Travel Reference
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fried seafood dishes. It's wildly popular with the locals and they stick rigidly to their
serving hours; get here after 7.30pm and you won't be able to order.
Thanon Chomsin Food Stalls
(cnr Th Chomsin & Th Naebkehardt; dishes 30-40B; 9am-9pm)
If you're after 100% authentic eats,
check out the food stalls that congregate at this popular lunch corner. Though the setting is
humble, Thais are fastidious eaters and use a fork (or their fingers with a pinch of
kôw
nĕe·o
) to remove the meat from the bones of
gài tôrt
(fried chicken) rather than putting
teeth directly to flesh.
THAI
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Chatchai Market
THAI
$
(Th Phetkasem; dishes from 30B; daylight hours)
The city's day market resides in a historic build-
ing built in 1926 with a distinctive seven-eaved roof in honour of Rama VII. There are the
usual market refreshments: morning vendors selling
Ъah·tôrng·gŏh
(Chinese-style dough-
nuts) and
gah·faa boh·rahn
(ancient-style coffee spiked with sweetened condensed milk);
as well as all-day noodles with freshly made wontons; and the full assortment of fresh
tropical fruit.
Hua Hin Koti
( 0 3251 1252; 16/1 Th Dechanuchit; dishes 120-300B; 11am-10pm)
Across from the night market,
this Thai-Chinese restaurant is a national culinary luminary. Thais adore the fried crab
balls, while foreigners swoon over
đôm yam gûng
(shrimp soup with lemon grass). And
everyone loves the spicy seafood salad
(yam tá-lair)
and deep-fried fish with ginger. Be
prepared to queue for a table.
THAI
$$
Sang Thai Restaurant
(Th Naresdamri; dishes 100-300B; 10am-11pm)
One of many beloved pier-side restaurants, Sang
Thai is a Hua Hin institution and a massive operation. There's a vast choice of seafood
housed in giant tanks awaiting your decision. You can eat very well for not much, or
spend lots.
SEAFOOD
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