Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand
Prik-Yuak
350pts30-year local favourite, Michelin-priced like a bargain.

About Prik-Yuak
A Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Thai restaurant in Phaya Thai that has been cooking home-style Southern Thai food for 30 years. At ฿฿ pricing, Prik-Yuak delivers a level of technique — particularly in dishes like the Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew — that most Bangkok restaurants charge significantly more to match. Booking is easy; the setting is calm and unhurried.
Verdict
Prik-Yuak is one of the clearest examples in Bangkok of a casual room delivering food that punches well above its price tier. With a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and a 4.4 rating from over 650 Google reviews, this Phaya Thai institution has spent three decades earning the kind of trust that most restaurants spend fortunes trying to manufacture. If you ate here once and left thinking it was a solid neighbourhood spot, go back — and this time order deliberately. The cooking rewards attention.
Portrait
Picture yourself walking into a room where the decor is light, earthy, and calm, where a garden sits just beyond the dining area and a small café and boutique shop fill the edges of the space. Nothing about the room signals occasion dining. That's exactly the point. Prik-Yuak has been doing this since its days at Chatuchak market, and the move to its current spacious Pradiphat Road location hasn't changed the kitchen's priorities: home-style Thai cooking executed with consistency and care.
The Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew is the dish you should order if you haven't yet. Tender braised pork belly, boiled eggs, and tofu in a deep, slow-cooked stew — this is the kind of dish that takes time to get right and is easy to get wrong. At a ฿฿ price point, finding this level of technique applied to genuinely traditional Southern Thai flavours is not something you can assume across Bangkok. The dish is a direct argument for why Michelin's Bib Gourmand category exists: to flag places where the food-to-price ratio is the story.
Returning visitors should treat each visit as a chance to move through the menu methodically. The home-style format means the kitchen's strengths are distributed across multiple dishes rather than concentrated in a single showpiece. If you already know the pork belly stew, use your next visit to explore what else the kitchen does with Southern Thai technique. For context on how this compares to other serious Thai cooking in Bangkok, Saneh Jaan and Chim by Siam Wisdom are both worth knowing , they operate in a similar spirit of preserving traditional Thai recipes, though at a different price tier.
The Bib Gourmand recognition in 2025 is worth treating as a practical signal rather than just a credential. Michelin's Bib Gourmand designation specifically identifies restaurants offering quality meals at moderate prices , it's the inspectors' way of saying the value equation is the feature. For comparison, Nahm and Samrub Samrub Thai operate at a higher price point for Thai cooking in Bangkok; Prik-Yuak is the move when you want seriousness without the bill that usually accompanies it.
The setting adds real value to the experience. A serene garden, unhurried pace, and the combination of café and boutique shop make this a place that works for longer visits. It's not a quick-turnover lunch counter. The earth-toned, low-key interior and garden access make it a particularly good option when you want a break from Bangkok's louder, more scene-driven dining rooms. Aksorn offers a very different atmosphere for Thai food with more of a heritage design statement; Prik-Yuak is quieter and more domestic in feel.
Prik-Yuak sits in Phaya Thai, a residential-leaning neighbourhood that isn't a dining destination in the way that Silom or Sukhumvit are. That's partly why the restaurant has maintained its local character over three decades. The address is 108 Pradiphat Road , direct to reach by BTS or taxi. If you're building a Bangkok itinerary and want to anchor a meal in a part of the city that feels less tourist-facing, this is a useful reason to head north. For a wider view of where to eat and stay across Bangkok, see our full Bangkok restaurants guide, our full Bangkok hotels guide, and our full Bangkok bars guide.
Thailand has strong regional cooking traditions outside the capital worth knowing about. PRU in Phuket, Aquila in Chiang Mai, and Ayutthayarom in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya each offer a different angle on Thai food culture beyond Bangkok. Closer to the city, AKKEE in Pak Kret and Suan Thip in Pak Kret are worth the short trip north. For something further afield, Anuwat in Phang Nga and The Spa in Lamai Beach round out the southern Thailand picture. And if Thai food has followed you home, L'Orchidée in Altkirch is an unexpected reference point.
Browse our full Bangkok wineries guide and our full Bangkok experiences guide to build out the rest of your trip.
Booking
Booking difficulty at Prik-Yuak is easy relative to Bangkok's more sought-after tables. The restaurant has been operating for 30 years with a loyal local following, which means demand is steady rather than frantic. You don't need to plan weeks ahead, but calling or visiting in person to check availability is advisable for weekends, particularly since online booking details are not publicly listed. For larger groups or a specific table in the garden, some advance notice is sensible. Walk-in availability is likely on weekday lunches, but don't count on it for Friday or Saturday evenings after the Bib Gourmand recognition raised the restaurant's profile further.
Quick reference: 108 Pradiphat Rd, Phaya Thai, Bangkok 10400 | ฿฿ | Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025 | Google 4.4/5 (651 reviews) | Booking: easy, walk-ins possible on weekdays.
FAQs
- What should a first-timer know about Prik-Yuak? Lead with the Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew , it's the clearest expression of what the kitchen does well. Prik-Yuak is a ฿฿ home-style Thai restaurant with a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025), which means the value-to-quality ratio is the main reason to come. The setting is calm and unhurried, with a garden and café attached. It's not a quick-service spot; give yourself time to settle in.
- What should I order at Prik-Yuak? The Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew is the kitchen's signature: braised pork belly, boiled eggs, and tofu in a slow-cooked stew that demonstrates real technique. Chef Darren Broom has built the menu around home-style Thai cooking rather than modern reinterpretation, so the Bib Gourmand recognition reflects traditional execution done consistently well. Work through the Southern Thai dishes systematically if you're a returning visitor.
- Is Prik-Yuak good for solo dining? Yes. The relaxed atmosphere, unhurried pace, and café component make it comfortable for solo visitors. At ฿฿ pricing in Bangkok, you can order multiple dishes without the bill becoming an issue, which is the right way to eat through a home-style Thai menu. The garden seating is an added draw if you want to eat at your own pace.
- Can Prik-Yuak accommodate groups? The spacious room and garden suggest it can handle groups better than most Bangkok restaurants at this price point. For parties of four or more, contact the restaurant directly to check table configuration , phone details are not publicly listed, so visiting in person or checking via the address at 108 Pradiphat Road is the most reliable approach. Groups wanting a private or semi-private setup should enquire ahead rather than assuming on arrival.
- Does Prik-Yuak handle dietary restrictions? The menu centres on home-style Thai cooking, which typically involves fish sauce, pork, and egg-based preparations. The signature pork belly and egg stew is not suitable for vegetarians. Specific dietary accommodation details are not publicly listed, so raise any restrictions directly with the restaurant before visiting. Thai home-style cooking can often adapt dishes on request, but confirming in advance is the practical move.
Compare Prik-Yuak
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Prik-Yuak accommodate groups?
Yes — the spacious Pradiphat Road location, which replaced the original Chatuchak market setup, has enough room to handle groups comfortably. For larger parties, arriving early or calling ahead is sensible given the restaurant's loyal local following. It's a better group option than Bangkok's tighter Bib Gourmand spots where counter seating dominates.
Is Prik-Yuak good for solo dining?
Solid choice for solo diners. The café element alongside the main dining room means you're not stuck at a formal table for one, and the relaxed, earthy atmosphere makes lingering feel natural. At the ฿฿ price tier, ordering a couple of dishes solo won't break the budget.
What should a first-timer know about Prik-Yuak?
Come expecting home-style Thai cooking, not a chef's-table showpiece — the Michelin Bib Gourmand recognises value and quality, not fine dining format. The restaurant has been running for 30 years, starting in Chatuchak markets, so the cooking style is rooted and consistent rather than trend-driven. Budget is modest: ฿฿ means you can eat well here for a fraction of what Bangkok's starred restaurants charge.
Does Prik-Yuak handle dietary restrictions?
The database doesn't specify a formal dietary policy, but the menu includes tofu alongside meat-based dishes like the Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew, suggesting some flexibility. For serious restrictions — allergies, strict vegan requirements — check the venue's official channels before visiting, as home-style Thai kitchens often use shared ingredients like fish sauce across dishes.
What should I order at Prik-Yuak?
The Southern Thai pork belly and egg stew is the documented signature: tender pork belly, boiled eggs, and tofu in a slow-cooked preparation that reflects the restaurant's home-style focus. That dish alone makes a strong case for the visit at the ฿฿ price point, and it's the clearest expression of what Prik-Yuak has built its 30-year reputation on.
Recognized By
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