Restaurant in Siem Reap, Cambodia
Malis
250Pearl PointsSerious Cambodian cooking, skip the tourist strip.

About Malis
Malis is Siem Reap's most credible address for traditional Cambodian cooking, with three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia list and a 4.3 Google rating across 1,336 reviews. Chef Luu Meng runs a composed, well-executed room that outperforms the city's tourist-facing competition. Book it for a sit-down meal — this is not a delivery situation.
Malis, Siem Reap: The Verdict
The common assumption about Malis is that it sits in the same tier as the tourist-facing Cambodian restaurants lining Pub Street — it does not. This is a serious, award-tracked restaurant that has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Asia list three years running, ranked #150 in 2023, #375 in 2024, and #409 in 2025. If you are spending time in Siem Reap and want a grounded, well-executed introduction to Cambodian cuisine, Malis is the most credible option at this address. Book it.
What to Expect
The atmosphere at Malis is calm by Siem Reap standards — open-air or semi-open construction typical of the city's better restaurants, with a measured energy that sits between casual and formal. It is not loud in the way that riverfront spots tend to be after dark, which makes it a workable choice for conversation-heavy meals. Evenings are the more composed experience; lunch draws a mix of business visitors and travelers who have done their homework. If you want the most settled version of the room, arrive before the dinner service peaks, earlier seatings, particularly on weekdays, give you more space and quieter surroundings.
Chef Luu Meng is one of Cambodia's most publicly recognised culinary figures, and that recognition shapes what Malis does: Cambodian cooking handled with deliberate technique rather than shortcuts. The menu leans into traditional Khmer flavours, broths, fermented fish pastes, coconut-based curries, in a format that is composed and platable without crossing into fusion territory. For a food traveler seeking depth and context in a cuisine that rarely gets full treatment outside Cambodia, this is exactly the kind of place worth prioritising over convenience.
The Google rating sits at 4.3 across 1,336 reviews, which for a restaurant of this positioning in Siem Reap is a reliable signal. High-volume tourist restaurants in the city tend to cluster at similar scores on surface-level service alone, but Malis earns it on the cooking. That said, the OAD ranking trajectory, strong in 2023, slipping in 2024 and 2025, is worth acknowledging. It does not disqualify the restaurant, but it suggests the wider regional field has grown more competitive. Think of it as a solid first-choice for Cambodian fine dining in the city, not an untouchable benchmark.
On Delivery and Takeaway
Malis is not a delivery restaurant. The dishes here depend on presentation, temperature, and the environment of the room to land properly. Cambodian broths and amok-style preparations lose significant texture in transit, and nothing on a menu built around this kind of cooking is designed for a container. If you are staying at a property nearby and thinking of ordering in, redirect that impulse toward something simpler, street food from the Night Market, or a more casual setup. Malis is worth sitting down for, not eating out of a bag in your hotel room.
Practical Details
Malis is on Pokambor Avenue in Siem Reap, a central and accessible address that does not require significant planning to reach. Booking is direct, this is not a restaurant where you need weeks of lead time outside peak tourist season (November through February), when Siem Reap fills with visitors on temple circuits. If you are traveling in high season, booking a day or two ahead is sensible. Outside that window, same-day reservations are typically available. Dress expectations are smart casual at minimum, the room is too composed for beach shorts, but a jacket is not required. For solo diners, the format works well: the menu is structured around sharing but individual portions are manageable, and the service is attentive without being intrusive. Check our full Siem Reap restaurants guide for broader context on where Malis sits in the city's dining options, and our Siem Reap hotels guide if you are still planning your base.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Malis?
The menu at Malis focuses on traditional Cambodian cooking under chef Luu Meng, one of the country's most prominent culinary figures. Specific dish recommendations aren't available here, but the format rewards going beyond the obvious — ask staff what is prepared in-house or regionally sourced that day. Avoid treating it like a tourist menu situation; this is a venue ranked in OAD's Top 150 restaurants in Asia as recently as 2023.
Can I eat at the bar at Malis?
Bar seating specifics aren't documented for Malis. The restaurant's open-air layout suits a relaxed, seated dining pace rather than quick counter eating. If bar seating is a priority, confirm directly with the restaurant on arrival or when booking.
What should I wear to Malis?
Malis sits above the Pub Street tourist corridor in terms of calibre, and dress should reflect that. Clean, presentable clothing is appropriate — think neat casual rather than beachwear or overly formal. Siem Reap's heat makes breathable fabrics the practical choice.
What are alternatives to Malis in Siem Reap?
Cuisine Wat Damnak is the closest rival for serious Cambodian cooking with a tasting menu format — better if you want a set progression rather than à la carte choice. Chanrey Tree offers a more accessible price point for traditional Khmer food. Le Royal at The Raffles is the option for occasion dining in a hotel setting, though the cuisine focus differs. For something more casual and community-oriented, Bayon Pastry School trades prestige for purpose.
Is Malis good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. Malis carries genuine culinary credibility — OAD-ranked in Asia's top restaurants across 2023, 2024, and 2025 — and the atmosphere is calmer and more considered than most Siem Reap options. It works well for a celebratory dinner where the food is the occasion. For a full private-room, set-menu special occasion format, Cuisine Wat Damnak may suit better.
Does Malis handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodation specifics aren't confirmed in available data. Cambodian cuisine relies on fish-based sauces and aromatics, which can complicate strict vegetarian or vegan requests. Communicate restrictions clearly when booking or on arrival — a restaurant at this level of recognition typically has the kitchen flexibility to adjust, but verify rather than assume.
How far ahead should I book Malis?
Book at least a few days ahead, particularly during peak Angkor season (November through March). Malis draws both informed travellers and local diners, so same-day walk-ins are possible but carry risk during busy periods. Given it's consistently OAD-ranked in Asia, treating it as a plan-ahead reservation rather than a spontaneous stop is the safer approach.
Location
Pokambor Ave, Krong Siem Reap 12131, Cambodia
Siem Reap, Cambodia
Compare Malis
| Venue |
|---|
| Malis |
| Cuisine Wat Damnak |
| Le Royal at The Raffles |
| Bayon Pastry School |
| Chanrey Tree |
| Damnak Meas |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Cuisine Wat Damnak, Cambodian, Cambodian
- Le Royal at The Raffles, French Cambodian, French Cambodian
- Bayon Pastry School, Notable alternative
- Chanrey Tree, Notable alternative
- Damnak Meas, Notable alternative
The most direct comparison to Malis is Cuisine Wat Damnak, which also appears on the Opinionated About Dining Asia list and takes a serious approach to Cambodian ingredients. Wat Damnak leans more toward a set-menu, tasting format, if you want structured progression through a meal with wine pairing potential, that is the better pick. Malis offers more flexibility with an à la carte approach, which suits travelers who want to eat selectively rather than commit to a full tasting sequence. For a first encounter with Cambodian fine dining in Siem Reap, Malis is the more accessible entry point; Wat Damnak rewards the more focused diner.
Bayon Pastry School is a different proposition, training-focused, lighter in format, and worth a visit for breakfast or a pastry stop, but it does not compete with Malis on dinner. Chanrey Tree and Damnak Meas offer Cambodian cooking at a more casual register, suitable if budget is a constraint or if you are eating multiple meals in the city and want variation in spend. Neither carries the same award recognition as Malis or Wat Damnak.
If your trip extends to Phnom Penh, Le Royal at The Raffles offers a French-Cambodian hybrid in a colonial heritage setting, a different dining register entirely, but worth including for the atmosphere and the city's contrasting food context. For Siem Reap specifically, the decision comes down to format: book Malis for à la carte flexibility and a composed, unhurried room; book Wat Damnak if a set tasting menu is your preferred structure. Both are the strongest options in the city.
Recognized By
Explore Siem Reap
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