu. To cook something great, you need great products from great farmers. Great farmers are from strong communities. So at Pru, we don’t want to be just a kitchen. We want to strengthen the local farmer community. This will yield better ingredients for better dishes,” says chef Jim Ophorst, a semi-finalist in S Pellegrino’s annual Young Chefs Award in 2016 and 2017.

 

Other one-starred Bangkok additions include contemporary Thai restaurants Le Du, R.Haan, Saawaan and Sorn and progressive cuisine eateries Gaa and Canvas.

 

Though no Thai restaurant has achieved a two-star rating, Gwendal Poullennec, international director of Michelin Guides, points out that more than half of the awards are going to Thai cuisine.

 

“We have also seen a trend in the degustation menu, whereby chefs design a complete experience for diners,” he adds.

 

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R.Haan run by chef Chumpol Jangprai offers multicourse menus of Thai dishes based on ancient recipes but in attractive new presentations. 

File photo: Nationphoto/Anand Chantarasoot

 

One of those, celebrated chef Chumpol Jangprai of R.Haan – the name means food in Thai –offers a choice of three seasonal samrub (a set of shared dishes), each made up of 18 different items. 

 

“We want people to sample a variety of dishes with different tastes made from carefully selected seasonal ingredients and enjoy a new dining experience. Pairing different items in one samrub is local wisdom. The different flavours don’t only complement each other, but also cater to family members of different ages,” he says. 

 

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Tom  yum goong : File photo: Nation/Anand Chantarasoot

 

His tom yum goong, for instance, has a theatrical presentation, coming in a glass siphon and prepared at the table. The herbs and coconut cream are placed in the top chamber then after vapour pressing, the intensely filtered soup drops back into the lower chamber. The aromatic soup is then poured over a bowl of river prawns and mushroom.

 

New restaurant Saawaan (heaven in Thai) run by two women – chef de cuisine Sujira Pongmorn and pastry chef Arisara Chongphanitkul – also reinterprets Thai comfort foods in innovative, multi-course offerings. 

 

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Chef Sujira Pongmorn at Saawaan reinterprets Thai comfort foods in new innovative, multicourse offerings.:Nation/Anand Chantarasoot

 

“I like Thai street food and it’s challenging to elevate them by giving a modern presentation while maintaining authentic flavours. I’m also interested in mixing and matching rare spices and herbs,” says Sujira. 

 

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Kai lukkei :Courtesy of Saawaan 

 

She transforms Thai classic kai lukkei (soft-boiled eggs deep-fried and coated with thick tamarind and palm sugar syrup) into an amuse bouche, poaching the yolk in its shell before seasoning with shallot cream, tamarind paste and dried chilli. Yum naem kao tod (spicy salad with pickled sausage and crispy-fried curried rice) comes in a totally new look with house-fermented beef brisket, crispy-fried curried rice, pickled cucumber slices and fried ginger. 

 

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Le Du run by chef Thitid Tassanakajohn offers four-course and six-course tasting menus based on seasonal produce and sustainable local ingredients.  

File photo: Nation/Anand Chantarasoot

 

Restaurant Le Du, meanwhile, has four- and six-course tasting menus based on seasonal produce and sustainable local ingredients. Young chef Thitid “Ton” Tassanakajohn, a judge on the popular TV show “Top Chef Thailand”, offers a new take on kao khulk kapi, cooking organic rice with aromatic shrimp paste and pork jam and serving it with grilled river prawn on the side. 

 

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Ant larvae, blue swimming crab, young bamboo, and southern style curry :Courtesy of Le Du

 

The recently opened, 20-seat Sorn also has a degustation menu celebrating the strong flavours of Southern Thai cuisine. Ingredients are sustainably sourced from local farmers and fishermen. 

 

Of the 27 starred restaurants in this edition, eight boast female chefs –Jay Fai, Sujira of Saawaan, Bo Songvisava of Bo.lan, Garima Arora from Gaa, Pim Techamuanvivit of Nahm, Bee Satongun of Paste, Banyen Ruangsantheia from Suan Thip, and Pannee Ganisthanaka of Ruean Panya. 

 

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The “Bib Gourmand” award, a rating that recognises restaurants offering exceptionally good food at moderate prices (within Bt1,000 in Thailand’s case), doubled in number this year from 35 to 72 venues.

 

GET YOUR COPY NOW

 

The bilingual edition of “Michelin Guide Bangkok, Phuket and Phang Nga 2019” in Thai and English is now available in a print version for Bt650 at leading bookstores and in digital version at www.Guide.Michelin.com.

 
 
 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-11-17
 

 

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What I find odd about Methavalai Sorndaeng is some of the terrible reviews it gets on Tripadvisor, with titles such as "The WORST", "Just awful", "Terrible service", "won't go back", "give this a miss", &c..  

 

Only 51% rate it "excellent", and 18% rate it "average", "poor" or "terrible".  Contrast that with another 1 star restaurant in Bangkok serving Western food:  98% rate it excellent, 2% rate it good.  Nobody rates it "average", "poor" or "terrible".

 

I wonder whether Michelin is dropping its standards for Thai restaurants just to get them into the guide.

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