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The Best Northern Thai Food Tour - A Chef’s Tour Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai is a beautiful city full of unique Northern Thai cuisine. Follow us as we embark on a food tour sampling all the best dishes Thailands second city can offer! From the famous “Cowboy Hat” lady’s pork leg on rice, raw buffalo laab and northern sausages to the delicious Shan Burmese noodles outside the city walls, we eat our way to the heart of Northern Thai cooking with A Chef’s Tour!

Disclosure: This article may contain affiliate links. We will earn a small commission from any purchases made through these links.

We love Thailand. We also love our food. Put the two together, and you have some very happy Jellie! 

Ellie smiles at the camera whilst eating roast pork and chicken at Neng Earthen Jar Roast Pork, Chiang Mai.

Happy Ellie eating in Thailand!

Thai cuisine is renowned world over, for its incredible blend of hot, sweet, salt and sour flavours, but outside of Pad Thai and green curries, most people's experience of this amazingly varied cuisine falls short. We have already eaten our way through the south of Thailand, up through the islands, mainland and the chaotic streets of Bangkok, but it was now time to sample the wonders of Northern Thai cooking. 

What Is Northern Thai Cuisine?

This is far too bigger question to answer! If we had to narrow it down a bit, this is what we’d say:

Northern Thai cuisine differs from its central and southern counterparts. The food in the north is heavily influenced by its Burmese, Chinese and Laotian neighbours. The northern Thai dishes blend their own cuisine with the borrowed flavours to create something deliciously unique.

Northern Thai cooking is unique in its uses of herbs and spices, sourced from the local fauna or further abroad from neighbouring countries. Due to its geographical location, river fish are more common, and jungle ingredients take a more central role. Northern dishes tend to be less creamy, with a more prominent bitter flavour. 

What Is The Best Way To Try Northern Thai Food?

The best way to try Northern Thai food as always, is just to get out and eat. In Thailand, street food is king and is available 24/7, 365 days a year. Getting out amongst the street life, pulling up a chair at a plastic table and ordering whatever the person sitting next to you is eating is one of the best ways of expanding your horizon and encountering yummy food. 

Fluorescent lights hang over colourful food stalls at Chaing Mai's North Gate Food Market

However, sometimes a more curated approach is necessary. 


Chiang Mai is Thailand’s second city, and the true hub of the north. Chiang Mai has everything you could want to experience of northern Thai cooking. From the Old City to Chinatown, Little Burma and Shan cuisine it has a little bit of everything. 


The city of Chiang Mai is big, too big to explore on foot and certainly too big to try every tasty thing it has to offer. A food tour is a great way to overcome these issues. An expert guide can show you around and lead you to the places and dishes you would never find by yourself. This is where ‘A Chef’s Tour’ comes in. 


We had an amazing experience with A Chef’s Tour eating our way through southern Thai cuisine in Phuket, as well as experiencing the street food in the colourful warren of Chandni Chowk in India’s Old Delhi . Both tours were incredible, with brilliant guides who opened our eyes to the cuisine and culture and added so much context to every dish we tried. With this in mind, it was a no brainer, A Chef’s Tour was our number one choice for a food tour in Chiang Mai. 


Northern Flavours - A Chef’s Tour Chiang Mai

Stop One - The Cowboy Hat Lady and Her Pork Leg On Rice

It started, as many great things do in a market. Chiang Mai’s North Gate food market is famous for its street food offerings. After dark the area outside of the Old City walls comes alive in fluorescent lights and flashing woks. 

We were here to see a local legend - The Cowboy Hat Lady. She was (according to rumour) already the most popular seller of Thai style pork leg and rice when, in order to protect her eyes from the bright lamps of her stall, she started to wear her iconic cowboy hat. Her fame grew in the West when the acerbic and brilliant late Anthony Bourdain ate at her stall and featured her in his books and TV shows. 

The famous "coyboy hat lady" works her stall selling pork leg and rice in the North gate market of Chiang Mai Thailand

Our guide said this was technically a bonus stop as pork leg is not a uniquely northern Thai dish. Pork leg and rice traces its roots from central Thailand and the Chinese communities who brought both pigs and Chinese five spice from their homelands. We were presented with small sample plates from the smiling be-hatted proprietor. 

It was beyond delicious, and the Cowboy Hat Lady thoroughly deserves her popularity. We have never eaten such tender pork! Meltingly soft seven hour stewed pork in a rich five spice sauce with a soft yolked duck egg, pickled mustard greens and a chilli vinegar. We wished our plates were larger, at least until we were reminded we had between ten and fifteen dishes still to go…

Piling into the back of the red songthaew, it was time for our next stop. 

Stop Two - Roasted Meat Perfection -  Clay Jar Roasted Pork and Chicken

Our next stop was a roadside wonder. Huge clay jars engraved with Chinese dragons lined the shop front. Moui, our guide (more on her later), lifted the lid on one of the jars and revealed its treasure. Huge slabs of pork belly, hung from the inside rim over flaming charcoal. The smell was amazing as the pork fat became crackling before our very eyes. The next pot was hung with roasting chickens. Again, the smell was incredible. 

A large earthenware jar holds hanging pork belly being roasted over hot coals. Taken at Neng Earthen Jar Roast Pork, Chiang Mai

We quickly grabbed a table and were presented with a plate of pork, chicken and two dipping sauces. 

Since coming to Thailand we’ve become slightly addicted to crispy pork belly. This was possibly the best we’ve had so far. The first layer was the crispiest crackling we’ve ever crunched, with each subsequent layer of the belly, either meltingly soft fat or perfectly tender meat. It was divine! Moui directed us to try the next bite with the dip of the special sauce. Made from soy sauce, chilli, lime and coriander root, this fresh acidic sauce cut through the rich pork belly beautifully. 

The roast chicken was next. Being from England we love our roast chicken, but this was a long way from stuffing and gravy. The chicken had been marinated prior to its spell in the charcoal fired kilns, and the skin was sweet and crisp, whilst the meat was so juicy, you could eat it with a spoon. The chicken, paired with a sweeter tamarind based sauce, was again insanely delicious. 

Two plates sit on a wooden table with a sprig of fresh Thai basil. On the left is roasted chicken and to the right is crispy belly pork. Above are two dipping sauces in Neng Earthen Jar Roast Pork, Chiang Mai.

Moui explained that this location was relatively new. The stall had always been popular, and had even been featured on the popular YouTuber Mark Wiens’ channel but had exploded in popularity during the pandemic as it offered home delivery of its roasted treats. Vowing to return, it was onwards to the next stop. 

Stop Three - Deep Into The North - Buffalo Bile Laab, Burmese Curry and Fermented Pork Naem

We think it's probably time we introduced you to Moui. Our tour guide had been amazing, sat in the back of our songthaew, Moui ran us through the histories of northern Thai cooking. We never knew that prior to the Chinese influence, there was no pork, no noodles and no duck in Thai cuisine. As we made our way to our third stop, she reached into her Mary Poppins bag and brought out two spice mixes. 

The first of her spice boxes was full to the brim with mak waen peppercorns. We have never heard of, seen, or tasted these little peppercorns. They smelled wonderfully floral, but when eaten were like baby szechuan peppercorns. Mak waen are fundamental in the blend of spices needed for laab, our next dish. Moui’s second spice box was a treasure trove of wonderful smells. Cinnamon mixed with star anise, mace, nutmeg and finally the mak waen produced an intoxicating aromatic blend. Moui was fantastic at explaining the roles, history and effects of the spices and what they would bring to the coming dishes.

Our songthaew, driven by the silent Mr Pong, pulled up next to a small restaurant on the side of a large road. Outside the restaurant, barbeques smouldered with leaf wrapped packages being grilled on top. Inside, the smell of curries permeated the air and we were ushered to our table by the smiling owner. It was time for some truly northern fare. 

A man tends to a grill barbeque outside a restaurant in Chiang Mai. On the grill sausages and other meats are cooking.

Laab (larb) in Thai literally means minced. A laab salad is not what we in the West would call salad. Minced meat is combined with a spice blend as well as onions, herbs, lemongrass and chilli. The meat is served either raw or cooked and is an iconic dish both of northern Thailand and neighbouring Laos. 

On our table, two dishes arrived. One a blood red, raw laab and the other a steaming cooked laab. Both were made of buffalo meat, mixed with the mak waen spice blends we had just been shown. Our guide swiftly assured us that we did not have to eat the raw buffalo laab but we had already dived in. For a salad including raw meat, blood, bile and undigested intestinal juices (Moui kept referring to this as poo juice), the raw salad was surprisingly subtle. The lemongrass and spice blend, had removed any gamey flavour, and you were left with a pleasant, tartare-esque, iron rich and slightly bitter salad. It was completely unique. The cooked laab was strikingly different. The meat and blood, now had a firmer texture and the spice mix, being cooked came through stronger. The closest comparison we could think of, was that this salad tasted a bit like a Thai version of Black Pudding. This cooked laab, eaten with a ball of sticky rice, was delicious. Moui explained that this is popular drinking food and we can see why.

The second of our dishes was a Burmese pork curry. This was incredible. Moui explained that northern Thai food is defined by a more bitter flavour profile, whereas this, originating in Burma, was sweet, cinnamony and rich in spices. 

Next came the sour soup. Despite its name, the sourness was not overwhelming, just the perfect counterpoint to the rich, tender stewed beef of the soup. A slice of radish added a bite of texture and a deep savoury undertone. 

The final dish of this stop was delivered from the barbeque wrapped in banana leaf. As we unwrapped the banana leaf, Moui explained that this was fermented pork or Naem Mok. Naem Mok is a traditional way of preserving pork meat. The minced sausage meat is combined with pork skin, shallots, sticky rice, salt, sugar, garlic and chilli, wrapped in a leaf and left to ferment for up to 3 days. You can use the Naem Mok raw, stir fry it or grill it. We were eating our Naem Mok grilled with sticky rice. The texture was like that of a terrine, and the flavour was amazing. When you think of fermentation, you think of sour and bitter flavours, and although they were present here, they were married with the sweet richness of pork. Each mouthful was incredible but made even better when paired with a bite of raw garlic and chilli.

A table is strewn with northern Thai dishes, featuring buffalo laab, a Burmese pork curry, sour soup, rice, naem mok and herbs.

Our northern feast!

After our laab and fermented pork, the unspeaking Mr Pong drove us to the amazing Siri Wattana Market.

Stop Four - Siri Wattana Market / Tha-nin Market - A Thai Market Feast - Sae Oua, Khanom Buang, Khanom Tuay, Coconut Sticky Rice, Sugarcane Juice, Thai Tropical Fruits, Fried Insects and Stir Fried Malindjo Leaf with Egg

Siri Wattana and Tha-nin markets were brightly lit and full of colour, produce and people. One of the things we love about Thailand are the local wet markets. So many fruits, vegetables, meats, fish and dried goods line tight alleyways. It looks to our food obsessed brains like an Aladdin’s cave. 

A cluttered stall sells every shape, colour and variety of seasonings and sauces in the Siri Wattana market, Chiang Mai.

We had already eaten many dishes, but it was time for the grand picnic! Moui took us all around the market, which even at 7pm was full of fresh produce and bustling life. 

A man carefully skins and enormous jackfruit at the Siri Wattana Market, Chiang Mai.

We took a tour of the aromat vendors and had a crash course in the many types of basil used in Thailand. After the fresh produce, we were shown big vats of curry pastes, pungent fish and shrimp pastes before going through the dried spices and noodle vendors.

We then moved through the meat and fish stalls, being shown all the different cuts of meat. From the usual bacon and pork belly, to whole pig faces, intestines and gall bladders!

A meat vendor cuts a pig face in two with a cleaver in the Siri Wattana market in Chiang Mai.

After the meat vendors, we made our way down to the front where a lady was grilling northern Thai sausages - Sae Oua. Fresh off the grill, the Sae Oua were herby and full of lemongrass and spiced pork. They were so moreish, and we would love a plate of these with some sticky rice and ice cold beer! Picking up a bag full, it was time to head to the dessert aisle of the market. 

We knew instantly that we had arrived in dessert town. Tables of brightly coloured sweet treats surrounded us and the smell of roasted coconut filled the air. A smiling dancing man cooked us up a fresh batch of crispy Thai pancakes - Khanom Buang. On a piping hot flat plate, circular discs of pancake batter crisp up and are filled with meringue before being topped with either orange coloured roasted coconut, or yellow shavings of egg. They are sweet, delicious and highly addictive. Next time we see these, we will pick up a bag and have them with coffee!

A Khanom Buang seller makes the crispy pancakes on a hot grill in Siri Wattana market, Chiang Mai.

Next door we grabbed Khanom Tuay, a small steamed pudding of coconut and pandan. Each side is flavoured either coconut or pandan and you have to eat both together to get the full effect. They are rich, creamy, slightly salty and very yummy! 

Our final pudding of this stage was the coconut sticky rice cooked in bamboo.

John peels apart a bamboo tube stuffed with coconut sticky rice in a market in Chiang Mai.

Peeling apart the bamboo tube revealed a fat cigar of steamed coconut sticky rice studded with black beans. Although a dessert, this sticky rice was more nutty than sweet, and super satisfying, we thought it would make an excellent breakfast. 


After this round of sweets, we grabbed some fresh sugar cane and lime juice from a lovely stall holder who pressed it fresh on site. Although extremely sweet, the lime juice cut through and made for a really refreshing pick me up. 

Desserts done we delved back into the market to assemble a picnic. First stop was the fruit section where we grabbed a bag full of exotic looking treats. We moved on and picked up some deep fried insects before finally ordering a stir fry from a small stall at the back of the market. We made a camp on an unused market table and unpacked our goodies. 

The stir fry was eggs mixed with malindjo leaf - Bai Lieng Pad Kai. The leaf is unique to the north and is deeply savoury and rich in iron. Think spinach but on steroids. Paired with the creamy egg it was lovely. 

Next came the fried insects, these are not just for the dares of drunken revellers on Khao San Road, but are an important source of protein in Thailand’s past and poorer communities. The silk worms were… an acquired taste, a taste we have not yet acquired. Crunchy, yet gooey they were not our favourite. The two different types of cricket however were strangely moreish. Crunchy and salty they would make an excellent bar snack. 

Moui spread out a colourful platter of snake fruit, mangosteen, rose apple and pomelo. Each fruit was completely unique and a treat to try. Honestly we wish we had this type of selection in the UK. The sweet mangosteen were great all by themselves but the pomelos were perfect when paired with some salt, chilli, and sugar dip. We had eaten snake fruit before in Indonesia and had loved their floral tart flavour, but these were more intense with an almost alcoholic taste. 

Our market feast was enormous, but this was not the end of our tour. Moui gleefully informed us that we had two more stops to make. 

Stop Five - Shan Cuisine - Khao Soi Ei Si Ket and Burmese Tea Leaf Salad

Our songthaew made our way down an alleyway so small that if the paint was any thicker we wouldn’t have fitted. Colourful textile shops selling silks and traditional clothing from Burma lined the alleyway, and we were dropped off outside a tiny restaurant that Moui assured was run by a true noodle master. This was a perfect example of why you need a food tour. We would never have found this place, let alone gone in, but this one shophouse restaurant is apparently responsible for supplying a good deal of the surrounding area with delicious handmade noodles. We took a table. 

This was a Shan restaurant in the Shan district of Chiang Mai. Moui explained how the Shan people of Burma had, and were, moving to northern Thailand to escape the ongoing conflicts of their homeland and had brought their cuisines and culture with them.

First up came the traditional Burmese Tea Leaf Salad. We have eaten a tea leaf salad before in Phuket but this was completely different. We do not know if it was a specifically Shan version of a tea leaf salad but it was wonderful. A tea leaf salad is made up of fermented tea leaves, raw onions and vegetables and topped with chilli, coriander and peanuts. It’s a true textural treat. This one was less sour in its fermented flavour than its Phuket counterpart, but was full of nuttiness, spice and fresh herbs. It was amazing. 

A plate of Burmese tea leaf salad sits in a Shan restaurant in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Then came the noodles. The Shan noodles - Khao Soi Ei Si Ket. These noodles are a wheat and egg blend, cut to long strips, with flat sides. They have an amazing texture. Firm yet springy, they allow any sauce to cling to them. We were served the noodles in a sweet, savoury nutty sauce topped with red pork. They were delicious as they were, but under Moui’s direction, we added a healthy scoop of roasted chilli oil and a big spoon of pickled mustard leaves. These two additions elevated the dish to new heights. Smokey, sweet, nutty and sharp, it had everything. 

A bowl of Shan red pork noodles, sits in a bowl alongside soup and pickled mustard greens in a Burmese Shan restaurant in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

At this point we pretty much rolled back into the songthaew. Think of Violet Beauregarde from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. 

Stop Six - One Last Sweet Treat - Bualoy Khai Wan 

The tour ended where it began, at the Chiang Mai North Gate Market. The market was in full force, the Cowboy Hat Lady had a long queue to serve and all the stalls were doing a roaring trade.

We had one more dish to try. This would be another famous stall, the Bualoy Khai Wan stall. Bualoy Khai Wan is a desert made up of tapioca balls (dyed green with pandan leaf) that sit in a coconut milk broth. This broth can be topped with lots of different ingredients, from sweet corn to poached eggs and any number of fruits and jellies. Ours came topped with steamed purple taro root. The taro provided a tempering flavour against the sweet coconut milk and vanilla scented tapioca balls. It was the perfect way to finish an evening of over indulgence. 

Different toppings are spread on a wooden platter on a bualoy khai wan stall in the northern night market of Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Just some of the many toppings you can choose from to top your bualoy khai wan!

With our bellies full of food, and our brains loaded with information, we bid farewell to Moui and the mute Mr Pong, happy and full with our evening of eating. 

Why Book ‘A Chef’s Tour’?

The knowledge and experience of the guides is incredible. The tours are more than just a ‘greatest hits’ food tour. You get the history and culture of a place, laced through with the story of the ingredients and how society shaped the food. Not only do you get to try famous dishes like “Cowboy Hat Lady” but you genuinely go off-piste finding tiny hidden gem restaurants that truly encapsulate the best of the cuisine. As we’ve said we have used in southern Thailand and in India, and they have been consistently amazing.

How To Book Your Own Tour?

If this has whetted your appetite and made you hungry to try the best of Northern Thailand’s cuisine, then why not book your own A Chef’s Tour?

A Chef’s Tour runs two tours daily in Chiang Mai.  A lunchtime tour and the evening tour we took. The lunch time tour is slightly different from the evening tour as different stalls and shops are open.

A Chef’s Tour also run tours in Bangkok, with two tours running focusing on the food from Old Siam and the backstreets of Bangkok.

For those travelling in Phuket, Thailand A Chef’s Tour also runs a tour focussing on the southern flavours in Phuket’s Old Town.

To read about our experiences on other food tours we’ve taken, check out our articles on Delhi and the Phuket Old Town.

Thanks for reading, 


John & Ellie x

#adventuresofjellie


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A Chef’s Tour - Phuket Old Town

Phuket Old Town is a wonderful blend of cuisines from all over southern Thailand, China, Malaysia, Myanmar and the Indian subcontinent. Taking a food tour is always a great idea and we may have found our favourite! Follow us on a day of foodie adventures with A Chef’s Tour eating our way around Phuket Old Town.

Disclosure: This article may contain affiliate links. We will earn a small commission from any purchases made through these links.

We are what you might call foodies. There are other words for what we are; adventurous eaters, food fanatics, or just plain gluttons. From high end Michelin Star restaurants to the cheapest of street food, we are food obsessed. As culinary travellers, many of our choices of where to go and even what countries to visit have been made due to the food that would be on offer. It should come as no surprise then, that when in the food wonderland of Thailand, we wanted to dig a little deeper and learn a bit more about Thai cuisine than just green curry, mango sticky rice and Pad Thai. We wanted to go on a proper food tour. 

Phuket Old Town is legendary for its food scene with Michelin recommended street food, colonial style shop house restaurants and an amazing blend of cuisines. We found ourselves visiting Phuket to meet up with some of our lovely friends from the UK. To get ourselves curated with the best Phuket could offer, we decided to book ourselves on “A Chef’s Tour - Southern Flavours Phuket Old Town” food tour. 

We came across A Chef’s Tour as they have consistently been recommended to us from other travellers, Instagram as well as a bunch of YouTubers we follow. 

The food tour started outside the entrance to the main market in Phuket’s Old Town. We met with our lovely guide Nam and the rest of our fellow foodie explorers for the day. Introductions completed, we set off down into the bowels of the market. 

Our first stop was at a lady’s stall selling all manner of vegetables, aromatics and herbs. Nam explained to us what each herb was used for in Thai cooking, as well as treating us to have a little sniff and taste of everything.

Green beans, pak choi, lemon grass and other vegetables are piled high on a market stall in the Central Market of Phuket Old Town.

Our taste buds primed, we moved across into a wall of fragrance, where we found ourselves next to a curry paste vendor. Bowls stacked high with pastes in every shade of ochre and saffron. A large vat of red paste was pulled aside and proudly showed off to us as the legendary massaman curry paste, a southern Thai favourite. We were given the run down of the 10 basic ingredients of the massaman, and as soon as we were told what was in it, our noses could instantly start to pick out the individual ingredients. As our food tour started mid morning, the market was winding down, but you could see from the empty bowls, and the tide mark on the vats, that these curry pastes are popular with the locals.

Baskets of shallots and garlic sit in front of colourful mounds of Thai curry pastes on a market stall in Phuket's Old Town Central Market.

Our appetites suitably wetted, we moved on to the first course of the day. 

Kuay Jab - Rolled Rice Noodles and Pork

At the back of the Central Market was a charming little counter with a smiling Auntie behind it. The Auntie was introduced as “mum” as our guide Nam was a childhood friend of the owner and had apparently spent a good portion of her youth sitting at this counter chowing down on steaming bowls of Kuay Jab.

Kuay Jab can look challenging to start with, a dark broth filled with all the bits of the pig that in the West would be at the bottom of the barrel. Ears, snout, heart, intestines, offal and all the rest. These more exotic parts (to the West at least) are slow braised along more regular cuts of pork. In eating, bravery is often rewarded. People don’t eat this because it's disgusting or weird, it's not a novelty, they eat it everyday because it's delicious! 

There are two types of Kuay Jab, a light clear broth version called Kuay Jab Nam Sai made with a pork bone stock. The second version is what we ate on this tour, Kuay Jab Nam Son. Our broth was rich and dark in colour, with a distinctive aroma of star anise and cinnamon,  mixed in with coriander, spring onions, garlic and three types of soy sauce. 

A bowl of Kuay Jab is laden with pork slices as well as offal and half a boiled egg. The Dark bowl of broth is served at a market stall in Phuket Old Town's Central Market.

Kuay Jab sets itself apart from other pork soups with its unique noodles. Small squares of rice flour noodles are dropped into boiling water and tapioca starch, where they curl up like little scrolls. These are then added to the soup, along with all the pork meats and give a wonderful texture as well as a perfect surface area for absorbing all of the delicious flavours. 

The Kuay Jab was incredible. Unique in flavour and texture, and by the end of the meal there were a lot more converts to pig heart and ear around the table than there had been at the start.

Before we left, Nam challenged the group with a “century egg”. Century eggs, or hundred year eggs are not eggs that have been kept for 100 years! They are simply eggs that have been pickled and cured in brine, and then buried in ash giving them a unique texture and a very challenging look. A century egg is a strange mix of black and translucent, with the yolk clearly defined on the inside. Its taste however, is not so challenging. It just takes like a very eggy egg! Seriously, if you took all the tasty parts and the smell of the egg and just intensified it, you’d have the taste of a century egg. Like lots of the things we have eaten on this trip, the only difficulty is the visuals. Get past this and you’ll be in for a treat.

Rice Salad, Chicken Murtabak, Roti and Teh Tarik - Aroon Po Chana

We left the market, and wound our way through the colourful streets of Phuket Old Town ending up outside Aroon Po Chana restaurant. This southern Thai muslim restaurant gave us a clue before we even stepped in as to what we might be eating. Right at the entrance, on the street side was a large tawa grill. These flat circular grills are a tell-tale sign that roti is to come. The lady in charge of the tawa was skillfully stretching, spinning and draping translucent roti dough onto the sizzling hot surface. We made our way inside.

A lady prepares roti dough at Aroon Po Chana in Phuket Old Town.

It turns out we weren’t entirely accurate with our predictions of what we would be eating, as the first thing that came out to us was a Khao Yum southern rice salad. We had never heard of this southern delicacy before, but Nam quickly showed us how to toss the rice, roasted coconut, carrots, cabbage, beansprouts, fried fish together with lime juice. The salad is eaten alongside a potent chilli dip and crunchy fresh green vegetables. This salad was unlike anything we had eaten before. The sweetness of the roasted coconut paired brilliantly with the salty fish, and the rice provided just enough body to make every bite super satisfying. 

A plate of bright green mixed vegetables including green peppercorns sits in front of a plate of Khao Yum at Aroon Po Chana restaurant in Phuket Old Town.


Next out of the kitchen came the crispy, oily and rich chicken murtabak. In its simplest terms, a murtabak is a stuffed savoury pancake that's then fried and grilled on both sides to crispify the exterior. Our murtabak was filled with a shredded chicken curry, rich with an almost sweet cinnamon flavour. To balance the decadent richness, a strong vinegar pickle of shallots, chilli and cucumber was served alongside. The corner pieces of the murtabak were especially delicious when dipped in this vinegar, as the extra crunch was amplified by the near raw vegetables in the tangy vinegar.

After our two starters, the savoury roti arrived. Roti can be translated literally to bread. However in southern Thailand, roti usually refers to “Thai pancake”. A thin dough, stretched out until it's like a huge translucent pizza which is then folded and cooked on a piping hot tawa. After being cooked on the tawa, the roti is “clapped” to give it extra surface area. By clapped, it is literally placed on a board and roughly smashed between two hands, breaking the uniform disk of the roti into crispy, chewy shards, perfect for absorbing anything they are dipped into. Our roti came with a massaman curry. We had seen the paste in the market earlier, and all the aromats we had smelled in the market were here tenfold. The cooked curry smelt amazing. Dipping the crispy roti in the massaman made it all the better. The curry coated and stuck to the roti beautifully and the whole bite was a symphony of spices. 

We thought we had finished our roti experience, but we were very wrong. Out came two new colours of roti, bright green and jet black. This was the pandan roti and the charcoal roti and this was now the sweet course. Drizzled with sweet condensed milk, this was a great example of the versatility of roti. Sweet, crispy and morish, it's no surprise that a version of this, is the namesake of the SE Asian ‘Banana Pancake Backpacker Trail’. 

To round off the meal was the famous teh tarik. Tarik is Malaysian for pull, and teh is unsurprisingly Malaysian for tea. So teh tarik is pulled tea and is widely popular in Malaysia and southern Thailand. The tea is poured from increasingly impressive heights from one cup to another, which aerates the tea and gives a smoother texture. Our teas came out towering with foam and tooth achingly sweet from the condensed milk. This black tea and condensed milk combo gave a much needed energy boost after such a heavy meal. 

A glass of hot teh tarik with a towering head of foam is held aloft at Aroon Po Chana restaurant in Phuket Old Town.

Hokkien Food Court - Spring Rolls and Satay - Lock Tien Food Court


We left the roti shop slightly disbelieving that we were less than halfway through our food tour, and made our way to the Lock Tien food court. This compact little food court had stores all around, many of them specialising in Hokkien cuisine. Hokkien cuisine originates in the Chinese province of Fujian and is spread all over South East Asia.  

We went to a stall specialising in hokkien spring rolls where we watched the stall owner expertly roll up our soft shelled spring rolls. The texture of the spring rolls was not at all like the crispy exterior familiar to take away goers in the UK.

Hokkien spring rolls being made by a market vendor in the Lock Tien food court of Phuket Old Town.

These rolls were wrapped in a soft wheat flour pancake. The chewy, slightly spongy exterior gave way to a crunchy filling of salad, beansprouts, yam roots, boiled yam and char siu pork. Served alongside was a fermented soybean sauce mixed with sour tamarind, sugar and chilli. The group were split as to whether these were better than the more familiar fried version, or just not for them. However, these were a unique try and certainly not like any spring rolls we had tried before. 

Alongside the spring rolls, another stall had supplied us with satay. Marinated meat, with a sweet savoury peanut dip and a tart pickle, you really can’t go wrong with a good satay! 

A plate of hokkien spring rolls sits next to satay skewers and a peanut dip at Lock Tien food court in Phuket Old Town.

Ahpom Coconut Pancakes - Pong Mae Sunee - Michelin Recommended Street Food

At the corner of an unassuming street lies possibly the cheapest Michelin recommended food we’ve ever seen. A small cart, topped with six charcoal braziers, was manned by a charming couple churning out delectable crispy coconut pancakes. 

Ahpom coconut pancakes being made on a street side stall at Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket Old Town. A Michelin sign sits on the left showing its recommended status.

A thin batter of rice flour, eggs, coconut  milk and sugar was spread evenly across the tiny metal woks set over the coals. A lid went on top, so that the bottom of the batter crisps up against the pan, whilst the top steams into fluffiness. We were reminded of the Sri Lankan hoppers we had eaten during our time in that amazing country and our guide Nam said this may well be because the dish originates on the Indian subcontinent. 

An ahpom coconut pancake roll is held up in front of the Pong Mae Sunee street stall in Phuket Old Town.

Once the pancakes reached the perfect level of crispy goodness, they were removed from the pans with a palette knife and an expert flip, and quickly rolled into loose cylinders. Presented with these fat crunchy cigars, we bit in. The pancakes were incredible, light as a feather yet full of the rich sweet flavour of toasted coconut. The textures were perfect, the cylinder shape meant you had many layers of snappy crunchy batter, but with a softer underside. As we bit into the middle of the pancake, the coconut flavour intensified. Due to the bowl shape of the cooking vessel, the batter is slightly thicker in the centre, lending an almost spongy coconut chew to the middle. They were fantastic! 

Everything was included in the price of the food tour, but these were so good we had to buy another portion to takeaway. This did not exactly break the bank as each pancake was 3 baht (£0.07 or $0.09). 

Despite their Indian origins, you can’t help but feel that this is the perfect expression of sunny Thai desserts. Light, sweet and full of that quintessential coconut flavour, we’d love them for breakfast with a coffee, although this might not be the healthiest start of the day. Word of warning, the stall sells out extremely quickly, so get there early in the morning! 

Ahpom are also popular in Malaysia, but under the name Apom. Definitely seek out the peanut version of this if you’re ever in a Malaysian food court.

Burmese Naan & Curry - Mingalar Coffee Shop

After pancakes, we headed back towards the market and walked around the busy shop lined back streets to “Little Myanmar” - A collection of Burmese shops and restaurants clustered together in Phuket Old Town. We’ve always wanted to visit Myanmar, so we were very excited to have the opportunity to try the food. 

A crate laden scooter turns the corner in the bustling streets around Phuket Old Town Market.

The streets around Phuket Old Town market are always bustling!

Standing outside the Mingalar Coffee Shop (mingalar is part of a Burmese greeting) we were blasted by the hot air from the tandoor oven sitting at the entrance to the restaurant. Nam quickly roped us all into an impromptu naan making class (try saying that quickly) with one of our group kneading and forming the Indian bread before it was slapped into the furnace-like opening of the tandoor oven. Whilst the bread cooked we took our seats. 

We were quickly presented with an array of colourful Burmese dishes. Along with our naan bread. We had crispy spiced samosas, a chicken curry, chickpea dahl, crispy fried chickpeas and most excitingly to us, a fermented tea leaf salad. We had heard of this dish via one of our many YouTube sessions, and had been eager to try it as it sounded so unique. We were not disappointed. 

A plate of fermented tea leaf salad in Mingalar Coffee Shop in Phuket Old Town.

The fermented tea leaf salad was made up of shredded white cabbage, shallots, garlic, beansprouts, chilli, dried shrimp, peanuts and the fermented tea leaves. The fermented tea leaves were sour and tart, yet complex. The salad had a layered tasty flavour unlike anything we had eaten before. As a contrast to the curries, deep fried samosas and hearty naan bread, this tangy salad was a perfect accompaniment.

The curries we ate here were completely different to the Thai curries we had eaten so far. These curries showcased the Indian influence in Burmese cooking, and unlike their Thai counterparts were not cooked with coconut milk. They were stronger in dry spiced favour, whilst being lighter and less creamy than the coconut based Thai curries. 

Four curries, a naan bread and samosas sit on a table at Mingalar Coffee Shop in Phuket Old Town.

One dish that split the group was the pickled roselle leaf. This deeply sour pickle had a slight funky taste to it, from the pickling/fermenting process. We enjoyed its salty, sour, umami taste but the others in the group found this a little too much and we can see why. 

We were really happy at our opportunity to try some Burmese food, like we say we’ve always wanted to go but circumstances are making that quite difficult and Burmese food doesn’t yet have the international representation of other cuisines. 

Hokkien Noodles and Roselle Juice - Ko Yoon Noodles

By now we must have looked like a group of hippopotamuses (we’ve just learnt that a group of hippopotamuses are called a bloat, and we can’t help but feel that this is perfectly apt for this situation)! We were five locations in, and at least ten courses down but there was still more to come. 

The penultimate stop was a beautiful Hokkien noodle shop. Walking into this restaurant was like walking into someone's front room. The walls were crowded with nik-naks, family photographs, children's toys and other nostalgia. Nam explained that until recently, the family that ran the restaurant lived in the building and the restaurant dining room would have to transform into their living and sleeping area after service hours. Sat at a cosy nook table, we were presented with a bowl of the famous hokkien mee. 

This hearty bowl of noodles was piled high with dumplings, thick noodles, fish balls, prawns, fried garlic and shallot, chilli and crushed peanuts. Using our chopsticks we mixed this all together with the rich, dark sauce from the bottom of the bowl. The taste was deep and savoury, balanced with tart lime and the sweetness of the prawns. We were very full at this stage and shared a bowl, but it was so good we still managed to wolf it down. 

A bowl of hokkien mee with dumplings, fish balls, chilli and crushed peanuts at Ko Yoon Noodles in Phuket Old Town.

You can get hokkien mee two ways, in soup (nam in Thai) or dry with a soup on the side (haeng in Thai). Ours came with soup on the side and the light broth was a perfect palette cleanser in between mouthfuls of the savoury sweet seafoody noodles. 

A plastic cup full of ice and roselle juice sits next to a plate of roselle buds in Ko Yoon Noodles, Phuket Old Town.

Whilst in the restaurant, we were brought strange fruit that looked like purple flower buds. This was the roselle flower. Eaten raw, they were extremely sour, but in a fun way almost like the sour sweets you ate as a child. Next they brought out the roselle juice. It was totally different whilst at the same time obviously made from the same fruit. Like the flower buds, the juice was a vibrant purple served cold with ice. Sweet, but not cloying, this was a deliciously refreshing drink. Later on in our Thai adventures we would frequently seek out roselle juice when dining at markets. This with the soup and the noodles was a perfect end to the savoury portion of our food tour.

O-Aew - Iced Lychee and Jelly Desert - A Phuket Speciality

The final stop at the food tour was for desert. We walked into a Momentary Coffee, a stunning cafe, art gallery and hostel. We were here for the Phuket specialty desert of O-Aew. 

O-Aew is shaved ice in a flavoured syrup with jelly made from the seed of the o-aew plant. The only issue was, we physically couldn’t fit any more food in. We tried a couple of spoonfuls of this desert and it was refreshing and light, yet sweet enough for those looking for a sugary fix. Our o-aew came with a lychee and ginger syrup topped with sprigs of mint. We really enjoyed our taste, and can imagine it would make the perfect desert, or a tasty way to cool down from the Phuket sun. 

A clear tea cup of o-aew iced desert with a lychee ball, ginger syrup and a sprig of mint at Momentary Coffee in Phuket Old Town.


Final Thoughts


The tour is extremely well organised, and Nam did tell us right at the start that restaurants had been pre-warned so that if we were full or wanted to ration ourselves then it wouldn’t be rude or awkward to leave anything. Members of the group who were more or less adventurous were catered too, with Nam being more than happy to ask for alternatives where needed. All in all, it was exactly how a food tour should work. 


“A Chef’s Tour - Phuket Old Town” is our favourite food tour we’ve been on so far. Maybe it's because we went with our friends, maybe it was Nam’s excellent direction, personality and knowledge, or maybe it was Phuket’s diversity of culture and cuisines, we don’t know. We hadn’t realised just how diverse the southern cuisine of Thailand and Phuket was. In a single day, we had eaten from Indian influences with the ahpom and the Burmese cuisine, through to Chinese and Hokkien dishes, all the while, every bite permeated with the unmistakable Thai flavour and charm. 

If this article has whetted your appetite and you now want to book your own foodie experience click the button below.

If you’re in Phuket, do check out taking a food tour. It was definitely one of our favourite days on this touristy island. 

Thank you for reading, 


John & Ellie x

#adventuresofjellie


A Chef’s Tour offers amazing, unique food experiences in many countries and cities (we also had an amazing time in Delhi). From Bangkok to Bogota, Chiang Mai to Kolkata they offer amazing food tours across the globe. Check out the link below and look around their website to see where they can take you.


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