Macro close-up of massaman curry — individual peanuts, amber oil pools, slow-braised beef and kaffir lime leaf on a dark iron surface
Bangkok Soul · Est. 1978

Three generations.

One mortar.

Mortar-pounded pastes. Charcoal-reduced coconut milk. A dining room where the smoke finds you.

Khao Soi · Thursdays OnlyMortar-Pounded PastesCharcoal Coconut MilkNo Apologies for the HeatOpen Kitchen · Courtyard SeatingPrivate Dining Available
Khao Soi · Thursdays OnlyMortar-Pounded PastesCharcoal Coconut MilkNo Apologies for the HeatOpen Kitchen · Courtyard SeatingPrivate Dining Available
Weathered hands of a Thai grandmother grinding fresh curry paste in a heavy stone mortar, black and white with warm sepia tones
Chapter I · 1978 · Chiang Mai

Mae Noi's

Hands.

Before sunrise, before the market opened, Mae Noi was already at the mortar. Galangal first. Then lemongrass, bruised flat with the heel of her palm. Dried chilies soaked overnight so they'd bleed color into the paste, not just heat.

She never measured. She tasted. She adjusted. She ground until the paste sang back to her — a specific resistance, a particular fragrance that meant it was ready.

Her defining dish

Gaeng Massaman Neua

Slow-braised beef, whole spices, peanuts — four hours over charcoal

Chapter II · 1999 · London

Across an ocean,

the paste survived.

Khun Som packed three things when she left Chiang Mai: her mother's mortar, a notebook of recipes written in pencil on the backs of market receipts, and the particular muscle memory of knowing when a paste is ready.

London gave her a kitchen twelve feet wide. She cooked anyway. The neighbors complained about the lemongrass. Then they started knocking to ask what was for dinner.

Her defining dish

Tom Kha Gai

Coconut broth, galangal, lemongrass — adjusted for a London winter

A Thai woman cooking in a small home kitchen, warm light, aromatic steam rising from a clay pot on the stove
Chapter III · Present · The Kitchen

Now it

erupts.

Mae Noi's mortar sits on the pass. The recipes are the same. The wok is louder. The dining room smells like a Bangkok soi at 7pm — lemongrass, charcoal, and the particular sweetness of fish sauce hitting hot iron.

Wok tossing vegetables in high flame, smoke rising in a Thai open kitchen
Close-up of Thai curry being ladled into a bowl with fresh herbs on top
Chef hands plating a Thai dish with precision, vibrant colors on a dark ceramic plate
Overhead shot of multiple Thai dishes on a wooden table in a busy restaurant

The dish that defines us now

Khao Soi Gai

Northern Thai braised chicken in a double-coconut curry broth — crispy egg noodles, pickled mustard greens, shallots, lime. Thursdays only. Off-menu. Ask at the door.

Find Your Way In

How would you like

to eat tonight?

Warm candlelit Thai restaurant interior with wooden tables and open kitchen visible in the background

Reserve a Table

Sit where the smoke reaches you.

Thai takeaway containers being packed with curry and rice, steam rising in a busy kitchen

Order for Pickup

Hot bag, fifteen minutes, no compromises.

Private dining table set for a group in a warmly lit restaurant with Thai décor and candles

Book Our Kitchen

Let us feed your people.