Category Archives: bamee

The Ultimate Noodle

The "wall art" at Gobu Rot Sing

With the earnest onset of the rains this year comes a general sense of malaise. I can’t seem to get anything done. Deadlines to be met, babies to be diapered, self to be showered, cookies to be baked (yes, my Carol Brady moment. All for charity! Contact @NamjaiMarket) — all pressing demands that I somehow manage to consistently ignore, day after day.  It’s like a helmet of smog has been fastened onto my head, and I can’t seem to shake it off.

And then, with @anuntakob and @aceimage on a wild goose chase to find the egg noodle stand belonging to a picture we had stumbled upon in a guidebook, a brief reprieve from the smog of apathy. But I should start from the beginning.

We’re working on a project that I don’t want to talk about, because I don’t want to jinx it. It’s the whole reason I’m here, sullying the web with my senseless chatter. Anyway. One night over a little monjya (a gigantic, flour-and-egg-based type of Japanese crepe) and a lot of Asahi, we chanced upon a picture of a bowl of crinkly yellow noodles, crowned with a sprinkling of spice and ringed by a line of egg — almost pristine in its perfection. The party responsible: Gobu Rot Sing (Klong Jan, across from Nida), the last two words in the name literally translating into “racing flavor”. Naturally we had to go.

So we went — somewhere. We don’t know, because we got lost. Numerous times. Terrorizing a number of cats skulking along quiet neighborhood lanes, dead-ending into countless gardens, driving slowly toward the bank of what appeared to be an enormous lake … you get the picture. This place was wicked hard to find. Finally, in front of a 7-11, just around the corner from what would end up being our final destination, interrogating the 80th person who claimed not to know what we were talking about, we back up to u-turn in a quiet side-alley only to find a rickety wooden shed outfitted with a series of burners, a bubbling cauldron set up over an open fire, and a massive display of egg crates. It looked like a caricature of what movie people would imagine roadside noodle stands to be, like something out of the Japanese noodle western movie “Tampopo”.

But what’s in the bowl is anything but Japanese. I’m sorry to have to say it, because I know people are suspicious of superlatives — people like what they like, this coming from the person who prefers France to Spain, cooking over sous-vide, Troisgros over Fat Duck (yes, I said it). Maybe because of that you won’t believe me when I say these were the best egg noodles I’ve ever had. But they are: the tom yum broth made the traditional way, with no coconut milk to muddy the strong, clear flavors; the noodles freshly blanched in a pot set over an open flame; shot through with roasted ground chilies that lend a nutty, almost woody heat to the broth; two barely cooked eggs which coat the noodles with a thick, carbonara-like silk. It is all kinds of yum.

Egg noodles in tom yum broth at Gobu

Now, if only I could manage to find this place again…

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Filed under Asia, bamee, Bangkok, food, food stalls, noodles, pork

Who rules in Bameeland?

I know, it’s a hard question to answer. Everyone has his or her favorite egg noodle stand. One of mine is produced out of the back of a dilapidated red pick-up truck and is nicknamed “Bamee Slow” by regulars. Take a trip to the corner of Ekamai 19 and you will quickly find out why (it will be the only “quick” thing about this whole experience).

Delicious egg noodles with distracting silver spoon detail

Despite the tortoise-like pace of its “kitchen”, Bamee Slow is packed every night, marked by a long queue of patrons with similarly long faces. Is it good enough to warrant a half-hour wait for a simple bowl of noodles? You be the judge.

Courtesy of pbinbkk

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Filed under Asia, bamee, Bangkok, food, food stalls, noodles, pork, Thailand

Go to this noodle shop

Let’s cut to the chase: Tang Meng Noodle (Sukhumvit Rd., between sois 47-49) is awesome. Best-known for its bamee ban (wide egg noodles, as opposed to the regular spaghetti-width ones), Tang Meng also serves a well-regarded bowl of yen ta fo (noodles in a pink seafood sauce), flavor-filled pork noodles in a sweet-sour tom yum sauce with crispy barbecued pork, and even a decently turned-out plate of khao mun gai (chicken rice).

chicken rice

seafood noodles in pink sauce

There are more dishes that I’m not even going to bother to mention, like a wide variety of khao pads (fried rice dishes) and fried noodle selections like pad see ew (fried noodles in soy sauce), @Specialkrb’s favorite. That is because they come from the kitchen in back, which technically makes Tang Meng a restaurant and not a noodle stall, but I don’t care, because the noodle dishes made up front are that good.  So go ahead and order a bowl of bamee moo (pork), luk chin pla (fish meatballs), tom yum (in a sweet-spicy chili sauce), nam yaek (noodle broth on the side) for 40 baht (50 baht for a “special” sized portion).

egg noodles with pork and fish meatballs

Don’t forget to venture a few feet into Sukhumvit Soi 49 for some fried wontons from Fried Wonton Lady (20 baht for 8, including a sweet chili dipping sauce) if, like me, you are striving to maintain your butternut squash-shaped figure. Just don’t order the nam than sod (fresh sugarcane juice), which actually comes in a can and is not, in fact, fresh. You can thank me later.

fried wontons and deep-fried tofu, taro and corn fritters

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Filed under Asia, bamee, Bangkok, food, food stalls, noodles, restaurant, Thailand, won tons