Dining in Bangkok: R-Haan**

Exterior of R-Haan restaurant at night, featuring a lighted sign and neatly landscaped entrance.

Thailand is famous for its vibrant street food—colorful, full of flavor, and often less than THB 100 (about €2.75) per serving. But during our stay in Bangkok, we decided to explore the other end of the culinary spectrum. Together with our neighbors, who happened to be in town at the same time, we tried Michelin-starred fine dining at R-Haan.

R-Haan holds two Michelin stars and offers a tasting menu that reinterprets classic Thai dishes in a refined, contemporary style. The menu includes four amuse-bouches, four starters, a main course composed of three dishes, dessert, and petit fours. The price is THB 5,512 (around €175, including service and tax). A wine pairing of six wines adds THB 3,812 (about €125). While these prices are astronomical by Thai standards, they are quite reasonable compared to two-star Michelin restaurants elsewhere in the world.

A gold-lacquered box containing colorful amuse-bouches arranged on a map of Thailand, showcasing a variety of miniature Thai dishes.

The amuse-bouches were presented in a gold-lacquered box, arranged on a map of Thailand to indicate their regional origins. From the north came a deep-fried noodle roll filled with minced pork and yellow curry spices. Central Thailand was represented by blue fish satay. From the northeast, an exquisite grilled Surin Wagyu beef with sour and spicy sauce. The east contributed a delicate lobster dumpling, and from the south, a Phuket crab curry croquette.

A close-up image of a wine bottle labeled 'Georg Breuer Terra Montosa 2021', showcasing a detailed design with a house illustration and elegant typography.

The first wine in the pairing was a very dry Riesling from Germany’s Rheingau region, with vibrant acidity and aromas of green apple.

A beautifully plated dish featuring sustainably cultivated Andaman prawns garnished with edible flowers and colorful caviar pearls on a turquoise plate.

It paired well with the first starter: a sustainably cultivated Andaman prawn served with avocado and nam pla sauce (galangal, lemongrass, bird’s eye chili, and lime).

A close-up of a bottle of Alsace Gewürztraminer wine, held by a person, featuring its label with the name Heim and vintage year 2023.

We continued with a medium-dry Gewürztraminer from Alsace, offering aromas of rose and lychee.

A sophisticated dish presented in a decorative plate, featuring a creamy base topped with dark caviar and garnished with green herbs, surrounded by a rich brown sauce.

This was an excellent pairing for the Gaeng Som, a sour fish soup served with cauliflower purée, mashed jackfruit seeds, crunchy water chestnuts, and caviar. The soup had a beautifully balanced flavor, which is the essence of Thai cuisine and particularly challenging to achieve in this water-based curry rather than the more common coconut milk-based curries.

A close-up of a wine bottle labeled 'Domaine Ostertag Riesling Clos Mathis 2022', showcasing its colorful design and details.

The wine for the third starter was also from Alsace, a Riesling with a nice creamy texture and aromas of petrol and green apple.

A plated dish featuring a grilled frog leg on a gold surface, garnished with microgreens and herbs.

This was a very good pairing for the grilled frog leg served with wild betel leaf, fern salad, thinly sliced banana blossom, and a Thai dressing. The wine complemented the spiciness of the dish beautifully.

A close-up of a wine bottle labeled 'Les Perrières 2021' beside a glass of water on a white tablecloth.

The next wine was a surprising choice: a red Bordeaux, a Cabernet Franc produced by the same family behind Château Lafleur as a distinct cru, using cuttings from Lafleur’s unique Bouchet (Cabernet Franc) vines grown on limestone terroir in Fronsac. The wine featured velvety tannins and aromas of red fruit and vanilla.

A plate featuring a modern interpretation of a Thai dessert, showcasing a vibrant orange sauce, a bright egg yolk, and delicate purple cake pieces, garnished with edible flowers and colorful sauces.

It was not a very good pairing for the sous-vide duck egg yolk with sweet brown sauce, pumpkin, and rice berry sponge cake. This was a modern interpretation of Khai Phalo, a classic dish of eggs simmered in a soy sauce and five-spice broth with palm sugar. The sweetness of the sauce accentuated the bitter notes in the wine. For Thai diners this dish may have nostalgic value—it was listed on the menu as “egg of memory”—but it was our least favorite dish.

A black, fluted dessert dish with a white sorbet topped with a small green mint leaf, placed on a white tablecloth.

A Khao Mak sorbet was served to cleanse our palate before the main course. This sorbet is a modern, creative twist on the traditional Thai fermented sticky rice dessert.

Close-up of a wine bottle label showing '2020 Thibault Liger-Belair, Aloxe-Corton Premier Cru, La Toppe au Vert'.

The wine for the main course was a 2020 Aloxe-Corton Premier Cru La Toppe au Vert by Thibault Liger-Belair. Although I had never considered pairing Thai food with red Burgundy, this elegant wine worked surprisingly well with two of the three main course dishes.

A tabletop display with two glass percolators filled with yellow broth and fresh herbs, accompanied by a large potted plant in the background.

One of the dishes was a Tom Yum soup, with the broth infused at the table using fresh Thai herbs in a clear glass percolator, allowing guests to watch the process as it happened.

A fine dining table set with a decorative plate, various Thai dishes including a curry, a salad, and a soup, and a hand pouring broth from a glass container.

The main course was served in traditional Thai fashion: plain rice to be combined spoonful by spoonful with an array of dishes. These included King River prawns accompanied by Tom Yum soup, chicken in a sweet bamboo shoot curry, and a spicy Rayong crab dip with fermented freshwater fish and Thai herbs. The chicken was very dry, but the prawns had phenomenal texture and the flavor balance of the soup was once again impeccable. The “plain” rice was actually Ubon Ratchathani Hommali rice, a high-quality, region-specific premium jasmine rice from northeastern Thailand with GI certification. The wine paired best with the chicken and crab, but was also acceptable with the prawn.

A group of four friends enjoying a fine dining experience at a restaurant with sophisticated decor, elegant table settings, and a chandelier overhead.

Wine is very expensive in Thailand because of the taxes, and up to this point the sommelier had been serving small pours. With the main course, however, he generously kept topping up our glasses with the excellent Aloxe-Corton.

Close-up of a wine bottle labeled 'Carmes de Rieussec' with a yellow and white design.

The dessert wine was a 2021 Carmes de Rieussec, the second wine of Château Rieussec in Sauternes, with its sweetness nicely balanced by acidity and aromas of ripe mango.

A beautifully presented dessert featuring mango and sticky rice ice cream, garnished with colorful edible flowers and herbs on an ornate Thai-style plate.

This was an excellent pairing for the modern interpretation of mango with sticky rice, which featured mango ice cream and sticky rice ice cream. The pastry chef personally presented the dessert at our table, and we complimented her highly on this lovely creation. There was also an alternative option: a black coconut sweet pudding with Thai tea ice cream, which was equally excellent according to Kees and Thomas, who chose that.

A beautifully arranged selection of colorful petit fours set on a gold board, featuring intricate desserts like a chocolate canelé, a blue jelly with a flower petal, a decorative round confection, and another sweet wrapped in a delicate paper.

The petit fours were served alongside the dessert: young rice milk canelé, flower rice cake, Thai fruit chocolate bonbon, and pink guava with salted plum candy.

This was an excellent meal and a wonderful evening. The enormous price difference compared to a regular meal in Thailand makes fine dining a harder sell than in other countries, even compared to Italy where the quality of everyday meals can also be very high. In Italy, the price gap is nowhere near as large as it is here. If, like me, you care mostly about flavor and less about presentation and service, it becomes an even tougher choice. So we’ll probably limit fine dining in Thailand to at most one dinner per trip and stick to the fantastic, inexpensive street food otherwise. R-Haan was a great choice, and I’m looking forward to trying another Michelin-starred restaurant on our next visit to Thailand.

5 thoughts on “Dining in Bangkok: R-Haan**

  1. Oh, I simply lack the words to say what I would like. I’m a little like a greedy child looking at your evening – me too please! Except for the far too fancy curtains in the room I love everything! Had heard the name before . . . am wondering who does frequent the place where the prices differ so widely from the ‘norm’? As you should know I do care about the presentation . . . keep on going back to that frog’s leg . . . utter perfection! Love the photo of the four of you also . . . I have been a bird on your shoulder for so long, methinks the faces of your friends ring familiar . . . 🙂 ! If you can find the time . . . a little more please > would love to learn the current street scene also . . . be well, have a wondrous time . . .

    Liked by 1 person

    1. We’ve been going with our neighbors to nice restaurants for something like once each year for over 20 years, so no wonder you start to recognize their faces. I’ll be blogging some recipes I’ve made and photographed over the last months without time for blogging. We’ll have to see if I have enough interesting marerial over the next weeks to do a blog featuring the food I’m having in Thailand.

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      1. For very sure you will have the material – the time to put it together, whilst so much interesting is going on around you, is naturally another matter. Remember choosing food from a street stall in Asia can be almost as exciting for all of us as a visit to a 3-star restaurant . . . truly hope you will keep on doing ‘interesting’ things and being well and happy . . . best to Kees also . . .

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  2. Thanks for sharing. We tried some single star restaurants in Bangkok pre COVID and they were priced like better no star restaurants at home. We got our list from the Guardian newspaper on an article about Michelin star restaurants in Bangkok.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Thanks for sharing. Not sure if this will double post as I always struggle to log in to WordPress.

    We visited some single star restaurants pre-COVID and they were priced like better no star restaurants back home. We got our list from a Guardian article about the first Thai edition of the guide published in 2017.

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